- Porsche’s upcoming Cayenne Electric introduces wireless home charging using a floor plate and underbody receiver, enabling automatic, cable-free energy transfer with built-in safety controls.
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Porsche is preparing to offer a wireless charging option for the upcoming Cayenne Electric, aiming to remove one of the more fiddly parts of EV ownership: plugging in. Instead of handling a cable, owners will be able to park over a floor-mounted plate in their garage and let the car take care of the rest. Here’s a clear look at how the system works, what makes it different, and why it matters.


The wireless setup consists of two main components:
- A floor plate is placed in the parking spot or garage.
- A receiver unit is mounted behind the Cayenne’s front axle.
The floor plate houses all required electronics in a single box measuring roughly 6 cm high, 78 cm wide, and 117 cm long. Unlike previous inductive systems that needed additional hardware, such as a wallbox, this plate only needs a connection to the home power supply.
Before charging for the first time, the vehicle and plate perform a one-time digital handshake, exchanging data and a password via the plate’s built-in Wi-Fi. This prevents misuse, including attempts at electricity theft.
How drivers position the SUV
To guide the car into place, Porsche uses tech similar to its Keyless Go system.
- On the car’s display, the receiver location is shown as a green dot.
- The charging coil in the floor plate appears as a green circle.
- Parking is accurate when the dot sits inside the circle.
Even if the alignment is not perfect, the system allows up to 10 cm of misalignment, with software continuously adjusting charging parameters to maintain efficiency.
The science behind the “wireless” part
Although the idea resembles wireless phone charging, the underlying engineering is more complex. The plate uses inductive coupling, where a magnetic field created by a coil in the floor plate induces voltage in a matching coil on the vehicle.
To make this work at EV-scale power levels, the system converts regular grid electricity into direct current and then switches it into a high-frequency alternating current, around 85 kHz, inside the plate. This high-frequency signal is what allows useful amounts of energy to cross the air gap efficiently. Continuous software monitoring ensures that even if the coils aren’t perfectly aligned, power flow remains stable.
Safety systems work in the background
Charging across an air gap requires careful control of heat, magnetic fields, and anything that might slip under the vehicle. The receiver is surrounded by shielding to keep magnetic exposure away from the cabin, while ferrite components in the plate and vehicle direct the magnetic field where it’s needed.
The plate constantly checks for metal objects, keys, tools, and coins that could heat up if left on or near the charging area. It also uses motion detection to guard against pets or hands reaching under the car. If something is detected, the system warns the driver or pauses charging immediately. Porsche says the technology also stays well within electromagnetic-compatibility limits to avoid interference with other electronics.
What owners can expect
Day-to-day use is designed to feel “normal,” just without a cable. Park, confirm alignment on the display, set the parking brake, and walk away. Charging time and performance should match what owners already expect from a wired 11 kW home setup.
Porsche is also exploring a future version where the car could park itself over the plate and begin charging automatically, taking the driver out of the process entirely.
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First Published Date: 15 Nov 2025, 08:30 am IST
