AutoDTCs – OBD-II Trouble Code LookupAutoDTCs – OBD-II Trouble Code Lookup
  • Home
  • DTC Codes
    • Powertrain (P-Codes)
    • Body (B-Codes)
    • Chassis (C-Codes)
    • Network (U-Codes)
  • Diagnostic Guides
  • Maintenance Procedures
  • VIN Build Sheet
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • DTC Codes
    • Powertrain (P-Codes)
    • Body (B-Codes)
    • Chassis (C-Codes)
    • Network (U-Codes)
  • Diagnostic Guides
  • Maintenance Procedures
  • VIN Build Sheet
  • About
  • Contact
Home / DTC Codes / Powertrain Systems (P-Codes) / P1DCB – External charging infrastructure no charge readiness for charging socket A (Skoda)

P1DCB – External charging infrastructure no charge readiness for charging socket A (Skoda)

Skoda logoSkoda-specific code — factory diagnostic data
DTC Data Sheet
SystemElectric Vehicle Charging
StandardManufacturer Specific
Fault typeEVSE Communication / Status
Official meaningExternal charging infrastructure no charge readiness for charging socket A
Definition sourceSkoda factory description · Autel MaxiSys Ultra & EV

P1DCB means the Skoda EV’s onboard charging system has detected that the external charging infrastructure connected to charging socket A (the primary AC charge port) is not signalling charge readiness. In plain terms: the vehicle tried to initiate AC charging but the EVSE — whether a home wallbox, a public AC charger, or a portable EVSE cable — did not confirm it was ready to deliver power. This is a Skoda manufacturer-specific code and applies to EV and plug-in hybrid models equipped with a Type 2 AC charge port. The root cause may be in the charging station itself, the charge cable, or the charge control pilot circuit on the vehicle side.

⚠ Scan tool requirement: This is a Skoda-specific code. A generic OBD2 reader will retrieve the code but cannot access the module-level data, live PIDs, or bi-directional tests needed for diagnosis. A professional-grade scan tool with Skoda coverage is required for complete diagnosis.
⚠ High-Voltage Safety Note: This code relates to a hybrid or EV system. The sensor and wiring circuit itself is low voltage, but it is located near high-voltage components. Always follow manufacturer HV safety procedures before working in the motor electronics area. You do not need to open HV components to diagnose this circuit, but HV isolation and PPE requirements still apply.

P1DCB Quick Answer

P1DCB on a Skoda EV means the vehicle’s charge management system cannot confirm the external EVSE is ready for charging on socket A. Try a different cable and a different charging point before investigating the vehicle. Most P1DCB faults trace to a faulty EVSE, a damaged charge cable, or a dirty/damaged charge port — not a vehicle powertrain fault.

What Does P1DCB Mean?

Official meaning (Skoda-defined): P1DCB – External charging infrastructure no charge readiness for charging socket A. Socket A refers to the primary onboard AC charging inlet, typically the Type 2 AC port used for home and public AC charging in European markets. “No charge readiness” means the charge control pilot (CP) signal from the EVSE did not transition to the expected state within the allowed time window after the charge cable was connected.

What the system actually checks: When a charge cable is plugged in, the EVSE communicates vehicle-to-charger readiness through the control pilot (CP) line — a PWM signal that steps through defined voltage states (State A through State E per IEC 61851). The vehicle’s onboard charger module (OBM) monitors the CP signal and expects it to move from State B (cable connected, EVSE standby) to State C (EVSE energised, charging permitted). Why that matters: if the EVSE is faulty, the cable is damaged, or the charge port contacts are dirty, the CP line may stay in the wrong state and P1DCB is logged.

Theory of Operation

When you plug in a Type 2 cable, the proximity pilot (PP) circuit first signals cable connection to the vehicle. The vehicle responds by closing internal contactors to present a standard load on the CP line. The EVSE detects this load change and begins its own readiness checks — RCCB testing, ground verification, and output contactor sequence. Once the EVSE confirms it is safe to energise the cable, it shifts the CP duty cycle to indicate power available. The vehicle’s OBM reads the duty cycle to determine the maximum available current and authorises AC charging to begin.

P1DCB sets when the OBM monitors the CP line for the expected state transition and does not receive it within the calibrated timeout. The fault can originate from the EVSE (failed internal self-test, relay fault, or no grid supply), the charge cable (damaged CP conductor, damaged PP resistor, corroded contacts), or the vehicle’s charge port (bent contact pin, contamination on the CP terminal, damaged inlet wiring). Because the charging network and cable are external to the vehicle, they must be eliminated before focusing on vehicle-side circuits.

Symptoms

You will usually see a charging fault notification with no charging current flow on socket A.

  • No charging begins despite cable being connected — charge indicator light stays amber or off
  • Charge fault warning displayed in the instrument cluster or Skoda Connect app
  • P1DCB stored as current in the onboard charger or charge management module
  • Charging stops shortly after starting if the fault is intermittent (cable or EVSE contact issue)
  • DC fast charging unaffected — P1DCB is specific to the AC socket A circuit; CCS DC charging may still work normally
  • Works on some charge points but not others — points to EVSE incompatibility or cable type rather than a vehicle fault

Common Causes

  • Faulty EVSE or wallbox: The charging station’s internal self-test failed, a relay or RCCB tripped, or the unit has lost its grid supply. This is the most common cause of P1DCB when the vehicle charges normally at other locations.
  • Damaged charge cable: A broken CP conductor, degraded PP resistor, or corroded Type 2 connector contacts prevent the correct signal from reaching the vehicle. Check for physical damage, bent pins, and moisture inside the connector.
  • Contaminated or damaged charge port: Dirt, moisture, oxidation, or a bent CP contact pin in the vehicle’s Type 2 inlet prevents correct CP signal exchange. Inspect and clean the inlet carefully.
  • EVSE-vehicle compatibility issue: Some older or non-standard EVSE units do not meet current IEC 61851 signal timing requirements. Updated vehicles with stricter CP validation will fault with non-compliant chargers.
  • Charge inlet latch or proximity pilot fault: A failed PP resistor or latch mechanism in the cable or inlet can hold the proximity circuit in the wrong state, preventing readiness from being established.
  • OBM (onboard charger module) input circuit fault: A damaged CP sense circuit inside the vehicle’s onboard charger module can misread a valid EVSE signal. This is the least common cause and should only be considered after ruling out the cable, EVSE, and inlet.
  • Wiring damage between charge inlet and OBM: Chafed or corroded CP or PP wiring in the charge cable trunking behind the inlet can interrupt the pilot signal path inside the vehicle.

Diagnosis Steps

Use a scan tool with full Skoda EV system access, plus a DMM and a Type 2 charge cable tester if available. Work through the external causes first — EVSE and cable — before accessing vehicle circuits. The charge port area and CP wiring carry low-voltage pilot signals only; standard DMM probing is safe on these circuits. Do not probe the high-voltage AC input wiring or any orange-insulated cabling without appropriate HV-rated PPE and training.

  1. Confirm P1DCB is stored in the charge management or OBM module using a scan tool with Skoda EV support. Record freeze frame data noting the charge session state, CP signal status, and any related DTCs. Check whether other EV or network codes are present alongside P1DCB — companion codes can point to power supply or CAN issues affecting the OBM.
  2. Test with a known-good EVSE at a different location. If charging begins normally, the original EVSE or its installation wiring is the fault source. Check the EVSE for error codes on its own display, verify the circuit breaker has not tripped, and confirm the EVSE’s earth fault protection has not activated. Contact the EVSE manufacturer or a qualified electrician for EVSE-side faults.
  3. Inspect the charge cable. Check the Type 2 connector at both ends for bent or pushed-back pins, corrosion, moisture, or physical damage. Pay particular attention to the CP pin (typically pin 4 in Type 2) and PP pin. Use a cable tester or a DMM to verify CP conductor continuity end-to-end and PP resistor value (typically 680Ω or 220Ω depending on cable rating). Replace a cable that fails either check.
  4. Inspect the vehicle’s Type 2 charge inlet. Look for contamination, moisture, bent contact pins, and debris. Clean the inlet contacts with a dry lint-free cloth. Do not use spray lubricants on EV charge port contacts. If a contact pin is visibly damaged or bent, the inlet assembly will need servicing — do not attempt to straighten high-tolerance contact pins.
  5. With a known-good cable and EVSE confirmed working, attempt charging again and monitor the CP signal behaviour with the scan tool’s live data if the OBM exposes CP state. The CP line should progress from State B to State C within a few seconds of connection. A CP signal that stays in State B indicates the EVSE is not energising the cable. A CP signal stuck in State A indicates no EVSE is seen by the vehicle.
  6. If the fault persists with a verified good EVSE and cable, access CP and PP circuit wiring between the charge inlet and the OBM. Inspect the harness for chafing, pinch damage, and corrosion at connectors. Measure CP line resistance between the inlet CP pin and the OBM connector with the circuit de-energised. Resistance should be near zero for a good conductor; elevated readings confirm wiring damage.
  7. If wiring and inlet check good, and the fault only occurs at certain EVSE units, obtain the EVSE’s firmware version and compatibility information. Some EVSE makes require updated CP signal timing that older firmware did not provide. A Skoda software update or EVSE firmware update may resolve compatibility-based P1DCB faults.
  8. After correcting any EVSE, cable, inlet, or wiring faults, clear P1DCB with the scan tool, attempt a full charge session at the confirmed-good location, and verify charging proceeds through all stages. If P1DCB returns immediately with a verified external circuit, suspect the OBM input stage and follow Skoda replacement and calibration procedures for the onboard charger module.

Professional tip: P1DCB is generated by the vehicle’s charge management system, but the fault source is most often outside the vehicle. Bring a portable EVSE with a known-good cable to your diagnostic appointment so you can isolate EVSE, cable, and vehicle variables independently. Most P1DCB cases that reach a workshop are resolved by replacing a cable or resetting a tripped EVSE — not by replacing vehicle components.

Need network wiring diagrams and module connector views?

Communication stop and network faults require module connector pinouts, bus wiring routes, and power/ground diagrams. A repair manual helps you trace the exact circuit path before replacing any ECU.

Factory repair manual access for P1DCB

Check repair manual access

Possible Fixes

  • Reset or replace the EVSE: Clear any fault state on the charging station, restore its supply circuit breaker, or replace the unit if internal faults are confirmed.
  • Replace the charge cable: A cable with a damaged CP conductor, corroded contacts, or failed PP resistor cannot establish charge readiness. Use a certified replacement cable rated for the vehicle’s maximum charge current.
  • Clean or replace the charge port inlet: Remove contamination from the Type 2 inlet contacts. Replace the inlet assembly if pins are damaged beyond cleaning.
  • Repair CP/PP wiring harness: Correct chafed, corroded, or open CP or PP wiring between the inlet and OBM using OEM repair methods.
  • Update EVSE or vehicle firmware: Apply available Skoda software updates via ODIS or over-the-air, or arrange an EVSE firmware update from its manufacturer, to resolve CP signal timing compatibility issues.
  • Replace the onboard charger module (OBM): Only after confirming the EVSE, cable, inlet, and internal wiring are all verified good — and only following Skoda OBM replacement and HV system procedures.

Can I Still Drive With P1DCB?

You can drive the vehicle normally with P1DCB stored. The fault relates to AC charging socket A only and does not affect vehicle propulsion, battery management, or DC fast charging. However, if you cannot charge via AC, you will need to use DC fast charging until the fault is resolved. Monitor battery state and do not allow the pack to deplete if AC charging remains unavailable. Schedule diagnosis before the next long journey.

How Serious Is This Code?

P1DCB is a medium-priority fault. It does not affect driving safety or vehicle operation directly, but it does prevent normal AC home charging. For daily-use EV drivers, losing AC charging capability is a significant inconvenience that should be resolved promptly. The code does not indicate a high-voltage system fault — the CP and PP circuits operate at low voltage (12V signal level) and pose no HV safety risk during diagnosis.

Common Misdiagnoses

The most common misdiagnosis is replacing the onboard charger module before confirming the EVSE and cable are working correctly. Because P1DCB involves the OBM reading an external signal, most technicians should start with the external circuit. A second common mistake is testing only one EVSE location. An EVSE that fails to deliver CP readiness will always produce P1DCB regardless of vehicle condition — confirm the EVSE works with another EV first. Technicians also sometimes overlook firmware compatibility between the vehicle’s charge management software and older EVSE units — a software update often resolves P1DCB on recently delivered Skoda EVs.

Most Likely Fix

In the majority of P1DCB cases, the fault resolves by correcting an external issue: resetting a tripped EVSE, replacing a damaged charge cable, or cleaning a contaminated charge port. For vehicles that fault selectively at certain charging stations, a Skoda software update addressing CP signal timing compatibility is often the confirmed fix. OBM replacement is rare and should only follow complete verification of the external circuit and internal wiring.

Repair Costs

Repair cost depends heavily on the root cause. EVSE and cable issues are typically low-cost. Vehicle-side component repairs vary significantly.

Repair TypeEstimated Cost
Professional EV charging diagnosis$100 – $200
Replacement Type 2 charge cable$80 – $300
Charge port inlet cleaning / inspection$50 – $150
Charge port inlet replacement$300 – $800
CP/PP wiring harness repair$150 – $500
Onboard charger module (OBM) replacement$1,500 – $4,000+

Related Charging External Codes

Compare nearby Skoda charging external trouble codes with similar definitions, fault patterns, and diagnostic paths.

  • P1CF4 – Charge socket A charge connector lock blocked (Skoda)
  • P1CF5 – Charge socket A charge connector lock fault/stuck open (Skoda)
  • P2980 – Charge Air Cooler Temperature Sensor Performance
  • P2504 – Charging System Voltage High
  • P2503 – Charging System Voltage Low
  • P2502 – Charging System Voltage
All Categories
  • Steering Systems
  • Suzuki
  • Powertrain Systems (P-Codes
  • Suspension Systems
  • Ford
  • Body Systems (B-Codes
  • Wheels / Driveline
  • Volvo
  • Chassis Systems (C-Codes
  • CAN Bus / Network Communication
  • Audi
  • Network & Integration (U-Codes
  • Control Module Communication
  • Skoda
  • Engine & Powertrain
  • Vehicle Integration Systems
  • Jeep
  • Fuel & Air Metering
  • Volkswagen
  • Ignition & Misfire
  • Mitsubishi
  • Emission System
  • BYD
  • Transmission
  • Toyota
  • Hybrid / EV Propulsion
  • Lexus
  • Cooling Systems
  • Mercedes-Benz
  • Body / Comfort & Interior
  • Dodge
  • Airbag / SRS
  • Kia
  • Climate Control / HVAC
  • Hyundai
  • ABS / Traction / Stability
  • Nissan
Powertrain Systems
  • Engine & Powertrain
  • Fuel & Air Metering
  • Ignition & Misfire
  • Emission System
More Systems
  • Transmission
  • Hybrid / EV Propulsion
  • Cooling Systems
  • Body / Comfort & Interior
Safety & Chassis
  • Airbag / SRS
  • Climate Control / HVAC
  • ABS / Traction / Stability
  • Steering Systems
Chassis & Network
  • Suspension Systems
  • Wheels / Driveline
  • CAN Bus / Network Communication
  • Control Module Communication
  • © 2026 AutoDTCs.com. Accurate OBD-II DTC Explanations for All Makes & Models. About · Contact · Privacy Policy · Disclaimer