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How can I download my bills with the new app?

  • August 26, 2024
  • 6 replies
  • 272 views

i can't find how can i download my bills with the new app. Please, help me!

Best answer by Firedog

There doesn’t appear to be any way of downloading a bill PDF on the app (although I rather thought there used to be an option to do so). I can’t even make the Share button do anything.

You should have a few options:

  1. Screenshot the bill as displayed. Messy, but at least you have the record you want.
  2. Use the web account in your browser. There’s a download link on every historical ‘billing details’ page. You should be able to sidestep the function that tries to open the app instead of the website.
  3. If you got an email with your latest energy bill, the bill PDF will have been included as an attachment.

 

[EDIT some days later] The Share button in the top left-hand corner when viewing a bill now seems to work, at least on Android 14. You can send the PDF to people or other locations, like a file-hosting site. 

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6 replies

Chris_OVO
Community Moderator
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  • Community Moderator
  • 735 replies
  • August 26, 2024

Hey @Gabriela89,

 

You can find all of our guides for the MyOVO app on our tutorial collection

 

You can find how to download a bill by clicking on the thread below:

 

I hope this helps and if you have any further questions, please let us know 😊


Firedog
Plan Zero Hero
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  • Plan Zero Hero
  • 2006 replies
  • Answer
  • August 26, 2024

There doesn’t appear to be any way of downloading a bill PDF on the app (although I rather thought there used to be an option to do so). I can’t even make the Share button do anything.

You should have a few options:

  1. Screenshot the bill as displayed. Messy, but at least you have the record you want.
  2. Use the web account in your browser. There’s a download link on every historical ‘billing details’ page. You should be able to sidestep the function that tries to open the app instead of the website.
  3. If you got an email with your latest energy bill, the bill PDF will have been included as an attachment.

 

[EDIT some days later] The Share button in the top left-hand corner when viewing a bill now seems to work, at least on Android 14. You can send the PDF to people or other locations, like a file-hosting site. 


  • New Member*
  • 1 reply
  • September 25, 2024

Is it possible to be able to download my meter readings and bills from my account for me to analyse them offline please?


Blastoise186
Plan Zero Hero
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  • Plan Zero Hero
  • 7867 replies
  • September 25, 2024

Hi @DWNiteowl60 ,

You can do this via the Online Account - simply copy/paste the meter readings into Excel and you can download and save as many bills as you wish via Billing History.


Emmanuelle_OVO
Community Manager
  • Community Manager
  • 2561 replies
  • September 26, 2024

Hey @DWNiteowl60,

 

Welcome to the OVO Online Community,

 

I can see that Blastoise has already given some helpful advice here, just wanted to add that our tutorial collection might be helpful to you in future:

 

 


Firedog
Plan Zero Hero
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  • Plan Zero Hero
  • 2006 replies
  • September 26, 2024

As regards downloading bills, there may be a shortcut that could save you a bit of fuss and fewer duplicated pages. On the Billing details page for a particular month, you’ll see a Download bill link to the PDF for that month. For example, 

https://smartpaymapi.ovoenergy.com/bal/bill/nnnnnnn?from=2024-06-01&to=2024-06-30 

where nnnnnnn is your OVO account no.

You can change this URL to produce a single PDF covering more than one period simply by changing one or both dates. For example,

https://smartpaymapi.ovoenergy.com/bal/bill/nnnnnnn?from=2023-01-01&to=2023-12-31

brings me all of last year’s bills. If your billing period isn’t the calendar month, don’t touch the day part of the dates. If it is, be careful to adjust the last day of the to date to the right last day of the month. 

 

You only mentioned analysing offline. Bills as PDFs don’t exactly lend themselves to spreadsheet analysis. If you really want the data to plug into Excel, say, you’d need a different approach. That’s not one I’ve examined, but I’m willing to give it a go if you’re interested.

You can get a JSON file giving your last ~400 meter readings quite easily. Say if you’d like instructions.

 


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