Site Dashboard Widgets Reference
A widget-by-widget guide to everything on the mobile site dashboard - what each widget shows, what its controls do, and what to look for.
Table of Contents
Note: The site dashboard requires the Optimize package. Widgets that need sensor data are hidden when the site has no sensors, so your dashboard may show fewer widgets than this article covers.
Most widgets have a refresh icon in their top-right corner - tap it to reload that widget without refreshing the whole dashboard.
Summary
What it shows
The Summary widget sits at the top of the dashboard, with the site's address below the title. It is a two-column grid of count cards covering the site's monitored infrastructure:
- Managed load - the total monitored load at the site, in kW, with a trend arrow showing change.
- Sensors - wireless circuit-level sensors installed at the site.
- Power meters - sensor-based power meters.
- Bridges - the gateways that collect sensor data and send it to PowerRadar.
- Loggers - data loggers reporting to the site.
- Meters - external (third-party) meters integrated into PowerRadar.
- Deployed devices - the total device count across all types.
When devices are not reporting, a card shows an offline count alongside the total.
What to look for
The offline counts. A bridge or several sensors going offline means part of your site is no longer being monitored - worth investigating before it shows up as missing data in your charts.

Real-Time Power Consumption
What it shows
The Real-time power consumption widget displays a live gauge of the site's total power draw right now, in kW. The gauge scale runs from zero to the site's managed load, and the Measurement time under the widget title shows when the reading was taken. If the site has solar or other on-site generation, the widget also shows the power currently being generated.
Below the gauge, the Energy consumption summary shows three cards - Last 24 hours, Last 7 days, and Last 30 days - each with total energy for the period and a percentage change against the previous period. Green means consumption went down; red means it went up.
What to look for
Unexpected load outside working hours. If the gauge shows significant draw when the site should be idle, something is running that probably shouldn't be - the Largest Consumers widget can help you find it.

Site Alerts
What it shows
The Site alerts widget summarizes the site's alert activity in two parts:
- Open now - the number of alerts currently open, with severity chips: Critical, High, Medium, Low.
- Opened in last 7 days - a bar per severity level showing how many alerts opened over the past week.
The widget refreshes automatically every 5 minutes.
What to look for
Any Critical or High count above zero - open the alert from the Notifications tab to see the trigger condition and acknowledge it. A growing 7-day bar for one severity can also signal a recurring issue worth a closer look in the alert's incident history.

Last 7 Days Power
What it shows
The Last 7 days Power widget charts the site's power over the past week.
What to look for
Days or hours that break the site's usual pattern. A weekend that looks like a weekday, or a night-time plateau that wasn't there last week, points at equipment running when it shouldn't. For a closer look at any specific window, open Time View.

Largest Consumers
What it shows
The Largest Consumers widget ranks the site's top energy-consuming categories as horizontal bars. Each row shows the category name with a color dot, its energy consumption for the selected period, its percentage of the site total, and a trend arrow - green for decreased consumption, red for increased.
Controls
Time range tabs at the top of the widget: 24h, 7d, 30d. Tapping a tab reloads the ranking for that period.
What to look for
A category with a red arrow that grew against its baseline. Compare the 24h and 30d views - a category consuming a much larger share in the last 24 hours than over 30 days changed behavior recently.

Actual VS Average
What it shows
The Actual VS Average widget plots today's consumption against the site's typical day, from 00:00 to 24:00. Three lines appear in the legend:
- Actual - consumption so far today. A dot marks the current time.
- Average - the site's historical average for the same hours.
- Expected - the projected consumption for the rest of the day, shown as a dashed line.
What to look for
The gap between Actual and Average. Actual consistently above average during off-hours usually means equipment is being left on. A one-time spike above average is worth matching against site events - a maintenance window or production change may explain it.

Historical Trends
What it shows
The Historical Trends widget shows monthly consumption as horizontal bar charts, January through December, with a Total figure above the chart. The first page is Site total; swipe horizontally (or follow the pagination dots) to move through per-device charts.
Controls
- Year pills - tap a year (e.g., 2025, 2026) to view that year on its own.
- Compare - overlays the two years month by month, one bar per year, so you can see year-over-year change at a glance.
- Swipe left or right to move between the site total and individual devices.
What to look for
Seasonal patterns and slow drift. A device whose monthly consumption creeps up over several months without an operational reason may be degrading - HVAC and refrigeration equipment are the usual suspects. Compare mode makes a month that outgrew last year's equivalent stand out immediately.
