Get a real installation cost estimate based on your state, charger choice, and home panel, including state electricity rates and utility rebates.
All fields required for an accurate estimate
Fill out the form and click Calculate to see your personalized EV charger installation cost estimate, including available utility rebates.
Estimate based on 2026 state labor averages and confirmed utility rebate programs. Your final cost depends on your home's specific wiring and electrician rates.
Get a Free Exact QuoteThis tool combines three real, independently sourced data inputs to build your estimate: state-specific electrician labor rates for 2026, confirmed utility rebate programs where they exist, and current charger hardware pricing from manufacturer listings.
This is an estimate, not a binding quote. Your actual cost depends on factors a calculator cannot see: the exact distance from your electrical panel to the charging location, whether your home needs any electrical repairs unrelated to the charger itself, and the specific rates of the electrician you hire. A certified local electrician can give you an exact number after a brief site visit.
Based on 2026 average electrician hourly rates and typical job duration of 4 to 8 hours per state, reflecting real regional cost differences.
Includes confirmed 2026 rebate amounts for LADWP, Austin Energy, ComEd, Dominion Energy, Duke Energy, Georgia Power, NV Energy, PSE, and others.
Reflects current 2026 manufacturer listed pricing for the most common Level 2 home charger brands available in the US.
Average residential electricity rates by state as of 2026, sourced from utility rate filings referenced across our state and city cost guides.
| State | Avg Residential Rate | Confirmed Utility Rebate |
|---|---|---|
| California | $0.31/kWh | LADWP up to $1,000 plus $250 meter |
| Texas | $0.15/kWh | Austin Energy 50% up to $1,200 |
| Illinois | $0.16/kWh | ComEd up to $3,750 income-qualified |
| Colorado | $0.15/kWh | Rocky Mountain Power, currently paused |
| Virginia | $0.13/kWh | Dominion $125 plus $40/year |
| North Carolina | $0.12/kWh | Duke Energy Overnight Advantage TOU |
| Georgia | $0.12/kWh | Georgia Power $150 |
| Nevada | $0.12/kWh | NV Energy off-peak TOU savings |
| Washington | $0.11/kWh | Puget Sound Energy up to $2,600 |
| Arizona | $0.14/kWh | APS rebate program |
| Florida | $0.13/kWh | No statewide rebate confirmed |
| Ohio | $0.13/kWh | No statewide rebate confirmed |
| New York | $0.22/kWh | No statewide rebate confirmed |