A 200-amp panel provides 48,000 watts of total capacity. A 48-amp Level 2 EV charger draws 11,520 watts. Most 200-amp homes have adequate capacity for a Level 2 charger. Homes with 100-amp service, electric heat, or multiple high-draw appliances may need a panel upgrade costing $3,000 to $6,000. A licensed electrician performs the load calculation during a free site visit before installation.
A load calculation is the process a licensed electrician uses to determine whether your home's electrical panel has sufficient spare capacity to support an additional circuit, in this case the 40-amp to 60-amp dedicated circuit required for a Level 2 EV charger. The National Electrical Code requires load calculations for service upgrades and new circuits that significantly add to the building's electrical demand.
The most common method for existing residential installations is the NEC 220.87 optional calculation method, which compares your panel's rated capacity against your actual peak historical demand. Your utility company can often provide your peak 12-month demand data which gives the electrician a real picture of your actual usage rather than a theoretical calculation that tends to overestimate demand.
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To understand whether your panel has capacity for an EV charger it helps to know how much electricity your existing appliances draw. Here is a reference table of typical residential electrical loads used in load calculations.
| Appliance | Typical Load | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Central air conditioner (3 ton) | 3,500 to 5,000W | Largest single load in most homes |
| Electric water heater | 4,000 to 5,500W | Not simultaneous with AC usually |
| Electric dryer | 5,000 to 6,000W | Intermittent use |
| Electric range or oven | 8,000 to 12,000W | Not usually all burners simultaneously |
| Electric heat pump | 3,000 to 7,000W | Variable by size and temperature |
| General lighting and outlets | 3,000 to 5,000W | General purpose circuits |
| Refrigerator | 150 to 400W | Runs continuously |
| Level 2 EV Charger (48A) | 11,520W | Runs 4 to 8 hours overnight |
| Total example (gas appliances) | ~21,600W | Well under 200A capacity |
Panel upgrades are required before EV charger installation in three situations. First if your home has 100-amp or smaller service, which is common in homes built before 1970. At 100 amps your total capacity is only 24,000 watts and after accounting for basic home loads there is rarely room for an 11,520-watt EV charger circuit. A 200-amp upgrade costs $3,000 to $6,000 depending on your location and whether the utility must also upgrade the service entrance from the street.
Second if your 200-amp panel is already heavily loaded with electric appliances including electric heat, electric water heater, electric range, and large air conditioners, your remaining capacity may be insufficient. In these cases a load management smart charger that automatically reduces charging speed when other high-demand appliances are running can often allow EV charging without a full panel upgrade. These smart load management chargers cost $100 to $200 more than standard Level 2 chargers but can save $3,000 to $6,000 in panel upgrade costs.
Third if you want to install the Ford Charge Station Pro for home backup power, which requires a 100-amp dedicated circuit at 240V. This alone requires a 200-amp service minimum with significant available headroom.
An electrician can assess your panel capacity in 15 minutes during a free site visit. Free quotes from certified electricians who do load calculations before every installation.
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