What it costs, what's permitted, and what to ask before you hire.
Last verified: 2026-05-31 · Well-sourced
Likely first step
Check your electrical panel capacity
Panel / electrical
May require a panel upgrade
Complexity
Verify locally
Permit likelihood
Confirm with your building department
Rebate sensitivity
Verify current programs
Best first call
A licensed contractor for an itemized quote
Utility impact
Electric & gas: PG&E
Pacific Gas & Electric
As of 2026-05-30, PG&E's default residential electric plan is E-TOU-C, a time-of-use plan with a 4-9 PM peak window. Alternatives include E-TOU-D (5-8 PM peak), EV2-A (whole-home TOU optimized for EV charging, lowest rates 12 AM-3 PM daily), and E-ELEC (a newer flat-rate-style plan for fully-electric and NEM 3.0 solar households, and the default plan when registering new residential solar under NEM 3.0). In March 2026, PG&E restructured residential rates under AB 205's income-graduated fixed charge framework, adding a flat Base Services Charge (~$24/month for non-CARE households; CARE/FERA pay a reduced fixed fee) paired with a per-kWh price cut. Households planning heat-pump HVAC, EV charging, or whole-home electrification may want to compare E-TOU-C, EV2-A, and E-ELEC; verify current rates and plan rules at the provider site.
$1,500–$4,500 — Installed cost for a single-family Bay Area home adding one residential Level 2 (240V) EV charger on a new 40A or 50A dedicated circuit, including a smart/wi-fi-capable EVSE (e.g., ChargePoint Home Flex, Wallbox Pulsar Plus, Tesla Wall Connector), permit, and standard 20–40 ft circuit run from the panel, pre-incentive. Excludes service-panel upgrade (see bay-area-cost-electrical-panel-upgrade) and long-distance trenching or detached-structure conduit runs.
Section 30C Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit (residential EV charger)
Sunsets June 30, 2026. For property placed in service Jan 1, 2023 – June 30, 2026: 30% of the cost of qualifying residential EV charging property, up to $1,000 per item (per charging port, fuel dispenser, or storage property), claimed on IRS Form 8911. Only homes located in a qualifying low-income community or non-urban census tract qualify. SUNSETS JUNE 30, 2026: Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Public Law 119-21, signed July 4, 2025), the §30C credit 'will not be allowed for any property placed in service after June 30, 2026.' This is a cliff termination with no transition rate — installations placed in service on July 1, 2026 or later do not qualify, regardless of when payment or contracting occurred. For property placed in service Jan 1, 2023 through June 30, 2026, the credit covers 30% of the cost of qualifying alternative fuel vehicle refueling property installed at a U.S. home used by the taxpayer as a main home, capped at $1,000 per item (the cap applies separately to each charging port, fuel dispenser, or storage property). Property must have original use beginning with the taxpayer. Census-tract eligibility is the load-bearing constraint: per IRS guidance, the property must be installed in a low-income community census tract or non-urban census tract — 2015 Census Tract boundaries apply to installations placed in service before Jan 1, 2025; 2020 Census Tract boundaries apply to installations placed in service on or after Jan 1, 2025. Many urban high-income census tracts do not qualify even though the homeowner installs an otherwise eligible charger. Homeowners claim the credit on Form 8911 attached to their federal tax return. Verify both the placed-in-service date and the census-tract eligibility of the install address with a qualified tax professional before relying on this credit.
PG&E Residential EV Charging Rebate (Standard and Rebate Plus tiers)
Standard: up to 50% of qualifying charger purchase. Rebate Plus (income-qualified): up to $2,000 for charger installation, or up to $5,000 combined for panel upgrade plus charger installation. As of 2026-05-30 the program is active. Applicants must be active PG&E residential electric customers (CCA customers eligible) who own or lease a qualifying battery-electric or plug-in hybrid vehicle. The Standard tier has no income test. The Rebate Plus tier may be available to households at or below 80% of county Area Median Income, or to participants in CalFresh, Medi-Cal, SSI, WIC, or similar assistance programs, or to recent Rebate Plus participants in the Pre-Owned EV Rebate program. Standard applicants must apply within 180 days of charger purchase; Rebate Plus applicants receive pre-approval with contractor selection before installation. Rebates are first-come, first-served and limited to one per eligible household. Homeowners may not combine this with the now-closed Empower EV program.
As of 2026-05-31, residential Level 2 (240V) EV charger installations in San Francisco require an electrical permit from the Department of Building Inspection (DBI). Per SF DBI Information Sheet E-02, for the installation of a single Level 1 or Level 2 charger by a licensed electrical contractor registered with DBI — where the contractor verifies that the existing panel has sufficient ampacity and space for the required overcurrent protection — a load calculation is not required and the permit may be issued the same day under the instant pathway. In all other cases, a load calculation must be provided, and a new electrical panel may need to be installed to support the additional load. Permit applications are submitted via the Electrical Permitting and Inspection Scheduling system at dbiweb02.sfgov.org/dbi_electrical/. Verify the current Information Sheet E-02 checklist (Attachment 1) and load-calculation thresholds with DBI before scheduling installation.