Installing a Level 2 home EV charger costs $800–$2,000 in the US on average, including the charger (~$300–$700), labor (~$300–$1,000), and a permit. Simple installs (panel near the garage, capacity available) come in under $1,000. Complex jobs — long cable runs, panel upgrades, trenching — push toward $3,000+. In Poland expect PLN 3,000–8,000 (≈$750–$2,000). In the Netherlands €1,000–€2,500 installed.
Typical Level 2 EV charger costs
| Item | Typical cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| Charger hardware (40A residential) | $300–$700 |
| Standard install (≤25 ft from panel) | $300–$700 |
| Long-run install (>25 ft, drywall work) | $700–$1,500 |
| Service-panel upgrade (if needed) | $1,500–$4,000 |
| Permit and inspection | $50–$300 |
Cost in Poland
Charger hardware runs PLN 2,000–4,000 (Wallbox Pulsar, easee, go-e). Electrician labor is PLN 800–2,500 depending on cable run. Apartment-building installs need building permission and may require running a sub-meter — add PLN 500–1,500. Many providers (Tauron, Enea) offer subsidized installs through utility partnerships.
What affects the cost?
- Distance from panel — every foot of run adds material and labor
- Existing capacity — older panels (100A) often need an upgrade for a 40A charger circuit
- Wall material — finished drywall costs more to wire through than an unfinished garage
- Hardwired vs plug-in — plug-in NEMA 14-50 saves on labor but limits charger options
- Tax credits — the US federal Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling credit covers 30% up to $1,000
How to save
- Install close to the panel — every foot of conduit adds $5–$15
- Choose plug-in over hardwired when your charger and panel allow it
- Bundle with other electrical work (panel upgrade, generator inlet)
- Apply for tax credits — file IRS Form 8911 for the 30% / up to $1,000 credit