What it costs, what's permitted, and what to ask before you hire.
Last verified: 2026-05-31 · Well-sourced
Incentive snapshot
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.
SDG&E Residential EV Charger Rebate — current status
Not currently available as a standalone SDG&E rebate for single-family Level 2 chargers. As of 2026-05-30 SDG&E does not advertise a standalone residential Level 2 EV charger rebate for single-family homes. SDG&E's EV incentives page lists vehicle-side incentives (the SDG&E Pre-Owned EV Rebate at $1,000 standard or $4,000 income-qualified within a 180-day post-purchase window), state Clean Vehicle Rebate, federal EV tax credit, HOV stickers, and EV-specific rate plans, but no charger or panel-upgrade rebate for single-family homeowners. SDG&E's Power Your Drive program — historically the EV charging infrastructure path — covers only multi-unit dwellings, workplaces, and fleet customers, and the apartments/condos and workplaces tracks are reported to be fully subscribed. Single-family homeowners installing a Level 2 charger should look to: (a) the federal Section 30C credit (sunsets June 30, 2026; see federal-30c-ev-charger), (b) EV-specific rate plans for ongoing operating cost reduction (see the SDG&E utility record), and (c) third-party programs that may emerge. Re-check quarterly in case SDG&E launches a single-family charger rebate.
$1,200–$4,000 — Installed cost for a single-family SoCal home adding one residential Level 2 (240V) EV charger on a new 40A or 50A dedicated circuit, including smart EVSE, permit, and a standard 20–40 ft circuit run, pre-incentive. Excludes service-panel upgrade.
As of 2026-05-30, SDG&E's default residential plan is TOU-DR1, a three-period time-of-use plan with on-peak / off-peak / super off-peak windows and a 4-9 PM peak. TOU-DR2 offers a simpler two-period structure with the same 4-9 PM peak. Households with EVs, batteries, or heat pumps may benefit from TOU-ELEC (designed for electrified homes), or from EV-specific plans: EV-TOU-5 (whole-house TOU with the lowest overnight pricing for home charging and the Solar Billing Plan) and EV-TOU (a separate-meter option). TOU-DR-P and EV-TOU-5-P are event-based variants that add Reduce Your Use events (up to 18/year) with a $1.16/kWh event adder during 4-9 PM. Plans require 12-month commitments; homeowners should verify the current default and rate cards on the SDG&E pricing plans page before assuming a peak window or rate.