EV Chargers Alamance, Durham, Chatham, Guilford, Orange County, NC

Charge at Home, Skip the Station

Level 2 EV charger installation that gets your electrical system ready, pulls the permit, passes inspection, and gives you a full battery every morning without the hassle of public charging.

Why Local EV Owners Call ESP

01

Licensed Master Electrician

Andy Helton brings 35+ years of hands-on electrical experience. Every install meets NC code and passes inspection the first time.

02

Flat Rate Pricing Always

You get a firm price before we start. No hourly billing, no surprise charges, no games with your budget.

03

We Handle the Permits

We pull your permit, coordinate the county inspection, and handle any follow-up. You don’t touch the paperwork.

04

Serving Since 2002

Over 20 years in Alamance, Durham, Chatham, and Orange Counties. We’re local, licensed, and we’ll be here tomorrow.

Electric Vehicle Home Charging Solutions in Alamance, Durham, Chatham, Guilford, Orange County, NC

Home Charging That Actually Works for Your Schedule

If you just bought an electric vehicle, you already know public charging is a gamble. Broken stations, long waits, detours when you’re running late. A Level 2 charging station installed in your garage changes that completely. You plug in when you get home, your car charges overnight, and you wake up with a full battery. No apps, no membership cards, no wondering if the station down the street is working today.

We install EV chargers for homeowners across Alamance, Durham, Chatham, and Orange Counties who want reliable charging without the runaround. We assess your electrical panel, run the wiring, mount the charger, pull the permit, and coordinate the inspection. You get a system that works safely and charges fast enough to keep up with your daily driving.

Level 2 Charging Station Installation

What You Get with a Proper Install

This isn't about gadgets or going green. It's about waking up to a full charge, spending less per mile, and never planning your day around a charging station again.

01

You’ll add 20 to 40 miles of range per hour, which means a full charge overnight even after a long commute.

02

Home electricity costs about $0.18 per kilowatt-hour in North Carolina, compared to $0.25 to $0.47 at public stations.

03

Your panel gets a proper load calculation so you’re not tripping breakers or creating fire hazards down the road.

04

You’ll know exactly what the job costs before we touch a wire, and that price won’t change unless you ask for additional work.

05

Duke Energy offers rebates up to $1,117 for installation costs, and we’ll help you understand what qualifies.

06

Everything’s permitted, inspected, and code-compliant, which protects your home’s value and keeps your insurance valid.

Electrical Panel Capacity Assessment

Your Panel Might Need an Upgrade—Here's Why

A lot of homes in Alamance and Orange Counties were built with 100-amp panels. That was fine when the biggest loads were a dryer and an air conditioner. Add a Level 2 EV charger pulling 40 to 50 amps, and you’re pushing that panel past what it was designed to handle. Breakers start tripping. Lights flicker when the AC kicks on. Or worse, nothing happens until something overheats.

We run a load calculation during the initial consultation. That tells us whether your current panel has the capacity to support a dedicated 240-volt circuit for your charger, or if you need to upgrade to a 200-amp panel. If an upgrade is required, we include that cost in your quote upfront. It’s not optional and it’s not a surprise. It’s the difference between a safe installation and one that creates problems you’ll deal with for years.

Most panel upgrades take a day and add between $1,000 and $3,000 to the total project cost, depending on your home’s setup. But once it’s done, you have the capacity to handle not just your EV charger, but future electrical needs without constantly worrying about overloading your system.

Car Charger Installation Process

How We Get Your Home EV-Ready

Panel Assessment and Quote

We evaluate your electrical panel, measure the wire run, and give you a flat-rate price that includes everything.

Permit and Installation

We pull the permit, run the wiring, mount your charger, and complete the electrical work in one visit for most jobs.

Inspection and Final Walkthrough

We coordinate the county inspection, make any needed adjustments, and show you how to use your new charging system.

Tesla Wall Connector Installation

What's Included in a Complete EV Charger Install

Whether you’re installing a Tesla Wall Connector, a universal Level 2 charger, or a specific model recommended by your vehicle manufacturer, the electrical work is the same. You need a dedicated 240-volt circuit run from your panel to the charger location. That circuit needs proper wire sizing, a breaker matched to the load, conduit if it’s running outside, and grounding that meets National Electrical Code standards.

We mount the charger where it makes sense for your parking setup—garage wall, exterior wall, carport. We hardwire it to the circuit, test it, and make sure it’s pulling the right voltage and amperage. Then we pull the permit through your county, schedule the inspection, and handle any corrections if the inspector asks for adjustments. You don’t call the county. You don’t figure out code requirements. We do that.

Once the inspection passes, we walk you through how the system works, answer any questions, and make sure you’re confident using it. The whole process typically takes a few days from quote to final inspection, depending on permitting timelines in your county.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to install a Level 2 EV charger in North Carolina?
Most homeowners in Alamance, Durham, Chatham, and Orange Counties spend between $1,200 and $3,500 for a complete Level 2 EV charger installation. That range includes the charger hardware, labor, materials, permits, and inspection. The final price depends on how far the charger is from your electrical panel, whether your panel needs an upgrade, and if the install is indoors or outdoors. Outdoor setups typically add $200 to $1,000 because of weatherproofing and conduit requirements. If your home has a 100-amp panel that’s already near capacity, you’ll likely need to upgrade to a 200-amp panel, which adds another $1,000 to $3,000. We give you a flat-rate price upfront that includes everything your specific job requires, so you’re not guessing or dealing with hourly billing. And if you qualify for Duke Energy’s rebate program, you can get up to $1,117 back to offset installation costs.
It depends on your home’s current electrical capacity and what else is already running on your panel. Most modern homes with 200-amp panels can support a Level 2 EV charger without an upgrade, as long as the panel isn’t already maxed out. But a lot of homes in this area were built with 100-amp panels, and once you add up your HVAC system, water heater, dryer, and other major appliances, there’s not enough capacity left for a 40- to 50-amp EV charger. We run a load calculation during your consultation to see where you stand. If an upgrade is needed, we’ll explain why, quote it clearly, and handle the permit and inspection for the panel replacement. Skipping this step creates a safety risk and code violations, so if your system can’t support the load, we’ll tell you upfront and include the upgrade in your total project cost. About 20% of homes need some type of electrical work beyond just installing the charger, so you’re not alone if your panel needs attention.
The actual electrical work for a straightforward Level 2 charger installation usually takes two to four hours. That’s for a setup where your panel has available capacity, the charger is going in a garage close to the panel, and there’s no major structural work involved. If you need a panel upgrade or the wiring has to run a long distance through walls or outside, it can take a full day. The bigger timeline factor is permitting and inspection. Once you approve the quote, we pull the permit through your county, which typically takes a few days to a week depending on how busy they are. After the installation is complete, we schedule the county inspection. Most inspectors can get out within a few days, and if everything passes, you’re done. If they ask for any adjustments, we handle those and schedule a re-inspection. From start to finish, most projects are wrapped up within one to two weeks, depending on your county’s permitting schedule and how quickly you want to move.
Yes. Duke Energy offers a rebate of up to $1,117 for residential customers in North Carolina who install a Level 2 EV charger. The rebate covers the cost of electrical upgrades—things like running new wiring, installing a dedicated circuit, upgrading your panel if needed, and adding the outlet or hardwired connection for the charger. It doesn’t cover the cost of the charger hardware itself, but it can offset a significant portion of the installation work. We’ll provide you with a detailed invoice that breaks out the eligible costs, and we’ll make sure the work is permitted and inspected, which Duke requires for rebate approval. You submit the paperwork through Duke’s online portal, and once it’s approved, the credit shows up on your electric bill. If you’ve already had the work done within the last 120 days, you can still apply retroactively. We’ve helped plenty of customers navigate this process, and we’ll walk you through what documentation you need and how to submit it correctly.
A Level 1 charger plugs into a standard 120-volt outlet, the same kind you use for everyday appliances. It’s the slowest option, adding only three to five miles of range per hour of charging. If you drain your battery completely, it could take two or three days to get back to a full charge using Level 1. That works fine if you drive less than 30 miles a day and can leave your car plugged in overnight, but it’s not practical for most people. A Level 2 charger uses a 240-volt circuit, the same type that powers your dryer or electric oven, and it charges five to seven times faster. You’ll add 20 to 40 miles of range per hour, depending on your vehicle and the charger’s amperage. That means a fully drained battery can recharge overnight in six to eight hours. For most EV owners who rely on home charging, Level 2 is the only setup that makes sense. It requires professional installation because you’re adding a dedicated circuit to your panel, but the speed and convenience make it worth it.
Yes. We install Tesla Wall Connectors, universal Level 2 chargers, and brand-specific models from manufacturers like ChargePoint, JuiceBox, Grizzl-E, and others. The electrical work is the same regardless of which charger you choose—you need a dedicated 240-volt circuit, proper wire sizing, a correctly rated breaker, and a code-compliant installation. Some chargers are hardwired directly into your electrical system, while others plug into a NEMA 14-50 outlet. We’ll discuss your options during the consultation and help you understand the pros and cons of each setup. If you’ve already purchased a charger, we’ll install it. If you haven’t decided yet, we can recommend models based on your vehicle, charging speed preferences, and budget. What matters most is that the electrical infrastructure is installed correctly, safely, and in compliance with local code, and that’s what we focus on regardless of which charger you end up using.

Cities we provide Ev Chargers In