Tesla Charger Installers in Raleigh, NC
Wall Connector + Mobile Connector hardwire, done right.
Tesla charger installers in Raleigh, NC — Wall Connector (Gen 3) and Mobile Connector hardwire installs. NEC 625-compliant, EVSE-rated breakers, and proper continuous-load sizing.
Why a Tesla-trained installer
A Tesla-trained installer knows the Gen 3 wiring diagram, the Powershare bidirectional spec, and the load-sharing setup for multi-vehicle households — and pulls the right permit on day one.
EV charger types installed in Raleigh, NC
From a 120V garage outlet to a 350 kW highway DC fast charger — what they cost and what they need.
120V trickle (Level 1)
- Power
- 1.4 kW · 12A
- Speed
- 3–5 mi/hr
- Cost
- $0 (uses included EVSE cord)
Standard outlet — no install required
Best for: Plug-in hybrids and low-mileage commuters.
240V Level 2 home charger
- Power
- 7.7–11.5 kW · 32–48A
- Speed
- 25–40 mi/hr
- Cost
- $900–$2,200 typical installed
Dedicated 40–60A circuit, NEMA 14-50 or hardwired
Best for: Daily-driver EVs that need an overnight full charge.
Networked Level 2 (workplace / MUD)
- Power
- 11.5–19.2 kW · 48–80A
- Speed
- 40–70 mi/hr
- Cost
- $2,500–$7,500 per port (excluding service)
Dedicated circuit + OCPP network + load management
Best for: Workplaces, multifamily, hotels, fleet depots.
DC Fast Charging (50–350 kW)
- Power
- 50–350 kW · 480V 3-phase
- Speed
- 100–300 mi in 20–40 min
- Cost
- $45,000–$200,000+ per stall
Utility coordination, transformer, concrete pad
Best for: Retail, highway corridors, public charging hubs.
The EV charger installation process
Typical timeline from first survey to a powered, permitted, inspected charger.
- 0145–90 min
Site survey & load calc
Electrician measures panel capacity, runs a NEC 220.83 load calculation, and walks the conduit path from panel to parking spot.
- 021–5 business days
Permit pulled
Licensed installer files an electrical permit with the local AHJ. Most cities now have an EV-charger fast-track.
- 03Same-day to 2 weeks
Service / panel verification
If service is ≤100A or the panel is full, the install adds a sub-panel, load-management module, or a 200A service upgrade.
- 042–6 hours
Conduit & wire run
Copper THHN sized for continuous load (125%) is pulled in EMT, PVC, or fished through walls per the AHJ.
- 051–2 hours
EVSE mount & commissioning
Charger is mounted, terminated, and commissioned over Wi-Fi (Tesla, ChargePoint, Wallbox) with the correct current setting.
- 061–7 business days
Inspection + utility notice
AHJ signs off; some utilities require an EV-charger notification for time-of-use rates or load-control programs.
Permits & inspections in North Carolina
Every EV charger over 16A needs a permit. Here's what gets inspected.
North Carolina permitting
- NEC cycle
- 2020 NEC via NC State Building Code
- Permit notes
- NC Board of Examiners of Electrical Contractors — Limited / Intermediate / Unlimited classifications.
- Inspection
- Rough-in, service, and final; coastal counties have wind-zone overlays.
EV-specific code (NEC 625)
- ›NEC Article 625 governs EVSE — dedicated branch circuit, no shared loads.
- ›Continuous-load sizing: breaker + wire at 125% of charger amps (e.g. 48A charger → 60A circuit).
- ›GFCI required for receptacle (NEMA 14-50) installs; hardwired Wall Connectors are exempt.
- ›Service ≤100A almost always requires a load-management device or a 200A upgrade.
- ›EVSE must be UL-listed (UL 2594 / 2231) and installed per manufacturer instructions for warranty.
EV charger rebates & incentives in North Carolina
Stackable federal, state, and utility programs your installer can paperwork.
Federal §30C Alternative Fuel Credit
Available for installs in eligible low-income or non-urban census tracts through 2032. Filed with IRS Form 8911.
Utility programs
| Program | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Duke Energy Park & Plug NC | Up to $5,000 per port | Workplace, MUD, and public Level 2 grants. |
Programs change frequently. Verify current eligibility at DOE AFDC before filing.
Verified Tesla installers serving Raleigh, NC
Licensed, insured, and manufacturer-trained on Tesla Charger hardware.
Other EV Charging brands in Raleigh
More brand-certified installers
Tesla Charger installers in nearby North Carolina cities
Tesla FAQ
+Wall Connector vs Mobile Connector — which should I install in Raleigh, NC?
The Wall Connector is the right pick for daily home charging in Raleigh, NC — faster (up to 48A), supports load sharing, and is Wi-Fi commissioned. The Mobile Connector is portable but limited to 32A on a NEMA 14-50.
+Does Tesla require a certified installer in Raleigh, NC?
For warranty coverage and (in many cases) rebate paperwork, Tesla expects a manufacturer-trained licensed electrician. Listings on this page are filtered for Raleigh, NC pros who meet that bar.
+How is the Tesla certification verified in Raleigh, NC?
Every Raleigh, NC contractor listed here holds an active state electrical license + has documented Tesla installer training. We re-verify both annually.