Electrical Panel Requirements for Home EV Charger Installation
Installing a Level 2 EV charger at home in Canada requires a dedicated 240V circuit and sufficient panel capacity to support it alongside existing household loads. Understanding what your electrical panel can handle — and what it cannot — determines whether a straightforward installation is possible or whether additional work will be needed first.
Service Size: The Starting Point
The electrical service entering a Canadian home determines the total power available across all circuits. Service size is expressed in amperes at 240 volts — the most common residential configurations are 100-amp and 200-amp service.
Older Canadian homes, particularly those built before the 1980s, may have 60-amp service. This capacity is insufficient for a Level 2 charger installation without a service upgrade and is also undersized for the electrical load of modern households generally.
100-amp service
A 100-amp panel at 240V represents 24,000 watts (24 kW) of theoretical maximum capacity. In practice, the Canadian Electrical Code (CEC) requires that service conductors be sized for the calculated connected load. For a typical household already running an electric range, electric water heater, and other 240V appliances, a 100-amp panel may have limited remaining headroom for a Level 2 charger.
An electrician performing a load calculation according to CEC Section 8 will determine whether a 100-amp panel can accommodate the additional circuit. In many cases, a 40-amp circuit (for a 32-amp-rated charger) can fit within a 100-amp service — but this depends on the specific household loads already present.
200-amp service
A 200-amp service provides substantially more capacity and is the standard for new residential construction in Canada. Most 200-amp panels can accommodate a Level 2 charger circuit without any upgrade to the service entrance. The electrician's load calculation will confirm available capacity and identify whether any load management accommodations are needed.
The Dedicated Circuit Requirement
A Level 2 EVSE must be on a dedicated circuit — one that serves no other loads. The Canadian Electrical Code and EVSE manufacturers both require this. The circuit breaker size depends on the charger's amperage rating:
| Charger output | Circuit breaker required | Wire size (copper) | Power delivered |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16A (3.8 kW) | 20A double-pole | 12 AWG | ~3.8 kW |
| 24A (5.8 kW) | 30A double-pole | 10 AWG | ~5.8 kW |
| 32A (7.7 kW) | 40A double-pole | 8 AWG | ~7.7 kW |
| 40A (9.6 kW) | 50A double-pole | 6 AWG | ~9.6 kW |
| 48A (11.5 kW) | 60A double-pole | 4 AWG | ~11.5 kW |
The CEC requires that continuous loads — including EV chargers, which are classified as continuous because they may operate for more than three hours — be sized at 125% of the load. This means a 32A charger requires a 40A breaker (32 × 1.25 = 40A), and a 40A charger requires a 50A breaker.
Load Calculation Under the CEC
Before an electrician installs a Level 2 charger, they must perform a load calculation for the dwelling to ensure the existing service can support the additional circuit. The CEC Section 8 provides the methodology for residential load calculations in Canada.
The calculation considers:
- Heating load (electric furnace, baseboard heaters, or heat pump)
- Air conditioning load (if present)
- Electric water heater, electric range, electric dryer
- Lighting and general-purpose outlet circuits (calculated as a demand factor)
- Other large fixed appliances
- The proposed EV charger circuit
If the total calculated demand exceeds the service rating, one of three outcomes follows: the charger circuit is not feasible at the desired amperage, a smart load management device is installed to limit charger current during peak household consumption, or the electrical service is upgraded.
Smart load management as an alternative to upgrading
Several EVSE manufacturers offer units with built-in load management that monitors total household current draw via a CT (current transformer) sensor installed in the panel. When household demand rises — during oven use, for example — the charger automatically reduces its draw to keep total consumption within panel limits. This can allow a Level 2 charger to be installed on a 100-amp panel without a panel upgrade in many situations.
Panel Space: Breaker Slots
A double-pole 40A or 50A breaker requires two adjacent slots in the panel. Older panels with tandem (slim) breakers already filling all slots may not have physical space available. An electrician will assess whether existing circuits can be reorganized, whether a tandem breaker is acceptable in a given location, or whether a subpanel is the appropriate solution.
A subpanel mounted in or near the garage is a common solution when the main panel is at capacity or distant from the parking area. The subpanel receives a feed from the main panel and distributes power locally, including the dedicated EVSE circuit.
Wiring Run Distance and Conduit
Longer wiring runs require attention to voltage drop. The CEC recommends limiting voltage drop to 3% for branch circuits. For a 40A, 240V circuit, this constrains the maximum run length for a given wire gauge. An electrician will size the wire appropriately for the run distance.
Wiring in a finished basement or through walls typically requires conduit or armoured cable (AC90 or TECK cable in Canada). Outdoor runs and buried conduit for detached garages add to project scope and cost.
Permit and Inspection Requirements by Province
A Level 2 charger installation in Canada requires an electrical permit in virtually all provinces. The permit is issued before work begins and requires a final inspection upon completion.
| Province | Electrical authority | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Electrical Safety Authority (ESA) | Permit required; inspection mandatory |
| British Columbia | BC Safety Authority (BCSA) | Permit required; ESA certification for EVSE equipment |
| Alberta | Safety Codes Council | Permit required through municipality |
| Quebec | Régie du bâtiment du Québec (RBQ) | License and permit required; contractor must hold RBQ licence |
| Manitoba | Office of the Fire Commissioner | Permit required |
| Saskatchewan | TSASK (Technical Safety Authority of Saskatchewan) | Permit required |
| Nova Scotia | Technical Safety Division | Permit required |
Service Upgrade: When It Is Necessary
A full service upgrade from 100A to 200A typically costs between $2,500 and $6,000 CAD, depending on the extent of the utility connection work, whether a new meter socket is required, and regional labour rates. This work requires coordination with the local utility, which must disconnect and reconnect power at the service entrance.
Not every 100-amp household requires an upgrade to accommodate an EV charger. An electrician's load calculation is the definitive way to assess whether available capacity exists or whether an upgrade is the appropriate path.
Condominium and Multi-Unit Residential Considerations
Installing EV charging in a condominium or multi-unit building involves additional complexity: approval from the strata or condo corporation, metering arrangements, and access to electrical rooms. Several provinces have introduced legislation requiring strata corporations to consider EV charging requests from unit owners, including British Columbia under the Strata Property Act and Ontario under the Condominium Act. The specifics of these requirements continue to evolve and should be confirmed with current provincial legislation or a legal professional.