EV Chargers in Tasmania

Home EV chargers in Tasmania, a complete guide

A dedicated home charger is the easiest and cheapest way to keep an electric vehicle topped up. This is an in-depth, no-jargon guide to home EV charging in Tasmania: how it works, what it costs, why pairing it with solar is smart, and how to get it installed properly.

  • Independent and Tasmania-focused
  • No jargon
  • Licensed installers

The short answer

A dedicated home EV charger lets you charge an electric vehicle far faster than the basic cable that comes with the car, usually overnight, ready each morning. In Tasmania, a typical single-phase home charger costs in the region of $1,500 to $3,000 fully installed, depending on your switchboard, your power supply and the cabling involved. Pairing the charger with rooftop solar is the real prize: it lets you charge the car on your own daytime solar power rather than buying it from the grid. Installation must be carried out by a licensed electrician.

How it works

How home EV charging works

Charging an electric vehicle at home is straightforward, but it helps to understand the three levels of charging, because the difference between them is large.

Level 1

The portable cable

Every EV comes with a portable charging cable that plugs into a normal household power point, the same 240 volt, 10 amp socket you would use for a kettle. Often called a granny charger. It works, but it is slow, typically adding only a small amount of range per hour. Fine as a backup or for a plug-in hybrid, frustrating as your only option for a full electric car.

Level 2

The dedicated home charger

A Level 2 charger is a wall-mounted unit wired in by an electrician. This is what most people mean by a home EV charger. It charges several times faster than the portable cable, comfortably topping up a car overnight. This is the right choice for a home with a full electric vehicle, and the focus of this guide.

Level 3

Public fast charging

Level 3, or DC fast charging, is the very high powered charging you find at public stations. It needs commercial-grade electrical infrastructure and is not installed at homes. You use Level 3 on long trips, not in your driveway.

For a Tasmanian home with an electric car, a Level 2 wall charger is almost always the sensible choice. Home charging handles the large majority of a typical driver's needs, with public fast charging kept for longer journeys.

Choosing a charger

Single-phase or three-phase, and charger speed

Home chargers come in different power ratings, and which one suits you depends partly on your home's electricity supply.

01

Single-phase chargers

Most Tasmanian homes have a single-phase power supply. A single-phase home charger, commonly rated around 7kW, suits these homes and charges fast enough to fully top up a car overnight. For the majority of households this is all that is needed.

02

Three-phase chargers

If your home has a three-phase supply, a three-phase charger, often rated up to around 22kW, can charge considerably faster. Note that not every car can accept the full three-phase speed, it depends on the vehicle. If you already have three-phase power, it can be worth future-proofing with a three-phase charger.

03

Smart and solar-aware chargers

Many modern chargers are smart units. They can be scheduled, app controlled, and importantly some can be set to charge from surplus solar power. If you have solar, or plan to, a solar-aware charger is worth serious consideration. More on that below.

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Worth knowing. A bigger, faster charger is not automatically better. For most homes that charge overnight, a single-phase 7kW charger fully replenishes a car by morning. Pay for speed only if your driving genuinely needs it.
The solar advantage

Charging your EV from your own solar

This is where a home EV charger and rooftop solar work powerfully together, and it is the single best reason to think about them as one project rather than two.

An electric car is a large electricity user. Charge it from the grid and you pay the standard rate for every unit of power. Charge it from your own rooftop solar during the day and that power is effectively coming from your roof at a far lower cost. For a household with solar, the car becomes one of the best things you can point your daytime generation at.

A solar-aware charger takes this further. It can be set to charge the car using surplus solar power, the power that would otherwise be exported to the grid for a modest feed-in credit. Instead of exporting that surplus cheaply, you put it straight into the car. In Tasmania, where using your own solar is worth considerably more than the feed-in tariff paid for exporting it, this is a genuine saving.

Cheaper kilometres

Power from your own roof costs far less than grid power, so every kilometre driven on solar is cheaper.

Uses your surplus

A solar-aware charger soaks up daytime solar you would otherwise export cheaply, putting it to better use.

One coordinated install

Planning solar, and a battery, and an EV charger together means the system is sized and wired as a whole.

Pairs with a battery

With a battery too, you can charge the car from stored solar in the evening, not only during daylight.

If you are considering both solar and an EV charger, getting them quoted together is the smart move. The system can be designed so your car runs, as much as possible, on your own power.

What it costs

What a home EV charger costs in Tasmania

As with solar, there is no single price, because the install varies by home. But the cost breaks into two clear parts: the charger hardware, and the installation.

Item
Typical range
Charger hardware
Roughly $700 to $1,500, depending on brand, power rating and smart features such as solar-aware charging.
Installation
Varies with switchboard condition, the cable run from switchboard to charger, and whether any supply or switchboard upgrade is needed.
Single-phase 7kW, fully installed
Commonly in the region of $1,500 to $3,000 all up, hardware plus installation.
Three-phase 22kW, fully installed
Higher, commonly around $2,500 to $4,500, reflecting the faster unit and more involved wiring.

Cost ranges are indicative and based on current Australian market figures, checked May 2026. Your actual price depends on your property. A site assessment and quote give the real number.

The biggest swing factor is your switchboard and cabling. A charger installed close to a modern switchboard with spare capacity is at the lower end. A long cable run, or an older switchboard that needs work, pushes the cost up. This is exactly why a quote based on your actual home matters more than any headline figure.

The installation

What is involved in installing a home charger

A home EV charger is a fixed piece of electrical equipment, so the installation is a proper electrical job, not a DIY task.

01

Site assessment

An electrician checks your switchboard, your supply, and where the charger would go. This is when the real cost of your install becomes clear, and it is why a quote is based on a look at your property.

02

Switchboard and supply check

The switchboard must be able to handle the extra load safely. Older boards sometimes need an upgrade, and that affects cost. The electrician confirms whether your supply suits the charger you want.

03

Mounting and cabling

The charger is mounted, usually on a wall near where you park, and cabling is run from the switchboard. A longer or more awkward cable run adds to the cost.

04

Testing and handover

The electrician tests the installation, confirms it is safe and compliant, and shows you how to use the charger, including any smart or solar features.

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This is electrician-only work. Australian electrical rules require fixed electrical installations, which a hardwired EV charger is, to be carried out by a licensed electrician. A home charger should never be a DIY job.
Support and incentives

Are there rebates for EV chargers in Tasmania?

It is worth being clear and honest about this, because the picture has changed and out-of-date information is common online.

As things stand, Tasmania does not have an open state rebate or loan scheme specifically for home EV chargers. The Tasmanian interest-free Energy Saver Loan Scheme, which had previously been able to cover EV charger installation, closed in September 2025 once its funding was exhausted. Tasmania's earlier electric vehicle purchase rebate has also closed.

At the federal level, the main support around electric vehicles is a fringe benefits tax exemption that can apply when an eligible electric vehicle is financed through a novated lease. That is a vehicle tax measure rather than a subsidy on the charger itself, and whether it helps you depends entirely on your circumstances. Government programs in this area change, so it is always worth checking the current position.

Last checked: May 2026. EV and charger incentives change. If you are reading this later, confirm the current position before relying on it.

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The honest takeaway. Do not count on a Tasmanian rebate to fund a home charger. Budget for the real installed cost, and treat any incentive that does apply to your situation as a bonus.

Quote solar and an EV charger together

Planning both? A single quote can cover solar, a battery and an EV charger, designed to work as one system.

Get a solar and EV charger quote
Getting it right

How to get a good EV charger install

A few practical points help you end up with a charger that suits your home and your driving.

Get a site assessment

A real quote follows a look at your switchboard and parking spot. That is what makes the price accurate.

Think about solar now

If solar is on your horizon, mention it. A solar-aware charger and coordinated wiring are easier to plan upfront.

Match the charger to your car

There is no point paying for three-phase speed your vehicle cannot use. Size the charger to your actual car and driving.

Use a licensed installer

It is a legal requirement and a safety one. The installer should test and certify the job on completion.

Common questions

Tasmania EV charger FAQ

How much does a home EV charger cost in Tasmania?

A single-phase 7kW home charger is commonly in the region of $1,500 to $3,000 fully installed, and a faster three-phase 22kW unit around $2,500 to $4,500. The charger hardware itself is roughly $700 to $1,500. Your final price depends on your switchboard, your supply and the cabling, so a site assessment and quote give the real number.

Do I need a special charger, or can I use a normal power point?

You can use the portable cable that comes with the car in a normal 240 volt power point, but it charges slowly. A dedicated Level 2 wall charger charges several times faster and comfortably tops a car up overnight. For a full electric vehicle, a dedicated home charger is strongly recommended.

Can I charge my EV from my solar panels?

Yes. A solar-aware charger can be set to charge the car using surplus solar power generated during the day. Because using your own solar is worth more than the feed-in tariff paid for exporting it, charging the car from your roof is one of the best uses of your daytime solar. With a battery, you can also charge from stored solar in the evening.

Are there rebates for EV chargers in Tasmania?

As at May 2026, Tasmania does not have an open state rebate or loan scheme specifically for home EV chargers. The interest-free Energy Saver Loan Scheme, which previously could cover chargers, closed in September 2025. Government programs change, so check the current position, but it is wise to budget for the full installed cost.

Can I install an EV charger myself?

No. A hardwired home EV charger is a fixed electrical installation, and Australian electrical rules require this work to be done by a licensed electrician. DIY installation is not permitted and is unsafe. Always use a licensed installer who tests and certifies the job.

Set your Tasmanian home up for an EV

You know how home charging works and where it pairs with solar. Get a quote for your property.

Get a solar and EV charger quote