EV Charging for Commercial Premises: Workplace, Retail and Fleet Installation

Quick Answer: Commercial EV charging installations differ from domestic in scale, load management complexity, and funding. Workplace chargepoints may qualify for the OZEV EV Infrastructure Grant (up to £350 per socket, capped). Fleet depots typically need three-phase supplies, multiple chargepoints, and a back-office management system. All commercial chargepoints must comply with the Smart Charge Points Regulations 2021 and BS 7671 Chapter 722. A site survey, load assessment, and DNO application are required for any installation above a few chargepoints.

Summary

Commercial EV charging covers a wide spectrum: a small business installing two chargepoints in a car park to a logistics depot installing 50 chargepoints for overnight fleet charging. The principles are the same as domestic — BS 7671 Chapter 722 compliance, smart charging, PME earthing resolution — but the scale adds complexity in supply capacity, load management, network connectivity, and commercial management.

For electricians, commercial EV charging is a significant revenue opportunity. A 10-chargepoint installation for a commercial car park is a medium-sized commercial electrical project. Skills required: load assessment, three-phase distribution, cable management, DNO engagement, and chargepoint network commissioning. Understanding the OZEV funding landscape is also valuable — clients often don't know what grants are available.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: Commercial EV Charging Scenarios

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Scenario Typical Power Chargepoints Key Consideration
Workplace staff parking (overnight) 7.4kW 2–20 Load management; OZEV grant
Retail car park (daytime use) 7.4–22kW 2–20 Fast enough to charge in visit duration; CPMS; payment
Fleet depot (overnight) 7.4–22kW 10–100+ DNO upgrade; load management; scheduled overnight charging
Hospitality (hotel, holiday let) 7.4–22kW 2–10 Guest-only access; billing integration; brand chargepoint
Public on-street / hub 50kW DC+ 2–10 DNO 3-phase high-power; wayleave; planning permission

Detailed Guidance

Site Survey for a Commercial Installation

A commercial site survey goes beyond domestic:

Supply capacity assessment:

Example: 100A three-phase supply = 100A × 400V × √3 = ~69kW total capacity. Standing load 20kW. Available headroom ~49kW. At 7.4kW per chargepoint, that supports ~6 simultaneous full-rate chargepoints; with load management, more chargepoints can be installed that share the headroom.

Physical routing:

Parking layout:

Load Management for Multiple Chargepoints

With 10+ chargepoints on a shared supply, dynamic load management is essential:

CT clamp gateway: A central gateway (e.g., Wallbox Commander, Schneider EVlink Pro, Zaptec Gateway) connects to CT clamps on the main incomer and to all chargepoints via Ethernet or Wi-Fi. It monitors total site load and allocates available current to each chargepoint in real time.

Allocation strategies:

Infrastructure sizing for load management: The cable from the distribution board to each chargepoint must still be sized for the maximum possible current to that chargepoint (32A per chargepoint even if load management will often reduce this), unless a sub-distribution board with a smaller fuse serves groups of chargepoints. Alternatively, a sub-board with a 63A or 100A three-phase feed can serve 6–12 chargepoints with load management, reducing the cable size required to each chargepoint from the main distribution board.

DNO Engagement

For commercial installations, DNO engagement is often required:

When to notify:

Application process (G99/G100 for generation; ENA framework for load): Most EV charging loads are "demand" (not generation), so G99/G100 technically doesn't apply. However, large EV loads may require a "demand increase application" via the DNO's standard connection process. Contact the DNO's connections team with the proposed load (kW, phases, address) and they will advise whether a formal application is required.

Supply upgrade: Where the existing supply is insufficient, the DNO will quote for an upgrade (new service cable from the nearest substation or transformer upgrade). This can cost £5,000–£50,000+ and take 6–18 months. Factor this into project timelines and budgets.

OCPP and Charge Point Management Systems

For any installation with public access, multi-user access, or billing requirements:

OCPP (Open Charge Point Protocol): Specify OCPP 1.6 or 2.0.1 compliant chargepoints. This allows the chargepoint to connect to any OCPP-compatible back-office system (CPMS). Avoid proprietary-only chargepoints that lock the customer into a single network operator.

CPMS selection: The CPMS provides:

Popular UK CPMS operators: Pod Point, BP Pulse, Osprey, Mer, EO, Zaptec. Many chargepoint manufacturers also offer their own CPMS (Wallbox, Schneider, ABB).

Payment compliance: From late 2024, new public charge points must offer contactless payment (bank card, contactless device) — this is a requirement under the UK EV Infrastructure Regulations. RFID-only or app-only chargepoints are not compliant for public installations.

OZEV EV Infrastructure Grant

Current OZEV guidance (verify as schemes evolve):

To claim:

  1. Customer confirms eligibility (business or public sector, UK address, off-street parking)
  2. Installer registers as OZEV-authorised (via the OZEV portal)
  3. Works completed; chargepoints from the OZEV approved list only
  4. Installer submits claim via OZEV portal with photos, receipts, and installation certificates

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a commercial EV chargepoint need planning permission?

In England, installing EV chargepoints in a commercial car park is generally Permitted Development under Schedule 2, Part 2, Class D of the GPDO (Town and Country (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015) — no planning permission required for most cases. Exceptions: listed buildings; conservation areas (check with the local planning authority); installations that materially alter the appearance of a building. Scotland and Wales have their own PD rules — confirm locally.

Can a commercial property use a domestic chargepoint?

Technically, a domestic chargepoint installed at commercial premises will work, but it is not eligible for OZEV commercial grants and may not have the OCPP connectivity or robust weatherproofing required for a shared or public-facing location. Specify commercial-grade units (IP54+ weatherproofing, OCPP support, metal or reinforced enclosures) for commercial sites.

What is PAS 1899 and does it apply?

PAS 1899:2022 is the BSI standard for EV charging infrastructure. It covers: chargepoint accessibility, labelling, safety clearances, and payment requirements. It is referenced by government guidance for publicly accessible chargepoints and is effectively the UK operational standard for public charging. For a private workplace installation (staff-only access), full PAS 1899 compliance is not mandatory but is good practice.

How long does a 10-chargepoint installation take?

For a typical commercial car park with a sub-distribution board serving 10 × 7.4kW chargepoints: 3–5 days for cable installation and board work; 1 day for chargepoint fitting and commissioning. Total typically 1 week. DNO supply upgrades, if needed, can add months.

Regulations & Standards