EV Charger Installation Costs: What Drives the Price — Cable Run, Consumer Unit Upgrade, DNO Works

Quick Answer: A standard domestic EV chargepoint installation costs £800–£1,400 including the chargepoint hardware and a straightforward cable run of up to 10m. The main cost drivers are cable run distance, consumer unit condition (upgrading an old fuse board adds £400–£600), PME earthing treatment (TT electrode adds £200–£400), and any groundworks for underground cable runs. OZEV grants (where applicable) can reduce net cost by £350. Always survey before quoting — hidden costs are common.

Summary

EV charger installation pricing varies enormously between a simple job (modern consumer unit, short cable run, no PME issues) and a complex one (long underground run, old fuse board, difficult parking location). Electricians who quote flat rates without surveying risk either losing profitable work or underpricing jobs that cost them money.

This article breaks down the cost components of a domestic EV chargepoint installation, explains what drives each cost, and provides guidance for building accurate quotes for customers.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: Domestic EV Chargepoint Cost Components

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Component Low High Notes
Chargepoint hardware (7.4kW smart) £450 £900 Varies by brand; tethered vs socketed
RCBO (32A Type B) £25 £60 Consumer unit way required
6mm² cable (per metre) £2 £4 Plus labour to install
Labour: standard install (to 10m) £250 £400 Basic wall-to-wall run
Consumer unit upgrade £400 £800 If required
PME TT electrode £200 £400 If required
Underground duct (per metre) £15 £30 Soft ground; more for hard surfaces
Post/bollard mount £150 £400 Parking space away from wall
OZEV grant offset -£350 -£350 Where applicable

Detailed Guidance

What a Standard Installation Covers

A "standard" EV chargepoint installation assumes:

This scenario allows an experienced electrician to complete the job in 3–5 hours. The EIC, commissioning, and handover are included in the day rate.

Cable Run: The Key Variable

For many domestic installations, the cable run is the single biggest variable in the job cost. Factors that increase cable run cost:

Distance: A 6mm² two-core-and-earth cable at £2.50/m costs only £25 for a 10m run — but labour to clip, chase, or duct it adds £10–£20/m. A 30m run adds £300–£450 in cable and fixing, before any surface work.

Indoor route: If the cable must run through a loft, along a corridor, under floorboards, or through multiple rooms to reach the parking location, this dramatically increases time. Allow additional hours for each room traversal or floor crossing.

External route: Surface-clipped on masonry is fast. Chased into a rendered or painted wall requires filling, and potentially redecoration — flag this to the customer upfront.

Underground: Where the cable must cross a garden, driveway, or path, it goes underground in duct (minimum 600mm deep under pathways; 500mm under non-trafficked garden — see BS 7671 Table 52.2). Excavation, duct laying, cable pulling, backfill, and reinstatement add £15–£30/m for soft ground. Double or triple this for tarmac, concrete, or block paving.

Overhead: An overhead cable run between buildings (e.g., from house to garage) must comply with the minimum height clearances in BS 7671 (not less than 3.5m above driveways; 5.2m above roads). Catenary wire suspension is required for unsupported spans over ~3m. These runs are often neater as underground but can be faster for short distances.

Consumer Unit Assessment

The consumer unit must be assessed during the site survey:

Consumer unit location: A consumer unit in a garage adjacent to the parking space is ideal. One at the back of the house, with the parking at the front, means a long cable run. Assess during survey.

PME Earthing Cost

Under BS 7671 Chapter 722, an EV chargepoint on a PME (TN-C-S) supply cannot be earthed directly to the PME earth without additional protection, because a PEN conductor fault could make the EV body live. Options:

  1. TT earth electrode — install a driven earth rod at the chargepoint; connect the chargepoint earth to this rod only. Cost: £200–£400 (electrode, clamps, connection, earth resistance test). This is the most common approach on domestic installs.
  2. PEN fault detection — a chargepoint with built-in PEN fault detection (some Andersen, Easee, and other brands) detects a PEN fault and disconnects the chargepoint automatically. More expensive chargepoint hardware but no electrode required. Cost difference built into chargepoint price.
  3. Isolating transformer — rare for domestic; expensive.

Most OZEV-approved chargepoints specify which PME earthing solution they support. Check the chargepoint spec before specifying.

Building an Accurate Quote

A reliable EV charging quote process:

  1. Site survey — do not quote without visiting. Check: consumer unit location and spare ways; cable route from board to parking; PME earthing type; cable run distance; surface types; parking space to wall distance
  2. Materials take-off — price the cable, RCBO, earthing components, conduit, fixings, post (if needed), and the chargepoint itself at your supplier cost + margin
  3. Labour hours — estimate time for: consumer unit work; cable run installation (per metre, by surface type); chargepoint fixing and connection; earthing; testing and commissioning; handover
  4. Fixed items — EIC, OZEV claim administration, travel
  5. Contingency — for residential installs with uncertain cable routes, 10–15% contingency is prudent
  6. OZEV grant — deduct £350 if the job qualifies; advise the customer of the net price

Worked example:

When to Walk Away from a Job

Some EV chargepoint jobs are not profitable at market rates. Be alert to:

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I include the OZEV grant offset in my quote automatically?

Yes — present the customer with both the gross cost and the net cost after the OZEV grant. Most customers are unaware of the grant. Telling them about the £350 saving builds trust and differentiates you from less knowledgeable competitors. Note: the grant applies to qualifying residential and commercial premises; confirm eligibility at survey.

Is it worth upgrading a consumer unit for EV charging?

The decision depends on the age and condition of the existing board. A consumer unit already scheduled for replacement (e.g., old rewirable fuse board, failing RCDs) should be upgraded as part of the EV job. If the existing board is a modern, compliant unit with one spare way, adding the RCBO is far cheaper than a full replacement. However, if the customer has other electrical work planned, bundling the consumer unit upgrade makes sense.

How do I price for a job where the cable has to go underground through a concrete driveway?

Core-and-cut through concrete is the most expensive reinstatement: hire of a disc cutter or core drill, cutting the slot, installing duct, backfilling with mortar, and making good the surface. Expect £50–£120/m for the reinstatement alone, plus the cable and duct cost. This is a significant cost — advise the customer upfront and consider whether a surface-mounted run (in steel conduit on the side of the driveway) might be more cost-effective.

Regulations & Standards