Setting up home EV charging in India costs most people between ₹15,000 and ₹35,000 all-in, and once it’s done you’ll pay roughly ₹6–9 per unit of electricity — which works out to about ₹1.5 per km. That’s the single biggest reason an EV is cheaper to run than petrol, CNG or even a hybrid. Here’s exactly what you pay, what you need, and whether it’s worth it for your situation.
- What home charging actually costs to set up
- The running cost that makes it worth it
- Living in an apartment? You have the right to charge
- The setup, step by step
- So, is it worth it?
- Frequently asked questions
- How much does it cost to install an EV charger at home in India?
- How much does it cost to charge an EV at home per km?
- Can my apartment society stop me from installing a charger?
- The bottom line
- Related reading
What home charging actually costs to set up

Your total depends on which charger you pick and how far your parking is from the meter.
| Item | Typical cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 3.3 kW portable charger | Free with most EVs | ₹8,000–12,000 if bought separately |
| 7.2 kW wall-box (basic) | ₹35,000–45,000 | Tata Power EZ, Statiq, Exicom |
| 7.2 kW wall-box (smart) | ₹45,000–65,000 | App-enabled, scheduling, load balancing |
| MCB + RCCB (Type B) | ₹2,500–4,500 | Mandatory safety gear |
| Copper armoured cable | ₹180–260 / metre | ~₹3,000 for a 15 m run |
| Earthing pit | ₹3,000–6,000 | Mandatory |
| Electrician + conduit | ₹2,000–5,000 | 4–6 hours of work |
If you only use the bundled 3.3 kW charger, your real outlay can be as low as ₹3,000–5,000 for a dedicated socket and earthing. Most owners eventually upgrade to a 7.2 kW wall-box because it charges roughly twice as fast — useful when you forget to plug in overnight.
The running cost that makes it worth it
Domestic electricity for EV charging typically lands at ₹5–10 per kWh, and around ₹6–9 in most states after slab rates. A car that uses about 15 kWh per 100 km therefore costs roughly ₹100–135 to travel 100 km — versus around ₹700 for a petrol car covering the same distance. Over 1,500 km a month, that’s the difference between paying about ₹2,250 and ₹10,000+.
That gap is also why public fast charging changes the equation. At ₹18–24 per unit on DC fast chargers, your per-km cost jumps two to three times. Home charging is the foundation of EV economics; lose it, and much of the saving goes with it.
Living in an apartment? You have the right to charge
This stops a lot of buyers, and it shouldn’t. Under the Ministry of Power’s revised EV charging guidelines and the Model Building Bye-Laws, your RWA cannot legally refuse an EV charger in your allotted parking, provided you bear the cost and the work is done by a certified electrician. In practice, get written approval, use a sub-meter so your usage is billed to you, and choose a smart wall-box that lets you cap the load so you don’t trip the building supply.
The setup, step by step
- Check your sanctioned load. A 7.2 kW charger needs headroom; you may need a load upgrade from your DISCOM.
- Pick the charger. 3.3 kW if you drive little and park overnight; 7.2 kW if you want faster, flexible top-ups.
- Use a certified installer. Tata Power, ChargeZone, Statiq and others handle the wiring, mounting and safety testing in about 4–6 hours.
- Insist on proper earthing and an RCCB. This is non-negotiable for safety with high-current charging.
So, is it worth it?
For anyone with a dedicated parking spot and a daily commute, yes — emphatically. The setup pays for itself within months through fuel savings, and overnight charging means you start every day with a full “tank.” If you can’t charge where you park, an EV becomes far less compelling, and a strong hybrid is usually the better buy instead.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to install an EV charger at home in India?
Most home installations cost ₹15,000–35,000 including a 7.2 kW wall-box, wiring, earthing and labour. Using the free 3.3 kW charger that comes with the car can cut this to ₹3,000–5,000 for a basic socket setup.
How much does it cost to charge an EV at home per km?
About ₹1.5 per km, based on ₹6–9 per unit of domestic electricity and typical EV efficiency. That’s roughly a quarter of the per-km cost of a petrol car.
Can my apartment society stop me from installing a charger?
No. As per the Ministry of Power’s guidelines, an RWA cannot refuse a charger in your allotted parking if you pay for it and use a certified electrician. A sub-meter ensures the electricity is billed to you.
The bottom line
Home charging is what turns an EV from “interesting” into “obviously cheaper.” Budget around ₹15,000–35,000 for a proper setup, confirm your electrical load first, and use a certified installer. Get that right and your fuel bill drops by roughly 75% for the life of the car.

