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EV Charging · Multi-Unit Dwellings

EV Charger in an Apartment? Complete 2026 Guide

Can you install an EV charger at your apartment? The short answer is maybe — it depends on your building’s electrical capacity, body corporate (HOA) rules, insurance policies, and your ability to meter separately. This guide walks through every obstacle, workaround, and the exact steps to get approval (or find a solid alternative).

February 10, 2026 9 min read Team Gridsync Multi‑Unit Dwellings
HOA/BC
First Hurdle
2‑12 mo
Approval timeline
Insurance
Wild card
10A outlet
Start small

So you’re thinking about getting an electric vehicle, but you live in an apartment. The big question keeping you up at night: can you actually charge the thing at home, or are you going to be that person camping out at public charging stations every week?

Let’s cut through the confusion. Installing an EV charger in an apartment isn’t impossible, but it’s definitely not as simple as owning a house where you can just slap a charger on your garage wall and call it a day. The real answer is: it depends on your building, your body corporate, and honestly, a bit of luck.

SECTION 1

The Body Corporate Hurdle

Here’s the thing nobody tells you until you’re already excited about your new EV: your body corporate (or homeowners association, depending on where you are) has a lot of say in this. And I mean a lot.

Some buildings are totally cool with EV chargers. Others? Not so much. I’ve seen cases where body corporates have explicitly banned EV charging in their insurance policies. Yes, you read that right – the insurance won’t cover it. One apartment owner shared that their commercial insurance explicitly states “no electric vehicle charging inside the buildings” – and that includes scooters, bikes, and cars.

The reason? Insurance companies are still figuring out how to handle EVs in multi-unit dwellings. Some won’t touch it, period. Others will, but the building needs proper infrastructure first. For a deeper look at what infrastructure entails, see our electrical service upgrade cost breakdown and 200‑amp service guide.

Insurance reality check

Always ask your body corporate for a copy of the building’s insurance policy. If it explicitly excludes EV charging, you cannot install a charger without risking the entire building’s coverage.

SECTION 2

The Metering Nightmare

Even if your body corporate says yes, there’s another fun challenge: how do you actually pay for the electricity you use?

Think about it. Your electricity meter is in your apartment unit. Your parking space is in the basement. Those two things aren’t connected. One apartment dweller spent years going back and forth with their body corporate just to get regular wall outlets installed in the carpark – and that was only approved because they agreed to install separate meters so the building could bill them properly.

Getting the wiring from your apartment’s electrical panel down to your parking space can be expensive, complicated, and sometimes physically impossible depending on how the building is set up. Some buildings just don’t have the electrical capacity to support multiple EV chargers without major upgrades — exactly the kind of project covered in our 400‑amp panel upgrade and service upgrade cost articles.

Submetering is the key

If your building allows charging, they’ll likely require a submeter or a third-party billing system so you pay for exactly what you use. This is exactly how many ADU electrical setups handle separate metering.

SECTION 3

Your Best Bet: Start with a Simple Power Point

Here’s some practical advice from folks who’ve been through this: don’t ask for a fancy fast charger right away. Start small.

Request a standard 10-amp wall outlet at your parking space instead. It’s less intimidating for the body corporate, cheaper to install, and honestly, it might be all you need. If you’re driving less than 100km a day (which most people are), a regular outlet can top you up overnight just fine.

This approach has worked for several apartment dwellers who found their buildings resistant to dedicated charging stations. It’s the foot-in-the-door strategy, and it works. For a complete guide on proper installation, see how to install an EV charger (the principles apply even for basic outlets).

Pro tip

A 10‑amp outlet gives you about 2.3 kW – enough for 10‑15 km of range per hour. For most commuters, that’s plenty.

SECTION 4

When Installation Actually Works

I don’t want to make this sound impossible, because it’s not. Some buildings are getting it right.

There are body corporates that have installed full charging infrastructure for their residents. The setup usually works like this: the building installs the main electrical infrastructure, then individual owners can pay to have a charger installed at their specific parking space. A third-party company handles the billing, so each owner only pays for the electricity they actually use.

Fair warning though: this isn’t cheap for anyone involved. One building owner mentioned paying extra levies for five years to cover the infrastructure installation. But once it’s done, it’s done, and it benefits the entire building long-term. This kind of project often requires a 200‑amp panel upgrade or even a full service upgrade to handle the load.

🔌 Individual
Owner‑initiated
  • Single parking space outlet
  • Submeter or fixed fee arrangement
  • Requires spare capacity
  • Often easier to approve
SECTION 5

What About Those Power Companies?

Here’s something interesting: some electricity providers have programs that might save you from all this hassle. Genesis, for example, offers a plan where you can use ChargeNet public chargers at your domestic electricity rate – around 25 cents per kWh instead of the premium public charging prices.

Is it as convenient as charging at home? No. But is it workable? Absolutely. You fast-charge when you need to, pay a reasonable rate, and skip the whole body corporate battle entirely. Check out our battery storage installation and generator installation guides for other ways to manage energy independence.

Utility EV‑specific tariffs

Many utilities now offer special rates for EV charging. If you can’t charge at home, these programs (like Genesis’s) make public charging much more affordable.

SECTION 6

The Insurance Wild Card

Remember how I mentioned insurance earlier? This deserves its own section because it can be a complete dealbreaker.

Some buildings have insurance policies that flat-out prohibit EV charging. And when the entire building’s insurance depends on following those rules, the body corporate isn’t going to budge – they literally can’t without risking the whole building’s coverage.

Before you get too deep into planning your charger installation, ask your body corporate about their insurance policy. It might save you months of wasted effort. For a broader view of what’s involved in backup power, see home backup generator installers – the same insurance considerations often apply.

Insurance exclusion

Policy explicitly bans EV charging. No negotiation possible without changing the whole building’s insurance.

Lack of infrastructure

Insurance may require certified electrical upgrades before they’ll cover chargers. See fuse box to breaker panel upgrades.

Strata liability

The body corporate can be held liable if a charger causes a fire – hence their extreme caution.

Smart panel solutions

Smart panels can monitor and limit EV load, satisfying insurers.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

QDo I need to own my apartment to install a charger, or can renters do it too?
You’ll almost certainly need the property owner’s permission first, and then you’ll still need body corporate approval. As a renter, your best bet is to ask the landlord to handle the body corporate negotiations. But honestly, most renters find it easier to rely on workplace charging or public chargers. Check our commercial vs residential electricians guide for who you’d need to hire.
QHow long does the approval process take?
Anywhere from a few months to years. Seriously. One person mentioned years of back-and-forth just for basic outlets. If your building has never dealt with this before, you’re blazing a new trail, and that takes time. The smart panel installation process can sometimes streamline approval.
QCan’t I just use a regular extension cord from my apartment?
Please don’t. Running a cable from your apartment to your parking space is a safety hazard, a tripping hazard, and probably against your building’s rules anyway. Plus, most EV charging cables aren’t designed to be daisy-chained with extension cords. Read our electrical wiring standards for why this is dangerous.
QWhat if my building says no?
You’ve got options. You can charge at work if your employer offers it. You can use public chargers strategically – hit them while you’re grocery shopping or running errands. Or you can look into those special electricity plans that make public charging more affordable. Generator transfer switches are another backup path, but not for daily charging.
QIs an EV still worth it without home charging?
This is personal. Home charging is definitely one of the big perks of EV ownership, but it’s not the only one. If you’ve got reliable charging at work or convenient public chargers near you, it can still work. Just be honest with yourself about whether you’ll actually stick with that routine long-term. Our smart home energy use article can help you think about overall consumption.
THE BOTTOM LINE

Can you install an EV charger at your apartment? Maybe.

Here’s my advice: before you sign any papers on that shiny new electric vehicle, have the charging conversation with your body corporate. Get an electrician to assess what’s actually possible in your building. Understand what your insurance allows. Know your costs upfront.

If your building is resistant, explore your alternatives: workplace charging, public chargers, special electricity plans. Make sure you’re comfortable with whatever backup plan you’ll need.

And if your building is open to it? Jump on that opportunity, but be patient with the process. Good things come to those who wait – and who don’t mind a few body corporate meetings.

The EV charging situation in apartments is getting better as more people push for it and buildings modernize their infrastructure. You might be the person who helps your building make that leap. Or you might be the person who decides to wait until they move somewhere with a garage. Either choice is valid.

Just don’t be the person who buys an EV first and figures out the charging later. Trust me on this one.

GridSync • Multi‑Unit EV Solutions

We help apartment buildings and HOAs get EV‑ready

From EV charger installation in San Francisco to full panel upgrades and smart home integration, GridSync works with building owners, strata committees, and individual owners to navigate approvals, metering, and infrastructure. We also support ADU electrical design and solar + storage.

Feasibility studyLoad calculations & panel capacity — see our 200A upgrade guide
Submetering designBilling solutions so you pay only for your usage
Insurance coordinationWe work with your building’s insurer to address EV exclusions
Smart load managementUsing smart panel devices to avoid costly main upgrades

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Whether you’re an owner, renter, or strata manager, we’ll guide you through the technical, legal, and insurance maze. Serving San Francisco, Menlo Park, Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Altos, and the Peninsula.

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More resources: PG&E San Francisco · PG&E Menlo Park · PG&E Mountain View · PG&E Los Altos