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Charging an electric vehicle at home is one of the most practical upgrades a driver can make. It is faster than public charging, more convenient, and often cheaper when paired with off-peak power. However, installing an EV charger is not just plug and play. It involves sustained high electrical loads, specialised equipment, and strict safety and compliance requirements that demand proper training and certification from the outset.
EV chargers place a continuous electrical load on a home’s electrical system for extended periods, often overnight. Unlike typical household appliances that draw power in short bursts, this sustained demand can stress circuits, wiring, and protective devices if the system has not been designed or upgraded to handle it safely.
Most homes were not originally designed for EV charging. A licensed electrician needs to assess the switchboard, confirm available capacity, and install a dedicated circuit specifically for the charger. The correct circuit protection also matters, including appropriately rated breakers and safety devices that respond properly under fault conditions. Without that design and assessment, circuits can become overloaded, wiring can overheat, and connections can deteriorate over time under repeated load. The risk is not only a charger that does not perform properly, but there is a higher chance of electrical faults that can damage property and create safety hazards.
EV charger installation is regulated because chargers operate at higher voltages and sustained electrical loads. Australian law requires this work to be completed by a licensed electrician to meet safety standards and electrical codes. These requirements are closely linked to warranties and insurance, and they can become a problem quickly if the installation is not certified.
Many vehicle manufacturers specify licensed installation as a condition of warranty coverage for batteries and charging systems. If a fault occurs and the charger was installed without certification, warranty claims can be refused, especially where charging-related damage is involved. Insurance can work the same way, noncompliant electrical work can invalidate cover, leaving homeowners exposed to repair costs or liability if damage occurs to the property, neighbouring property, or someone is injured.
Installing an EV charger without proper licensing introduces avoidable risks that often outweigh any upfront savings. The common issue is not just that the charger is wired in, but whether the circuit, relevant protection, and connections are designed for continuous high-load use and comply with safety rules.
These risks include:
Many of these problems do not appear immediately. They often develop over time as circuits operate beyond capacity, heat builds at weak connection points, or protection devices are incorrectly selected or installed.
Installing an EV charger is specialist electrical work that directly affects safety, compliance, warranties, and insurance. Cutting corners can turn a convenient home charging setup into an expensive fault-finding problem, or worse, a safety incident that should never have happened.
Perth Complete Electrical installs EV chargers with licensed electricians who assess switchboard capacity, install dedicated circuits, and complete the required testing and certification so the charger operates safely and meets the standards your warranty and insurance expect.
Choose professional installation and keep home EV charging safe, compliant, and dependable.
