EV Charger Installers in Washington, D.C.
Find EV charger installers in Washington, D.C.. We've gathered 5 electricians and EV charging companies from across Washington, D.C. with their phone number, address, hours, and Google rating — so you can compare and reach out for quotes. With residential electricity averaging 17.7¢/kWh in Washington, D.C., a properly installed Level 2 charger lets you fill up at home for a fraction of public charging.
5 EV charger installers in Washington, D.C.
Spread across Washington, D.C. so there's likely one near you. Details from public Google Business Profiles — verify before hiring.
Precise Building Services
5.0(149)- MondayOpen 24 hours
- TuesdayOpen 24 hours
- WednesdayOpen 24 hours
- ThursdayOpen 24 hours
- FridayOpen 24 hours
- SaturdayOpen 24 hours
- SundayOpen 24 hours
Hours· tap to view
Johnson Electric Company, Inc.
4.8(144)- MondayOpen 24 hours
- TuesdayOpen 24 hours
- WednesdayOpen 24 hours
- ThursdayOpen 24 hours
- FridayOpen 24 hours
- SaturdayOpen 24 hours
- SundayOpen 24 hours
Hours· tap to view
Luis&James Electric LLC.
4.7(109)- MondayOpen 24 hours
- TuesdayOpen 24 hours
- WednesdayOpen 24 hours
- ThursdayOpen 24 hours
- FridayOpen 24 hours
- SaturdayOpen 24 hours
- SundayOpen 24 hours
Hours· tap to view
Schmidt's Electrical Enterprise
4.8(54)- MondayOpen 24 hours
- TuesdayOpen 24 hours
- WednesdayOpen 24 hours
- ThursdayOpen 24 hours
- FridayOpen 24 hours
- SaturdayOpen 24 hours
- SundayOpen 24 hours
Hours· tap to view
Paradise Construction LLC
5.0(42)- Monday7AM-10PM
- Tuesday7AM-10PM
- Wednesday7AM-10PM
- Thursday7AM-10PM
- Friday7AM-10PM
- Saturday7AM-10PM
- Sunday7AM-10PM
Hours· tap to view
How to choose an EV charger installer in Washington, D.C.
Hire a licensed electrician (NEC 625)
A Level 2 charger is a 240V branch circuit, so the work must be done by an electrician licensed in Washington, D.C. and follow NEC Article 625, which governs electric-vehicle supply equipment. Confirm they carry liability insurance and a labor warranty on the install — not just the manufacturer's warranty on the charger itself.
Check your panel can handle the new 240V circuit
A good installer runs a load calculation before quoting. A Level 2 charger typically needs a dedicated 40–60A double-pole breaker, and an older or fully-loaded panel may need a subpanel or a service upgrade. Ask whether your panel has the spare capacity or whether the quote includes panel work — it's the single biggest cost variable.
Confirm the permit, inspection & hardwired vs. plug-in
A reputable contractor pulls the electrical permit and schedules the Washington, D.C. inspection — skipping it can void insurance and fail at resale. Decide between a hardwired charger (cleaner, supports higher amperage, often required outdoors) and a NEMA 14-50 outlet (plug-in, portable). Both are valid; make sure the quote states which you're getting.
Listing data is sourced from public Google Business Profiles and may be out of date. WattSimple is not affiliated with, and does not endorse or recommend, any listed company. Verify licensing and details directly before hiring.
Frequently asked questions
Plan your EV charger install
Size the circuit and breaker (NEC 125% rule).
Home charger install costEstimate the full installed price by state.
EV charging cost calculatorWhat it costs to charge at home vs. public.
Washington, D.C. electricity ratesWhat you pay per kWh today in Washington, D.C..
EV charger installation costAn evergreen guide to what drives the price.
Do I need a panel upgrade?When a charger needs more electrical capacity.
