Cost guide · IL

EV charger installation cost in Illinois

Typical all-in range in Illinois: $700 – $2,200 for a standard Level 2 install including permit — before any charger hardware and before rebates. Labor here runs about +5% vs the national average, and the scenarios below reflect that.

Pick your scenario

Line-item scenarios (IL-adjusted)

ScenarioWhat's includedTypical range
Existing 240V outlet + plug-in charger Outlet inspected, plug-in charger mounted; no new circuit $60 – $210
New NEMA 14-50 outlet, short run (<10 ft) New 50A circuit with GFCI breaker, outlet next to the panel $450 – $1,000
Hardwired charger, short run (<10 ft) New circuit, no GFCI breaker needed, charger hardwired $650 – $1,420
Typical garage install (~25 ft run) The most common scenario: circuit across the garage $870 – $1,820
Long run (~100 ft, opposite side of home) Conduit/fishing through finished spaces adds labor fast $1,750 – $2,990
Detached garage with trenching Underground conduit, digging, and restoration $2,630 – $6,830
Add a panel upgrade (100A → 200A) On top of any scenario above, when the load calc requires it $1,890 – $4,730
Add a load-management device instead The panel-upgrade alternative many homes qualify for $370 – $950

Ranges exclude charger hardware (≈$350–$650 for quality Level 2 units) and assume a permitted, code-compliant installation. Permit fees ($75–$350) are included in circuit scenarios.

This estimate is educational and not a quote. Real prices depend on your home, local labor rates, and code requirements. Electrical work should be reviewed by a licensed electrician.

Local context

What's specific to Illinois

Chicago's brick bungalows and two-flats often carry 100A service, and the city's electrical code requires wiring in conduit (EMT) — a Chicago-proper install typically prices a few hundred dollars above the same job in the suburbs. ComEd's rebate covers installation costs, which absorbs much of the conduit premium.

Yes — a new 240V circuit needs an electrical permit, but Illinois permitting is municipal: each city or county runs its own process (Chicago's Department of Buildings uses the online Express Permit Program). Note that Illinois has no statewide electrician license — Chicago and many suburbs license or register electrical contractors locally, so verify credentials with your municipality.

Offset the cost: see Illinois's active rebates — several programs pay for exactly the expensive line items above (panel work, wiring).

Get IL quotes with these line items

Send each electrician this page and ask them to quote your scenario row — comparisons get honest fast.

Finding an installer yourself: ask for the contractor's state license number, proof of insurance, and at least two recent Level 2 installs. Get the permit number in writing.

Use the free permit checklist