The federal 30C credit can put up to $1,000 back in your pocket on a Level 2 EV charger installation — but there’s a catch most guides don’t mention. Your home has to be in a qualifying census tract. Here’s how to check, what counts, and why the clock is running.
⚠ DEADLINE ALERT: The 30C credit was originally set to run through December 31, 2032. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (signed July 4, 2025) moved the expiration to June 30, 2026. Property placed in service on July 1 or later does not qualify — regardless of when you ordered or paid.
If you’ve been thinking about installing a Level 2 EV charger at home, you have roughly 81 days to act. The 30C Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit lets qualifying homeowners claim 30% of the total cost of purchasing and installing an EV charger, up to a maximum of $1,000.
That’s real money back on a project that typically runs $800–$2,500 depending on your electrical setup. But the credit only applies to property placed in service — meaning fully installed and operational — by June 30, 2026. After that date, it’s gone.
Section 30C of the Internal Revenue Code is the Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit. For homeowners, it works like this:
The credit applies to Level 2 EV charging equipment (240V EVSE) installed at your primary residence.
Important: This is not a blanket credit available to every American homeowner. Since 2023, the credit requires that your home be located in a qualifying census tract. This is the rule most online guides skip — and it’s why you need to check before you install.
This is the part that trips people up. You can’t just buy a charger and claim the credit. Your home’s address must fall within a qualifying census tract — a specific geographic unit the U.S. Census Bureau uses to divide the country into roughly 74,000 areas.
A census tract qualifies under 30C if it meets either of these two criteria:
The tract must qualify as a “low-income community” under the New Markets Tax Credit (IRC Section 45D). This means the census tract’s median family income is:
This means lower-income neighborhoods in cities can qualify — even in dense urban areas like Los Angeles, Chicago, or Houston.
A census tract qualifies as non-urban if at least 10% of its census blocks are not designated as urban areas by the Census Bureau (using 2020 census definitions). This captures suburban fringe areas, rural towns, and any tract that isn’t entirely urban.
Likely Qualifies
Likely Does NOT Qualify
The bottom line: Nationwide, roughly 30–40% of census tracts qualify. Whether yours does depends entirely on your specific address — there’s no shortcut other than looking it up.
There are two official ways to check whether your address falls in a qualifying census tract. Use both to confirm.
Important note: The mapping tool is for reference only. It cannot be cited on your tax return to substantiate eligibility. Official verification requires your 11-digit census tract GEOID matched against the IRS Appendix B list (see Method 2 below).
Your electrician or tax preparer can help locate your GEOID. Keep a printout of Appendix B showing your tract as part of your tax documentation.
The 30C credit covers 30% of your total qualified cost. Here’s what’s in and what’s out:
Covered Expenses
Not Covered
If your panel is too small to support a 240V charger circuit, the upgrade cost is included in your qualified expenses — as long as it’s clearly documented as charger-necessitated. Have your electrician’s invoice specify that the panel upgrade was required to install the EV charger.
File IRS Form 8911 — Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Credit. The form is included in all major tax software (TurboTax, H&R Block, TaxAct) and is attached to your regular federal return for the year the charger was placed in service.
If you install by June 30, 2026, claim the credit on your 2026 federal tax return (filed in spring 2027). The credit is non-refundable — it offsets taxes owed but won’t generate a refund. Unused credit can be carried forward to future tax years.
The IRS rule is clear: property must be placed in service by June 30, 2026. “Placed in service” means fully installed, energized, and operational. Ordering before the deadline, making a payment before the deadline, or having a permit issued before the deadline does not count. The charger must be working.
Many homeowners will rush installations in May and June. If you need a panel upgrade, contact an installer no later than mid-May 2026. A simple install can wait until early June — but don’t cut it close.
Property placed in service on July 1 or later receives no federal 30C credit. No grace period, no partial credit. The installation date on your invoice and permit is the date the IRS uses.
If your census tract doesn’t qualify, you won’t be able to claim the 30C federal credit — but you’re not out of options.
Your electric utility is often the best source of rebates — and most have no census tract requirement. Search the Alternative Fuels Data Center incentives database by state and utility to find programs in your area.
Charger manufacturers (ChargePoint, Enel X JuiceBox, Emporia) and some EV brands occasionally offer installation incentives. Ask your installer what’s currently available before you finalize your purchase.
First, check your address at the 30C Eligibility Locator. If your tract qualifies, you need an installation complete by June 30 — not started, not paid for, complete.
We connect homeowners with verified Level 2 charger installers who know the 30C documentation requirements and can complete your project before the deadline.
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Questions? Review the IRS 30C guidance for individuals or consult a tax professional.