Fast Level 2 Home Charging Stations

Charging your electric vehicle using a standard 120V household wall outlet (Level 1) can take over 30 hours to complete. A dedicated Level 2 home charging station supplies 240V power, restoring your battery up to seven times faster overnight. At Brooksville Electrical Specialists, we are certified EV charger installers in Brooksville, FL.

Our installations comply strictly with NEC Article 625 (Electric Vehicle Power Transfer System). We assess your home's main panel capacity, run heavy-duty industrial conduit, pull dedicated high-gauge copper lines, and mount your charging unit safely in your garage or driveway.

Tesla wall connector or Level 2 charging box mounted on garage wall

Schedule an EV Charger Assessment

We perform a load calculation on your breaker panel before installation to verify safe operation.

Call (352) 655-1152

Tesla, Wallbox & ChargePoint Setups

We work with all major EV charging station brands and configure them for your specific vehicle:

  • Tesla Wall Connectors: Hardwired 48-amp charging units that require a 60-amp circuit. We handle matching load configurations for Model 3, Y, S, X, and Cybertruck.
  • NEMA 14-50 Receptacles: We install industrial-grade 240V plugs to allow mobile charging cables to plug in directly. Ideal for homeowners who want flexibility.
  • Panel Upgrades: If your home currently has an older 100-amp panel, adding a 40-amp or 50-amp EV circuit can overload it. We offer combined packages for service panel upgrades to make room.

Why Professional Installation is Required

EV chargers draw high current continuously for hours at a time. This represents a significant load on your home’s electrical system. Poor terminations, loose wiring, or low-grade NEMA sockets will quickly overheat and melt under continuous load, posing extreme fire risks. We run dedicated circuits using heavy copper wire and industrial-grade receptacles. Calculate ballpark pricing in our job cost estimator tool.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can my garage support a Level 2 charger?

If your main electrical panel has a 200-amp capacity, it can almost always support a new 50-amp EV circuit. If you have a 100-amp panel, we will conduct a load calculation to see if a capacity swap is needed.

What is the difference between NEMA 14-50 and a hardwired charger?

A NEMA 14-50 plug allows you to unplug the charger (max 40-amps output). A hardwired station connects directly to your conduit wiring (max 48-amps output), providing slightly faster charging and higher weather resistance.