EV Charger Buyer's Guide Canada (2026): Level 2, Amperage, and What Your Electrician Wishes You Knew
Level 1 trickle or Level 2 speed? 32A or 48A? Plug-in or hardwired? This Canadian buyer's guide walks through the choices in plain language — including the panel-capacity reality check most buyers skip and the rebate programs worth checking before you buy.
For most Canadian homes, the right buy is a Level 2 (240V) charger at 32–48A, sized to your panel's spare capacity — which a licensed electrician confirms with a load calculation. Plug-in (NEMA 14-50) models top out lower but move with you; hardwired supports the highest charging rates. In Quebec, check Roulez vert rebates before purchasing.
Level 1 vs Level 2: the only speed comparison you need
| Level 1 | Level 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Voltage | 120V (regular outlet) | 240V (like a dryer/range) |
| Typical power | ~1.2–1.4 kW | 7.2–11.5 kW (30A–48A circuits) |
| Overnight result | A top-up | A full battery |
| Installation | None | Licensed electrician + permit |
| Right for | Plug-in hybrids, very low daily km | Battery EVs, Canadian winters |
Level 1 adds only a handful of kilometres of range per hour — workable for a short commute, frustrating for a full EV. Cold matters too: Canadian winter reduces effective range and the battery uses energy for thermal management, which makes slow charging feel even slower in January. Most full-EV households end up at Level 2.
32A vs 40A vs 48A: how fast is fast enough?
Charging speed scales with amperage — but so do the wiring and panel requirements. A key Canadian Electrical Code concept: EV charging is a continuous load, so the circuit must be sized at 125% of the charger's draw (equivalently, the charger uses at most 80% of the breaker rating).
| Charger output | Power | Circuit required | Connection |
|---|---|---|---|
| 32A | 7.7 kW | 40A breaker | Plug-in (14-50) or hardwired |
| 40A | 9.6 kW | 50A breaker | Plug-in (14-50) or hardwired |
| 48A | 11.5 kW | 60A breaker | Hardwired only |
Honest guidance: for typical daily driving, even 32A refills overnight. 48A earns its keep with big batteries, two EVs sharing one charger window, or short charging windows (time-of-use rates). Many smart chargers — including the Leviton units Maple stocks — are adjustable, so you can buy 48A-capable hardware and set it to what your panel supports today.
Plug-in or hardwired?
- Plug-in (NEMA 14-50): caps at 40A output, easy to take when you move, receptacle must be EV-rated quality.
- Hardwired: required for 48A, cleaner install, generally preferred outdoors for weather sealing.
If you're at all unsure, hardwired is the "do it once" answer; plug-in is the renter/mover's answer.
The panel reality check (read before falling in love with 48A)
A 48A charger on a 60A circuit is a major load. Whether your panel can take it depends on service size (100A vs 200A) and what else is electric — heat, range, dryer, A/C. The answer comes from a load calculation by a licensed electrician, not from the panel's label. Two common outcomes when capacity is tight:
1. A load-management device or adjustable charger set to a lower amperage — often avoiding a service upgrade entirely. 2. A service upgrade to 200A — best timed with a renovation if one's coming (Before You Renovate: Electrical Checklist).
Quebec note: Hydro-Québec publishes guidance on home charging and winter charging behaviour — worth a read before sizing. Ontario: installation requires an ESA notification like any electrical work.
Rebates: check before you buy
- Quebec — Roulez vert: the provincial program has offered home-charger purchase/installation rebates; eligibility and amounts change, so confirm the current program at quebec.ca before purchase. Some conditions require the charger to be on the program's eligible list.
- Ontario: no broad provincial home-charger rebate at writing, but utility or municipal programs appear periodically — check your local utility.
- Workplace/condo programs exist federally and provincially and change frequently; verify current programs on official sites (we deliberately don't quote amounts here — programs move faster than blog posts).
What electricians wish you'd buy (the supply-house view)
1. An adjustable smart charger — flexibility for the load calculation outcome, and certified for Canada (look for cUL / CSA certification — see What CSA, cUL and ETL marks mean). 2. A cold-rated unit if mounting outdoors (cable flexibility at −30°C is a real differentiator). 3. The right cable length — 25 ft covers most two-car layouts; measure to the charge port, not the wall. 4. Quality breaker + wire for the run — your electrician will spec; bundle it in one order so they're not waiting on parts. Maple supplies the charger, Siemens breakers, and wire together — authorized reseller stock, CAD pricing, fast ON/QC shipping.
Common EV charger buying mistakes
- Buying 48A hardware before the load calculation (sometimes fine, sometimes a $3K surprise)
- A bargain charger without cUL/CSA certification — inspectors and insurers care
- Cable too short by one parking spot
- Ignoring Quebec rebate eligibility lists until after purchase
- Forgetting the charger is only half the order (breaker, wire, possibly conduit)
Frequently asked questions
Can I just use a regular outlet to charge an EV?
Yes — that's Level 1. It works, but adds range slowly. Most full-EV owners in Canada move to Level 2 within the first winter.
Do I need a permit to install an EV charger?
Yes — it's electrical work: ESA notification in Ontario, licensed contractor (RBQ) in Quebec.
Can I install a 48A charger on a 100A panel?
Sometimes — it depends on the load calculation. Adjustable chargers and load-management devices often make it work without a service upgrade. Ask a licensed electrician; don't guess.
Is hardwired better than plug-in?
Hardwired is required above 40A output and is generally preferred outdoors. Plug-in is more flexible if you might move.
What does a Level 2 install cost in Canada?
It varies too much to quote honestly — distance from panel, wall types, and panel capacity dominate the price. Get two quotes; provide the charger spec sheet to both.
Are smart chargers worth it?
For time-of-use billing (Ontario) and rate programs, yes — scheduling charging to off-peak hours is real money over a year.
- Hydro-Québec — electric vehicles & home charging: hydroquebec.com
- Gouvernement du Québec — Roulez vert program: quebec.ca
- Electrical Safety Authority (Ontario): esasafe.com
- Natural Resources Canada — zero-emission vehicle infrastructure: natural-resources.canada.ca
- CSA Group (certification): csagroup.org
Buying a charger? Send Maple your electrician's spec — charger, breaker, and wire in one CAD order. Ask Maple
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