EV Charger Electrical Inspection Checklist for Florida
Florida's electrical inspection process for EV charger installations combines requirements from the National Electrical Code (NEC) — specifically Article 625 — with the Florida Building Code and local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) protocols. This page covers the discrete inspection checkpoints that apply to residential and commercial EV supply equipment (EVSE) installations across Florida, explaining what inspectors verify at each stage. Understanding these checkpoints helps installers, property owners, and project managers anticipate compliance requirements before the final inspection occurs.
Definition and scope
An EV charger electrical inspection checklist is a structured set of verification points that a licensed electrical inspector uses to confirm that an EVSE installation meets all applicable code requirements before the system is energized or placed into service. In Florida, inspection authority derives from the Florida Building Code (FBC), Chapter 13 (Energy) and is enforced by local building departments operating under the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR).
The checklist applies to Level 1 (120V/16A maximum), Level 2 (240V/up to 80A), and DC Fast Charging (DCFC) installations at residential, commercial, and multi-unit dwelling properties. For a full breakdown of the electrical differences between these charger classes, see Level 1 vs Level 2 vs DC Fast Charging: Electrical Differences.
Scope and limitations: This checklist framework applies to Florida-jurisdictional inspections only. Federal OSHA workplace electrical standards (29 CFR Part 1910, Subpart S) govern occupational safety aspects at commercial sites but are administered separately from building department inspections. Utility interconnection review — relevant when solar or battery storage integrates with the EVSE system — falls under the applicable electric utility's tariff and interconnection rules, not the building department. Properties on federally owned land follow federal inspection protocols and are not covered here.
How it works
Florida EV charger inspections proceed through three primary phases: permit application and plan review, rough-in inspection, and final inspection. Some jurisdictions add a temporary service inspection for commercial DCFC installations.
Phase 1 — Permit Application and Plan Review
- Submit load calculation documentation demonstrating that the new circuit does not overload the existing panel (NEC Article 220).
- Provide a single-line diagram showing circuit path from panel to EVSE location.
- Identify conductor size, conduit type, and GFCI or GFPE protection method (NEC Article 625.22).
- Confirm the EVSE unit is listed by a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL) such as UL under UL 2594 (for Level 2) or UL 2202 (for DCFC).
- For commercial or multi-unit projects, include load management or demand response provisions where required by the AHJ.
Phase 2 — Rough-In Inspection
The rough-in inspection occurs after conduit and wiring are installed but before walls are closed. Inspectors verify:
- Conduit fill does not exceed NEC Chapter 9 Table 1 limits (40% fill for 3 or more conductors).
- Conductor ampacity matches the circuit breaker rating with an appropriate 125% continuous load margin per NEC 625.42.
- Grounding electrode conductor and equipment grounding conductor are correctly sized and routed — see EV Charger Grounding and Bonding Requirements Florida.
- Conduit type is appropriate for the environment (e.g., Schedule 80 PVC or rigid metal conduit for outdoor or embedded runs).
Phase 3 — Final Inspection
The final inspection confirms the completed installation:
- EVSE is mounted at the correct height and the outlet or receptacle is rated for the application.
- GFCI protection is present on all 120V and 240V EVSE circuits where required (NEC 625.54).
- Weatherproof enclosures are correctly rated for outdoor Florida environments (NEMA 3R minimum for outdoor; NEMA 4 recommended for coastal exposure).
- Overcurrent protective device ampacity in the panel matches submitted plans.
- Label "Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment" or equivalent is affixed per NEC 625.44.
- For networked chargers, communication wiring is separated from power conductors per applicable wiring method requirements.
For permitting context beyond the inspection itself, the Florida Building Code EV Charging Electrical page provides the broader statutory framework.
Common scenarios
Residential Level 2 installation (single-family): The most common inspection involves a 240V, 50A dedicated circuit feeding a hardwired or plug-connected EVSE in a garage. Inspectors most frequently cite missing GFCI protection, undersized grounding conductors, and insufficient panel capacity documentation. The Dedicated Circuit Requirements for EV Charging Florida page details conductor sizing for this scenario.
Garage conversion or panel upgrade: When an older panel lacks capacity, a panel upgrade precedes EVSE installation. The rough-in inspection for the panel upgrade and the EVSE circuit are often combined into a single site visit. See Home EV Charger Panel Upgrade Florida for load calculation benchmarks.
Commercial DCFC installation: DC Fast Chargers operating at 480V three-phase require a separate service entrance inspection and utility coordination. Inspectors verify transformer sizing, service entrance conductor ratings, and compliance with NEC Article 625.2 definitions. The Commercial EV Charging Electrical Infrastructure Florida page addresses these larger-scale requirements.
Multi-unit dwellings (condos and apartments): Florida's HB 1179 (2023) established condominium association obligations regarding EV charging access, creating a class of inspections specific to common-element electrical infrastructure. Load management systems are frequently required; see EV Charger Load Management Florida.
Decision boundaries
Two key contrasts define how inspection requirements diverge in Florida:
Residential vs. Commercial classification: A single-family homeowner's Level 2 installation is inspected under the FBC Residential volume. A commercial property — including a retail parking lot with Level 2 stations — is inspected under the FBC Building volume, which carries stricter accessibility, labeling, and load documentation requirements. The classification boundary is determined by occupancy type, not charger voltage.
Listed EVSE vs. unlisted equipment: NEC 625.5 requires EVSE to be listed (NRTL-certified). An unlisted unit fails final inspection regardless of wiring quality. This is distinct from a listed unit that is improperly installed, which fails on installation defects alone.
Understanding the overall regulatory landscape for these inspections begins with the regulatory context for Florida electrical systems, which situates the FBC and NEC within the state's enforcement hierarchy. For a foundational understanding of how Florida's electrical infrastructure operates in context, how Florida electrical systems work provides the conceptual grounding that supports inspection compliance decisions.
For the full resource index covering EV charger electrical topics in Florida, the Florida EV Charger Authority home page consolidates all subject areas across charger types, permitting processes, and safety standards.
References
- National Electrical Code (NFPA 70) 2023 Edition, Article 625 — Electric Vehicle Power Transfer System
- Florida Building Code — Florida Building Commission
- Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) — Electrical Licensing
- UL 2594 — Standard for Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment
- UL 2202 — Standard for Electric Vehicle (EV) Charging System Equipment
- OSHA 29 CFR Part 1910, Subpart S — Electrical
- Florida Senate HB 1179 (2023) — Condominium EV Charging
- NEC Chapter 9, Table 1 — Percent of Cross Section of Conduit and Tubing for Conductors