Commercial planning preview

Plan a commercial EV charging project in Austin

Commercial charging begins with an operating model, not a charger count. Define who will use the site, how long vehicles dwell, who pays, who maintains the equipment, and what electrical and civil work the property can support.

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Planning guidance first. Provider referral only with separate permission.

A Central Texas property with parking suitable for EV charging planning
Project pathAddress → site → scope
01

Use case

Customer, tenant, public, employee, and fleet charging each create different requirements.

02

Site capacity

Parking, electrical distribution, trenching, connectivity, and future phases should be considered together.

03

Operations

Access, pricing, uptime, support, and ownership need decisions before equipment selection.

01

Define users and dwell time

Estimate the number of vehicles, arrival pattern, typical stay, turnover, and growth. Avoid selecting ports or power levels until the use case is clear.

02

Document the property and electrical starting point

Collect site plans if available, parking counts, accessible routes, electrical one-lines, transformer and distribution information, panel locations, and proposed trench or conduit paths.

03

Plan the network and operating model

Decide whether access control, payments, driver support, reporting, roaming, cellular service, Wi-Fi, or back-office integrations matter. Ask who owns data and what happens if a network service changes.

04

Create phases instead of overbuilding the first step

A phased design can reserve electrical and civil pathways for later growth. Ask providers to distinguish initial ports, future-ready capacity, and assumptions that would trigger additional utility work.

Common questions

Know what this planning path can—and cannot—answer.

Is provider coverage open for commercial projects?

Coverage is still being verified. This page prepares project context and does not promise a provider introduction.

Should the project choose chargers before a site assessment?

Usually the use case, site constraints, electrical concept, network needs, and ownership model should inform the equipment shortlist.

Who determines code and accessibility requirements?

The qualified project team and applicable authorities determine requirements for the specific site. This planning page is not a design or compliance approval.

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Bring the address, site, equipment, and timing into one intake.

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