EV Charging Incentives · Georgia

Georgia EV charging incentives & rebates (2026).

As of June 2026, we track 12 incentive programs that can offset EV charging costs in Georgia: 5 commercial, 4 residential, 1 vehicle/rate programs, plus the federal 30C tax credit available nationwide.

Available Everywhere

Federal incentives that apply in Georgia.

Available in every state. The federal 30C credit is claimed on your tax return — eligibility depends on census tract, and for the full 30% commercial rate, on prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements.

30C Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Tax Credit

The Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Tax Credit, commonly referred to as the “30C tax credit,” gives qualifying businesses that install electric vehicle (EV) recharging property located within an eligible census tract a tax credit of up to $100,000 per EV charging port. The credit, subject to depreciation, equals 6% of the total qualified costs per port, or 30% for businesses and tax-exempt entities that meet prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements, with that same $100,000 limit.

Program details

Residential 30C Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Tax Credit

The Alternative Fuel Vehicle Refueling Property Tax Credit, commonly referred to as the “30C tax credit,” gives qualifying individuals that install electric vehicle (EV) recharging property located within an eligible census tract a tax credit equal to 30% of the cost with a maximum amount of $1,000 per EV charging port.

Program details

Commercial

Commercial & workplace charging programs in Georgia.

Rebates and grants for businesses, fleets, multifamily, and public charging. Most require application before installation.

Cobb EMC Commercial EV Grant Program

Cobb EMC’s EV Grant Program provides funding to businesses, property owners, multifamily unit owners and government agencies who are interested in installing electric vehicle charging stations at their place of business. The program grants $500 to $5,000 to recipients to assist with the cost of purchasing and installing EV supply equipment (EVSE). Grant funds are allocated until all funds are exhausted, and the grant amount will vary based on each application, with preference given to proposals that promote public access to EV charger(s) or that benefit the greatest number of EV users.

Program details

Georgia Power: EV Charger Plus Rebate

Georgia Power offers incentives for Level 2 and DCFC commercial customers based on the power rating of the EV chargers. The total rebate value will be determined based on the quantity and types of chargers being installed. Rebate amount is limited to 50% of the total project cost, which includes charger, installation and material cost. Rebate capped at $30,000 per calendar year per customer. Pre-approval is not required but recommended.

Program details

Georgia Power: Make Ready Electric Transportation Program

Georgia Power make-ready infrastructure program offers make-ready support to commercial customers installing charging stations. The Make-Ready Program supports charging infrastructure for passenger vehicles, transit buses, forklifts, delivery trucks, and more. Program Eligibility: You must install six or more Level 2 chargers, or at least one DC fast charger. Chargers must either be installed in areas accessible for public use or designated for public fleets, which serve the general public.

Program details

Sumter Electric Cooperative: EV Charger Rebates

Residential and commercial Sumter EMC members may be eligible to receive a rebate for installing an electric vehicle charger at their home or business. Commercial members may be eligible to receive a $500 rebate for installing a Level 2 or 3 Charger at their business. A maximum of 3 rebates per business will be awarded.

Program details

Tri-County EMC: EV365 EV Charger Program

Tri-County EMC is helping customers charge their EV by offering a $250 rebate on the purchase and installation of any NRTL certified Level 2 charger at your home or business. Simply purchase the charger and have it installed and a credit of $250 will be applied to your Tri-County EMC bill.

Program details

Residential

Residential charging programs in Georgia.

Rebates and rate programs for home charging — useful for employees, fleet-at-home programs, and residents of properties we serve.

Cobb EMC’s EV Charger Incentive

Cobb EMC provides a $250 rebate for residential customers installing Level 2 EV chargers at their home. Customers may take advantage of the NiteFlex rate provided by Cobb EMC, allotting for approximately 400 kWh for free each month.

Program details

Georgia Power EV Charger Installation Rebate

Georgia Power offers first-time applicants up to $150 for installing a new Level 2 EV charger at their residence. Customers must apply prior to December 31, 2025 for chargers purchased and installed in the prior six months.

Program details

Sumter EMC Residential EV Charger Rebate

Residential members receiving electric service from Sumter EMC may be eligible to receive a rebate for installing a Level 2 EV charger at their home. A rebate of $250 is available after submission of an application with a copy of the paid installation and charger invoice.

Program details

Tri County Rebate for Level 2 (240V) Electric Vehicle Charger

Tri-County EMC is helping residential customers charge their EV by offering a $250 rebate on the purchase and installation of any NRTL certified Level 2 charger. Simply purchase the charger and have it installed and a credit of $250 will be applied to the member's Tri-County EMC bill.

Program details

Vehicles & Rates

Vehicle and rate programs in Georgia.

Adjacent programs — vehicle incentives and charging-rate structures that change the economics of a charging project.

Georgia EV Incentive

The Part Everyone Underestimates

Incentives are won or lost in the paperwork.

Most charging incentives have equipment eligibility lists, network requirements, deadlines, and post-installation reporting — and many pay out only if the application went in before construction. Faith Energy bakes incentive capture into design-build delivery: we match hardware to program eligibility lists, sequence applications correctly, and hand you the documentation each program demands.

Have us run the incentive math

Straight Answers

Questions we answer every week.

What EV charging incentives are available in Georgia?
As of June 2026, there are 12 programs that can offset EV charging costs in Georgia: 5 commercial, 4 residential, 1 vehicle/rate programs — mostly utility rebates and state grants — plus the federal 30C Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Tax Credit, worth up to $100,000 per commercial charging port. Programs open and close; confirm current status before budgeting.
Does Georgia offer rebates for commercial EV charging stations?
Yes. 5 commercial programs are currently tracked in Georgia, including Cobb EMC Commercial EV Grant Program, Georgia Power: EV Charger Plus Rebate. Most are administered by utilities and pay per port or per project, and many require pre-approval before installation begins.
How does the federal 30C tax credit work for EV chargers?
The 30C Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Tax Credit gives businesses up to $100,000 per charging port — 6% of qualified costs, or 30% if prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements are met — for chargers installed in eligible census tracts. Homeowners can claim 30% up to $1,000 per port. It's claimed on your federal tax return; eligibility mapping by census tract is the first step.
Who applies for the incentives — the owner or the contractor?
Formally the applicant is usually the site owner, but in practice the contractor determines whether you qualify: equipment must match program eligibility lists, applications often must precede construction, and payout requires commissioning documentation. Faith Energy handles incentive sequencing and paperwork as part of design-build delivery.

Every State

Browse incentives in other states.

Program details change and funding rounds open and close. Last reviewed June 2026 against program sources; always confirm current terms with the administering agency or utility before counting an incentive in a budget. Faith Energy confirms live program status as part of every project review.

Email usStart project review