- 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.