EV Charging Infrastructure
EV charger sizing, demand factors, and load management
Standard
Supply Parameters
Charger Groups
Load Management
Configure chargers and click Calculate
EV charging load is the electrical demand imposed by an electric vehicle supply equipment unit on the installation. IEC 61851-1 defines charging modes from Mode 1 through Mode 4, with power levels ranging from 3.7 kilowatts single-phase to over 350 kilowatts DC fast charging. Circuit design must account for continuous duty and diversity among multiple chargers.
How to Size an EV Charger Circuit
- 1Determine the charging mode — Identify the IEC 61851-1 charging mode: Mode 2 uses a portable EVSE with domestic socket, Mode 3 uses a dedicated wallbox with Type 1 or Type 2 connector, and Mode 4 is DC fast charging.[IEC 61851-1]
- 2Establish the continuous load current — EV charging is classified as a continuous load because it can operate for more than three hours. Apply a 1.25 multiplier to the charger rated current when sizing the cable and protective device.[BS 7671 Regulation 433.1]
- 3Select cable size with derating — Size the cable for the continuous load current including all applicable derating factors. A typical 7.4 kW single-phase charger draws 32A, requiring a minimum 6mm2 cable for most installation methods.[IEC 60364-5-52 Clause 523]
- 4Select the protective device — Install an RCBO or MCB plus RCD combination with Type A or Type B RCD sensitivity of 30 mA for personal protection. Type B RCD is recommended for Mode 3 chargers with DC fault current capability.[IEC 62955]
- 5Apply diversity for multiple chargers — For installations with multiple EV chargers, apply diversity factors to reduce the total supply demand. Typical factors range from 0.8 for two chargers to 0.4 for ten or more, based on usage patterns.[BS 7671 Appendix 15]
How EV Charging Works
The EV charging calculator sizes the electrical infrastructure for electric vehicle charging installations, including charger selection, cable sizing, demand management, and supply capacity assessment.
The calculator supports all IEC 61851-1 charging modes: Mode 1 (domestic socket), Mode 2 (portable EVSE), Mode 3 (dedicated AC), and Mode 4 (DC fast charging). Demand factors are applied per the selected standard — BS 7671 Section 722 provides specific diversity factors for multiple EV chargers, NEC Article 625 establishes feeder demand factors per Table 625.42, and AS/NZS 3000 applies general maximum demand rules.
Static and dynamic load management options reduce the required supply capacity by distributing available power across chargers. Results include recommended charger types, per-charger and total demand, cable sizes per circuit, supply capacity assessment, load management schedule, and cost estimation.
EV Charging Modes and Power Levels
| Mode | Connector | Power Range | Current | Standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mode 2 | Domestic socket | 2.3–3.7 kW | 10–16A | IEC 61851-1 |
| Mode 3 (single-phase) | Type 2 | 3.7–7.4 kW | 16–32A | IEC 61851-1 |
| Mode 3 (three-phase) | Type 2 | 11–22 kW | 16–32A | IEC 61851-1 |
| Mode 4 (DC) | CCS/CHAdeMO | 50–350 kW | 125–500A | IEC 61851-23 |
Source: IEC 61851-1 Clause 6, BS 7671 Section 722
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I size a circuit for an EV charger per NEC Article 625?
What is the continuous load rating requirement for EV charging?
What is EV load management and when is it required?
What RCD/GFCI protection is required for EV chargers?
How many EV chargers can I install on my existing supply?
What are the IEC 61851 charging modes?
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Standards Reference
- IEC 61851-1 — EV conductive charging
- NEC Article 625 — EV charging
- BS 7671:2018+A2 — Section 722