What the audit checks
- Breaker sizing — does it match the charger's rated continuous load × 125%
- Conductor sizing — is the wire gauge correct for the breaker
- Conduit — is it the right type (EMT vs PVC, indoor vs exterior)
- Mounting — secure, weatherproofed if exterior
- GFCI/AFCI — current code compliance
- Manufacturer warranty — registered? Installer on approved list (Tesla)?
- Permit history — was the original install permitted? City records check
- Visual — any signs of overheating, corrosion, water intrusion
Why this matters
Roughly 1 in 4 home-EV charger installs we see in the regional market were DIY or done by handyman-class electricians without permits. Many work fine. Some are genuinely dangerous — undersized conductors that overheat, breakers that won't trip on a fault, exterior installs without proper weatherproofing. The audit catches issues before they cause problems.
What you get
- Written audit report with photos
- Pass / fail / needs-correction on each checklist item
- Cost estimate for any corrections needed
- Documentation for home insurance or future buyer disclosure