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EV Charging Infrastructure for Michigan Businesses: A Complete Guide to Level 2 and Level 3 Chargers

Why Michigan businesses are investing in electric vehicle charging infrastructure — and how to choose the right solution for workplaces, fleets, and multi-unit residential properties Electric vehicle adoption is accelerating across Michigan, creating infrastructure demands that extend far beyond residential charging. Businesses, property managers, and fleet operators face a fundamental question: how do you build […]

Generac EV Chargers from Wolverine Power Systems of Michigan

EV Charging Infrastructure for Michigan Businesses: A Complete Guide to Level 2 and Level 3 Chargers

Why Michigan businesses are investing in electric vehicle charging infrastructure — and how to choose the right solution for workplaces, fleets, and multi-unit residential properties


Electric vehicle adoption is accelerating across Michigan, creating infrastructure demands that extend far beyond residential charging. Businesses, property managers, and fleet operators face a fundamental question: how do you build EV charging infrastructure that meets current demand while scaling for future growth — all while managing installation costs, electrical capacity constraints, and operational efficiency?

The answer depends on understanding the substantial differences between Level 2 and Level 3 charging systems, their respective applications, and how smart energy management can optimize charging operations without requiring electrical service upgrades that can cost $50,000 or more.

This guide examines both charging technologies through the lens of practical implementation: power requirements, installation considerations, operational costs, and real-world applications across Michigan’s commercial, industrial, and multi-unit residential sectors.


Understanding EV Charging Levels: Power, Speed, and Application

Electric vehicle charging infrastructure is categorized by power delivery capacity, which directly determines charging speed and appropriate use cases.

Level 1 Charging (120V household outlets): Provides approximately 4-5 miles of range per hour of charging. However, it’s suitable only for residential overnight charging and emergency situations. Therefore, it’s not viable for commercial or fleet applications due to extremely slow charge rates.

Level 2 Charging (208-240V): Delivers 3.3 kW to 19.2 kW depending on charger and vehicle capability. Most Level 2 chargers operate at 7.2 kW (30A) to 11.5 kW (48A). Provides 25-45 miles of range per hour of charging. Ideal for workplace charging, overnight fleet charging, and multi-unit residential installations.

Level 3 DC Fast Charging (200-1000V DC): Delivers 50 kW to 350 kW directly to the vehicle battery, bypassing the onboard charger. Provides 100-300+ miles of range in 20-60 minutes. Designed for public charging stations, highway corridors, and high-utilization fleet operations where vehicles need rapid turnaround.

The key distinction: Level 2 charging is designed for locations where vehicles park for extended periods (2-8 hours). Level 3 fast charging is designed for rapid charging where vehicles need to return to service quickly.

Schedule your free consultation: Call 800-485-8068 or visit wolverinepower.com/ev-chargers


Generac Level 2 Pro Charger at Wolverine Power Systems of Michigan
Generac Level 2 Pro Charger at Wolverine Power Systems of Michigan

Level 2 Pro Charger: Workplace, Fleet, and Multi-Unit Residential Applications

Technical Specifications

Generac’s Level 2 Pro charger delivers 11.5 kW of charging power at 48 amps, 208-240V AC. This translates to approximately 35-45 miles of range added per hour of charging, depending on vehicle efficiency and battery acceptance rate.

Key specifications:

  • Charging Power: 11.5 kW (48A)
  • Voltage: 208/240V AC ± 10%, 60Hz
  • Connectivity: Bluetooth, WiFi, RFID
  • Cable Length: 25 feet
  • Dimensions: 7.8″ x 7.9″ x 3.9″ (without cable)
  • Weight: 15 lbs (product), 19 lbs (shipping)
  • Environmental Rating: NEMA Type 4 (indoor and outdoor installations)
  • Operating Temperature: -22°F to 122°F
  • Certifications: UL 2594, UL 2231, Energy Star Certified
  • Charging Protocol: SAE J1772 (universal North American standard)

Electrical installation requirements: Dedicated 60-amp circuit with 60-amp breaker, minimum. Hardwired installation (no plug-in option on this model). Professional installation required to meet NEC Article 625 (Electric Vehicle Charging System Installation).

Dynamic Power Sharing: Avoiding Electrical Service Upgrades

The most significant technical feature for commercial installations is dynamic power sharing capability. This allows up to 50 Level 2 Pro chargers to share available electrical capacity intelligently, avoiding the need for expensive electrical service upgrades.

How it works: A power meter monitors total available capacity on the electrical panel. The chargers communicate via local network to automatically distribute available power among actively charging vehicles. If electrical capacity is limited, power is allocated based on need, charging state, and scheduling priorities set by the facility manager.

Practical example: A workplace with 300-amp available electrical capacity could theoretically only support 5 Level 2 chargers at full 48-amp draw (5 × 60A circuit = 300A). With dynamic power sharing, that same 300-amp service can support 15-20 chargers by intelligently managing when and how fast each vehicle charges based on actual electrical availability and charging schedules.

Cost impact: Installing a new 400-amp electrical service for a commercial building in Michigan typically costs $40,000-$80,000 depending on transformer proximity and site conditions. Dynamic power sharing can defer or eliminate this expense entirely for facilities installing 10-20 chargers.

Smart Energy Management Features

The Level 2 Pro integrates with Generac’s mobile app and web-based management platform, providing:

Scheduling: Set charging windows to occur during off-peak electricity hours (typically 11 PM – 7 AM in Michigan, when commercial electricity rates can be 40-60% lower than peak rates).

Remote monitoring: Real-time status of all chargers, current power draw, energy consumption by charger, vehicle connection status, and session history.

User authentication: RFID card access control to restrict charging to authorized users (employees, tenants, fleet vehicles). Prevents unauthorized use that would increase facility electricity costs.

Energy tracking: Monitor total kWh consumed per charger, per user, or per time period. Essential for cost allocation in multi-tenant properties or for billing employees who charge company-provided vehicles.

Firmware updates: Remote over-the-air updates ensure chargers remain compatible with new vehicle models and charging protocols.

Primary Applications for Level 2 Pro

1. Workplace Charging (Employee Benefit Programs)

Employees park vehicles for 8-10 hours during work shifts, providing ample time for full charge even from depleted batteries. A typical EV with 60 kWh battery capacity requires approximately 5-6 hours for full charge from empty using an 11.5 kW Level 2 charger.

Implementation considerations:

  • One charger per 10-15 EV-owning employees (rotational use)
  • RFID authentication to limit use to enrolled employees
  • Charging scheduled during business hours (8 AM – 5 PM) to coincide with solar generation if facility has on-site solar
  • Energy cost recovered through payroll deduction ($30-50/month per employee typical)

2. Fleet Charging (Light-Duty Commercial Vehicles)

Municipal fleets, delivery vehicles, service trucks, and corporate fleets benefit from overnight charging that ensures vehicles start each day fully charged.

Fleet sizing calculation: A fleet of 20 light-duty EVs (each with 60 kWh battery, consuming average 40 kWh/day) requires 800 kWh total nightly charging capacity. With 10 hours available for charging, minimum charging infrastructure is 80 kW, or 7-8 Level 2 chargers at 11.5 kW each. Dynamic power sharing allows these chargers to operate efficiently on a 200-300 amp electrical service.

Operational benefits:

  • Lower fuel costs: $0.12/kWh electricity vs. $3.50/gallon gasoline = 70-80% fuel cost reduction
  • Predictable “fueling” costs (electricity rates are more stable than petroleum prices)
  • No time spent driving to fueling stations
  • Reduced maintenance costs (EVs have no oil changes, fewer brake replacements due to regenerative braking)

3. Multi-Unit Residential (Apartments, Condos, Townhomes)

Property managers face tenant demand for EV charging while managing shared electrical infrastructure and cost allocation complexity.

Key challenges Level 2 Pro solves:

  • Electrical capacity management: Dynamic power sharing prevents electrical panel overload when multiple tenants charge simultaneously
  • Cost allocation: User authentication and energy tracking allow property managers to bill tenants accurately for electricity consumed
  • Future-proofing: Infrastructure scales from 2-3 chargers initially to 20-30 chargers as EV adoption increases among tenants
  • Property value: EV charging infrastructure is increasingly viewed as essential amenity comparable to in-unit laundry or parking

Installation model: Install 2-4 chargers initially in shared parking areas. Add chargers incrementally as tenant demand grows. Dynamic power sharing allows expansion without electrical service upgrades.


Generac Level 3 Pro Charger at Wolverine Power Systems of Michigan
Generac Level 3 Pro Charger at Wolverine Power Systems of Michigan

Level 3 Fast Charger: Public Charging and High-Utilization Fleet Applications

Technical Specifications

Generac’s Level 3 Fast Charger is available in three power configurations to match application requirements and electrical service availability:

L3-60 (60 kW output):

  • Max output current: 350A DC
  • Input: 480V AC ± 10%, 3-phase, 80A
  • Suitable for: Small-scale public charging, municipal fleet facilities

L3-120 (120 kW output):

  • Max output current: 350A DC
  • Input: 480V AC ± 10%, 3-phase, 160A
  • Suitable for: Retail centers, rest stops, medium-traffic public charging

L3-180 (180 kW output):

  • Max output current: 350A DC
  • Input: 480V AC ± 10%, 3-phase, 235A
  • Suitable for: High-traffic public charging, highway corridors, large fleet operations

Dual-port configuration: All models support simultaneous charging of two vehicles with intelligent power allocation. Maximum 90 kW per port when two vehicles charge simultaneously (on 180 kW model).

Key specifications (all models):

  • DC Connectors: CCS1 (standard) or CCS1 + NACS (Tesla)
  • Cable Length: 16.4 feet
  • Dimensions: 78.7″ H × 17.8″ W × 28.1″ D (without cable holster)
  • Weight: 750-882 lbs depending on model
  • Environmental Rating: IP54, IK10, NEMA 3R (outdoor installation)
  • Operating Temperature: -22°F to 122°F
  • Noise Level: <65 dBA at 3.3 feet (low noise mode)
  • Efficiency: 95% (minimal energy loss during DC conversion)
  • Cooling: Active air cooling (internal fans)

Modular Architecture for Reliability

The Level 3 Fast Charger uses a six-module power system architecture. Each module operates independently, providing fault tolerance. If one module fails, the charger continues operating at reduced capacity rather than complete shutdown.

Uptime impact: Traditional monolithic fast chargers experience complete downtime during component failure. The modular design reduces revenue loss for public charging station operators by maintaining partial charging capability during service events.

Example: A 180 kW charger with one failed module (of six) continues operating at 150 kW — sufficient for fast charging most vehicles, rather than being completely offline until repair.

Charging Speed and Throughput

Charging speed depends on vehicle battery acceptance rate, battery temperature, and state of charge. Most modern EVs accept DC fast charging at rates of 50-250 kW.

Representative charging times (10% to 80% state of charge):

60 kW charger:

  • Small EV (40 kWh battery): 25-30 minutes
  • Mid-size EV (60 kWh battery): 35-45 minutes
  • Large EV/truck (100 kWh battery): 60-75 minutes

120 kW charger:

  • Small EV: 15-18 minutes
  • Mid-size EV: 20-25 minutes
  • Large EV/truck: 35-45 minutes

180 kW charger:

  • Small EV: 12-15 minutes
  • Mid-size EV: 15-20 minutes
  • Large EV/truck: 25-35 minutes

Note: Charging slows significantly above 80% state of charge due to battery chemistry limitations. DC fast charging is optimized for 10-80% charging window.

Primary Applications for Level 3 Fast Charging

1. Public Charging Stations (Retail, Rest Stops, Urban Centers)

High-turnover locations where charging speed directly impacts site utilization and revenue generation.

Business model: Charge per kWh consumed ($0.40-$0.60/kWh typical) or per session ($8-15 flat fee). A 180 kW charger operating at 60% utilization (14.4 hours/day active charging) generates 2,592 kWh daily. At $0.50/kWh, this produces $1,296/day revenue or $38,880/month. Installation cost typically $80,000-$120,000 for 180 kW unit installed, resulting in 3-4 month payback period at high-utilization sites.

Site selection criteria: Highway corridors (I-75, I-94, I-96, US-131 in Michigan), retail centers with 30+ minute dwell time (grocery stores, shopping centers), urban parking facilities, rest areas.

2. Fleet Operations (Delivery, Transit, Municipal)

Fleets operating multiple shifts or requiring mid-day charging to maximize vehicle utilization.

Application example: A delivery fleet with 30 vehicles operating two 6-hour shifts daily. Vehicles require mid-day charging to complete second shift. Level 2 charging would require 4-6 hours, reducing vehicle availability. Level 3 fast charging at 120-180 kW provides sufficient charge in 30-45 minute lunch break, keeping vehicles in service.

ROI calculation: Each delivery vehicle generates approximately $150-300 revenue per shift. If slow charging removes vehicles from second shift, revenue loss is $4,500-9,000 daily (30 vehicles × $150-300). A $150,000 investment in fast charging infrastructure to maintain two-shift operation pays back in 15-30 days from eliminated revenue loss.

3. Multi-Unit Residential (Premium Amenity)

High-end residential properties differentiate with fast charging amenity, particularly in urban markets where residents may not have overnight parking or dedicated charger access.

Resident use case: Urban resident without dedicated parking charges vehicle 1-2 times per week for 30-45 minutes. Fast charging matches time required for grocery shopping or gym workout within same property.

Property manager benefits: Premium amenity justifies higher rent ($50-100/month premium for units with fast charging access). Revenue generation through per-session charging fees or monthly access subscriptions.

Schedule your free consultation: Call 800-485-8068 or visit wolverinepower.com/ev-chargers


Implementation Considerations: Electrical, Permitting, and Operational

Electrical Infrastructure Requirements

Level 2 chargers: Require 208-240V service, widely available in commercial and multi-unit residential buildings. Each charger needs dedicated 60A circuit. Can operate on single-phase power.

Level 3 chargers: Require 480V three-phase service, typically available only in commercial/industrial buildings. Residential and small commercial buildings usually require electrical service upgrade to support Level 3 charging. Utility coordination required for service upgrades exceeding 200 kVA.

Michigan-specific considerations:

DTE Energy service territory: Commercial electrical service upgrades require 60-120 day lead time for utility transformer installation. Plan infrastructure 6-12 months in advance of anticipated need.

Consumers Energy service territory: Similar lead times apply. Utility provides free transformer upgrade if incremental load exceeds 50 kVA, but customer pays for trenching and conduit installation from transformer to building.

Winter performance: Both Level 2 and Level 3 chargers are rated for operation to -22°F. However, cold battery performance degrades charging acceptance rates. A battery at 0°F may accept only 50-70% of normal charging power until battery reaches operating temperature. Pre-conditioning (warming battery using shore power before departure) mitigates this issue.

Permitting and Code Compliance

Michigan electrical installations must comply with:

National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 625: Defines EV charging system installation requirements including dedicated circuits, GFCI protection, cable management, and disconnecting means.

Michigan Electrical Code: Adopts NEC with few state-specific amendments. Local jurisdictions (cities, townships) may have additional requirements.

ADA compliance: Public charging stations must provide accessible parking spaces and charger placement per ADA guidelines. Minimum one accessible EV charging space per charging location.

Building permits: EV charging installations require electrical permit from local building department. Inspection required before energization.

Utility notification: Commercial installations exceeding 50 kW typically require utility notification and may require power quality studies for Level 3 fast chargers.

Network Connectivity and Backend Management

Both Level 2 Pro and Level 3 chargers support OCPP (Open Charge Point Protocol), the industry-standard communication protocol for EV chargers.

OCPP benefits:

  • Vendor neutrality: Manage chargers from multiple manufacturers on single platform
  • Payment integration: Connect to payment processors for public charging applications
  • Energy management: Integrate with building energy management systems
  • Grid services: Participate in demand response programs (utilities pay businesses to reduce charging during peak demand periods)

Network options:

  • Ethernet: Hardwired network connection (most reliable, recommended for Level 3 installations)
  • WiFi: Wireless connection to existing building WiFi network
  • Cellular (4G/LTE): Independent connectivity without building network (recommended for outdoor locations without building network access)

Maintenance and Lifecycle Costs

Level 2 chargers: Minimal maintenance required. No moving parts except cable retraction mechanism (if equipped). Expected service life 10-15 years. Annual maintenance: inspect connections, test GFCI, verify firmware current.

Level 3 chargers: More complex due to active cooling, higher power electronics, and cable management systems. Expected service life 10-12 years. Annual maintenance: inspect cooling system, verify power modules, test safety systems, update firmware. Recommended service contract with qualified technician.

Component replacement: Level 2 cables may require replacement every 5-7 years due to wear. Level 3 cables experience higher wear due to heavier construction and frequent connect/disconnect cycles; replacement every 3-5 years typical.


The Business Case: ROI Analysis for EV Charging Infrastructure

Workplace Charging ROI

Initial investment:

  • Level 2 Pro chargers: $800-1,200 per unit (equipment only)
  • Installation: $1,200-2,500 per charger (electrical work, trenching if required, permits)
  • Total: $2,000-3,700 per charging station

Operating costs:

  • Electricity: 40 kWh/day × $0.12/kWh = $4.80/day = $100/month per charger at full utilization
  • Maintenance: Minimal, approximately $50-100/year per charger
  • Network fees (if using third-party charging network): $10-30/month per charger

Revenue/cost recovery:

  • Employee charging fees: $30-60/month per employee enrolled (typical model: employees pay for electricity consumed)
  • Property value increase: EV charging capability increases commercial property value by attracting high-quality tenants

Intangible benefits:

  • Employee recruitment and retention (EV charging benefit increasingly valued, particularly by younger professionals)
  • Corporate sustainability goals (supporting employee EV adoption reduces Scope 3 emissions)
  • Future-proofing facility for continued EV adoption growth

Fleet Charging ROI

Cost comparison: Electric vs. gasoline fleet (per vehicle annual basis):

Gasoline vehicle:

  • 12,000 miles/year ÷ 25 mpg = 480 gallons
  • 480 gallons × $3.50/gallon = $1,680 fuel cost
  • Maintenance (oil changes, transmission, exhaust, etc.): $800-1,200/year
  • Total: $2,480-2,880/year per vehicle

Electric vehicle:

  • 12,000 miles/year ÷ 3 miles/kWh efficiency = 4,000 kWh
  • 4,000 kWh × $0.12/kWh = $480 electricity cost
  • Maintenance (tire rotation, cabin air filter, brake fluid): $200-300/year
  • Total: $680-780/year per vehicle

Annual savings: $1,800-2,100 per vehicle

For a 20-vehicle fleet, annual operating cost savings are $36,000-42,000. Even with higher vehicle acquisition costs ($8,000-12,000 premium for EV vs. comparable gasoline vehicle), payback period is 4-6 years through operating cost savings alone.

Charging infrastructure investment: $40,000-60,000 for 8-10 Level 2 chargers (including installation) pays back in 1-2 years from fuel savings alone.

Public Charging Station ROI

Level 3 fast charger investment:

  • Equipment: $40,000-70,000 (60-180 kW model)
  • Installation: $30,000-60,000 (electrical work, transformer if required, trenching, concrete pad, permits)
  • Total: $70,000-130,000 per charging location

Revenue model:

  • Pricing: $0.40-0.60/kWh or $10-15 per session flat rate
  • Utilization: 20-60% depending on location (highway corridor higher, suburban retail lower)
  • Average session: 30 kWh consumed at 120 kW charger (20-minute session)

Monthly revenue (120 kW charger at 40% utilization):

  • Utilization: 40% × 24 hours = 9.6 hours active charging daily
  • Sessions: 9.6 hours ÷ 0.5 hours per session = 19 sessions/day
  • Energy: 19 sessions × 30 kWh = 570 kWh/day = 17,100 kWh/month
  • Revenue: 17,100 kWh × $0.50/kWh = $8,550/month
  • Operating costs: Electricity (17,100 kWh × $0.10/kWh = $1,710), maintenance ($200), network fees ($100) = $2,010/month
  • Net profit: $6,540/month

Payback period: $100,000 installation cost ÷ $6,540/month = 15 months

High-traffic locations achieve payback in 6-12 months. Lower-traffic suburban locations require 18-36 months.


Generac Industrial Energy: Integrated Microgrid Solutions

Wolverine Power Systems is Michigan’s only Generac Industrial Platinum Dealer, providing access to Generac’s complete microgrid solutions portfolio including backup generators, battery energy storage systems (BESS), microgrid controllers, and EV charging infrastructure.

Why integration matters:

1. Combined backup power and EV charging: Facilities with Generac backup generators can continue EV charging operations during grid outages, ensuring fleet vehicles and employee vehicles remain operational during extended power interruptions.

2. Battery storage + EV charging: BESS systems can reduce demand charges by providing power during peak pricing periods, reducing the operational cost of EV charging by 20-40% in facilities with time-of-use electricity rates.

3. Solar + storage + EV charging: Complete renewable energy integration. Solar generates power during day, BESS stores excess for evening charging, generators provide backup during multi-day grid outages or solar unavailability in winter.

4. Unified management platform: Single interface manages all energy assets — generators, batteries, EV chargers, solar — providing facility managers complete visibility and control.

5. Future-ready infrastructure: As vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology matures, EV batteries can provide emergency backup power to buildings. Generac’s platform architecture is designed to support V2G integration when widely adopted.

Schedule your free consultation: Call 800-485-8068 or visit wolverinepower.com/ev-chargers


Frequently Asked EV Charging Questions for Michigan Businesses

What’s the difference between Level 2 and Level 3 EV charging?

Level 2 chargers deliver 7-11.5 kW using 208-240V AC power, providing 25-45 miles of range per hour. They’re ideal for workplace and overnight fleet charging where vehicles park 4-8 hours. Level 3 DC fast chargers deliver 50-350 kW, providing 100-300+ miles in 20-60 minutes. They’re designed for public charging stations and high-utilization fleet operations requiring rapid vehicle turnaround. For most Michigan businesses with employee or fleet charging needs, Level 2 is more cost-effective ($2,000-3,700 per charger vs. $70,000-130,000 for Level 3).

How many EV chargers does my Michigan workplace need?

A general rule is one Level 2 charger per 10-15 EV-owning employees for rotational use. For example, if 30 employees drive EVs, install 2-3 chargers initially with infrastructure planned for 6-8 chargers as adoption grows. However, with Generac’s dynamic power sharing, you can install more chargers on limited electrical service—a 300-amp panel can support 15-20 chargers instead of just 5 without power management.

Can I install EV chargers without upgrading my building’s electrical service in Michigan?

Yes, using dynamic power sharing technology. Generac Level 2 Pro chargers can share available electrical capacity among up to 50 chargers, intelligently distributing power based on demand. This allows Michigan businesses to install 3-4× more chargers on existing electrical service. Without power sharing, adding 10 chargers requires 600 amps; with power sharing, the same 10 chargers can operate on 200-300 amps. This saves $40,000-80,000 in electrical service upgrade costs typical for Michigan commercial buildings.

How much does it cost to charge an electric vehicle at my Michigan business?

Commercial electricity in Michigan averages $0.10-0.14/kWh. A typical EV uses 30-40 kWh daily (for 100-120 miles), costing $3.00-$5.60 per full charge. At workplace charging, if an employee charges 20 days/month, total cost is $60-112/month. Many Michigan businesses charge employees $30-60/month for unlimited charging access, recovering electricity costs while providing valued employee benefit.

What are the electrical service lead times with DTE Energy or Consumers Energy?

In DTE Energy and Consumers Energy service territories, commercial electrical service upgrades requiring new transformers take 60-120 days from application to energization. For Level 3 fast charger installations requiring 480V three-phase service, plan 6-12 months lead time. Both utilities provide free transformer upgrades if incremental load exceeds 50 kVA, but you pay for trenching and conduit from transformer to building. Early utility coordination is critical for Michigan EV charging projects.

How do EV chargers perform in Michigan winters?

Both Level 2 and Level 3 chargers are rated for operation to -22°F. However, cold batteries (below 32°F) accept charge more slowly until warmed to operating temperature. A battery at 0°F may only accept 50-70% of normal charging power initially. This means a Level 2 charger providing 45 miles/hour in summer may deliver only 25-30 miles/hour in winter until battery warms. Pre-conditioning vehicles while plugged in (warming battery before departure) mitigates this issue for fleet operations.

Can I use federal tax credits or Michigan incentives for EV charger installation?

Federal tax credits provide up to 30% of installation costs (maximum $100,000 per site) for commercial EV charging under the Alternative Fuel Infrastructure Tax Credit. Additionally, Michigan’s eGallon program and various utility rebates may apply. DTE Energy and Consumers Energy periodically offer commercial charging rebates. Wolverine Power Systems helps Michigan businesses navigate available incentives to reduce total project costs. Contact us for current incentive analysis specific to your project.

How long does EV charger installation take in Michigan?

Level 2 charger installations typically take 1-3 days per location after electrical permits are obtained. Permitting in most Michigan municipalities takes 2-4 weeks. Total timeline from contract to operational chargers: 4-8 weeks. Level 3 fast charger installations requiring electrical service upgrades take 3-6 months including utility coordination, permitting, electrical work, and commissioning. Projects requiring new transformers from DTE or Consumers Energy add 60-120 days to timelines.

Can I install EV chargers for multi-unit residential properties in Michigan?

Yes, and they’re increasingly essential amenities for Michigan apartments and condos. Key considerations: (1) Dynamic power sharing prevents electrical overload when multiple tenants charge simultaneously, (2) RFID authentication and energy tracking enable accurate billing to individual tenants, (3) Start with 2-4 chargers and expand as demand grows, (4) Properties with EV charging can command $50-100/month rent premiums. Wolverine Power Systems has installed charging infrastructure for multi-unit residential properties throughout Michigan including Detroit, Ann Arbor, and Grand Rapids.

What’s the ROI for workplace EV charging in Michigan?

Workplace charging typically isn’t revenue-generating but provides employee recruitment/retention benefits and supports sustainability goals. Initial investment: $2,000-3,700 per Level 2 charger including installation. Operating costs: $100-120/month per charger at full utilization. Many Michigan employers charge employees $30-60/month for charging access, recovering 50-80% of operating costs. Intangible benefits include attracting talent (particularly younger professionals who prioritize sustainability) and meeting corporate ESG commitments.

Can EV chargers integrate with my building’s backup generator or solar system?

Yes. Wolverine Power Systems specializes in integrated microgrid solutions combining generators, battery storage, solar, and EV charging. Benefits include: (1) Continued EV charging during grid outages using backup generator power, (2) Solar energy stored in batteries for EV charging during peak rate periods, reducing electricity costs 20-40%, (3) Unified energy management platform controlling all systems, (4) Future vehicle-to-grid (V2G) readiness when technology matures. As Michigan’s only Generac Industrial Platinum Dealer, we design complete integrated energy solutions.

What maintenance do EV chargers require?

Level 2 chargers require minimal maintenance: annual inspections of electrical connections, GFCI testing, and firmware updates. No regular parts replacement except cables every 5-7 years from wear. Level 3 fast chargers require annual service including cooling system inspection, power module verification, and safety system testing. Service contracts recommended for Level 3 installations. Wolverine Power Systems provides maintenance services for all chargers we install throughout Michigan’s 83 counties with 24/7 emergency support.


Next Steps: Assessing Your EV Charging Needs

Determining the right EV charging solution requires analysis of:

1. Vehicle population and growth projection: How many EVs need charging today? Expected growth over next 3-5 years? (Many facilities install infrastructure for 2-3× current EV population to avoid future electrical service upgrades.)

2. Parking duration: Do vehicles park for 8+ hours (favors Level 2) or need rapid turnaround (requires Level 3)?

3. Electrical service capacity: Available electrical capacity without utility service upgrade? Cost and timeline for service upgrade if required?

4. Business model: Employee benefit? Revenue-generating public charging? Fleet optimization?

5. User experience requirements: Contactless payment? Mobile app control? RFID access? Energy cost allocation to individual users?

Wolverine Power Systems’ technical team provides complimentary site assessments for Michigan businesses, property managers, and fleet operators considering EV charging infrastructure. Our assessment includes:

  • Electrical capacity analysis (review existing service, determine upgrade requirements)
  • Charging system sizing (number and type of chargers needed for current and projected demand)
  • Layout and installation planning (optimal charger placement, cable routing, ADA compliance)
  • Technology recommendations (Level 2 vs. Level 3, network connectivity options)
  • Cost estimation (equipment, installation, ongoing operational costs)
  • ROI analysis (payback period, total cost of ownership)
  • Integration opportunities (existing or planned backup power, solar, battery storage)

Schedule your free consultation: Call 800-485-8068 or visit wolverinepower.com/ev-chargers


About WPS

Wolverine Power Systems has served Michigan’s commercial and industrial market since 1997, with extensive experience in critical power infrastructure for businesses, municipalities, and multi-unit residential properties. As Michigan’s only Generac Industrial Platinum Dealer, our team includes certified technicians, experienced energy systems designers, and 24/7 emergency service capabilities across all 83 Michigan counties. We collaborate with licensed electrical engineers to ensure all installations meet professional engineering standards and code requirements.

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