Will the quote show charger and labor separately?
You need paid invoices for both the charger and the installation if the rebate application asks for purchase and install documentation.
Rebate guide
The current residential rebate page says eligible customers can receive up to $300 for purchasing and installing a Level 2 charger at home.
Updated June 26, 2026
Current working number: up to $300 for eligible Georgia Power residential customers purchasing and installing a Level 2 charger. The rebate is available while funds last, and Georgia Power says the amount is subject to change.
Eligibility
Georgia Power's current EV charger rebate page lists these requirements: you must be a Georgia Power customer, the charger must be a 208/240-volt Level 2 charger on a dedicated circuit, and the property must be a single-family home or townhome.
The page also says third-party vendors and EV charging businesses are not eligible for the residential rebate.
Timing
The current rebate page says eligible installations run from January 1, 2026 through December 31, 2028. It also says the rebate request must include paid installation and charger invoices and be submitted within 6 months of installation.
That matters because an Atlanta homeowner cannot treat the rebate like an automatic discount. You need paperwork from the charger purchase and installer.
Georgia Power's broader EV resources page still contains older "up to $150" home charger rebate language. The dedicated EV charger rebate page is more specific and currently says up to $300. Because official pages conflict, this site uses "up to $300" with a verification warning instead of promising an exact payout.
Budget impact
For a simple $1,750 home charging project, a full $300 rebate would lower the out-of-pocket cost to about $1,450 before any federal tax-credit effect. Before the June 30, 2026 federal deadline, a qualifying 30C credit can change the math further.
For line-item pricing, read the Atlanta EV charger installation cost guide. For federal eligibility, read the 30C deadline guide.
Installer checklist
You need paid invoices for both the charger and the installation if the rebate application asks for purchase and install documentation.
Georgia Power's eligibility language requires a 208/240-volt Level 2 charger with a dedicated circuit.
A permitted installation protects the rebate paperwork and reduces the risk of problems when you sell or insure the home.