The federal EV-charger credit ends June 30, 2026.
Per the IRS: homeowners get 30% of the cost, up to $1,000 per charging port, for home charging equipment bought and placed in service between January 1, 2023 and June 30, 2026. After June 30 — gone. Installed, powered on, done. Not ordered. Not scheduled.
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Statutory deadline — property placed in service through June 30, 2026. Read the credit terms at IRS.gov.
If you install chargers, read this
Every homeowner on your list is worth up to $1,000 more this month than next month.
A real statutory deadline is the one time a countdown is honest marketing. The play: quote the IRS terms exactly, work every EV-charger lead in the pipeline now, schedule installs so they're placed in service by June 30 — and kill the campaign at the deadline, automatically.
That last part is the difference between an operator and a tool. SCS AI drafts the outreach in your voice, runs it only to contacts you have consent to message, cites only verified terms, and sunsets the copy the day the statute does — the same way this page will.
Verified terms
quoted from IRS.gov, never invented
Consent-gated
outreach only where you're allowed
Auto-sunset
expired offers die on the statutory date
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HVAC, plumbing, electrical, GC, and the renewable-energy sub-tier (heat pumps, solar, EV chargers, energy audits). One operator at a time.
Credit terms above are for property installed at a main home, as stated by the IRS (verified June 12, 2026). Additional eligibility rules apply — including census-tract requirements — and terms for business-property installations differ. See the IRS page and a tax professional for your situation. This page is not tax advice.