Whether you're charging at home overnight or managing a workplace fleet, choosing the right EV charger makes a real difference. Browse our directory below — all models confirmed available in Ireland with SEAI grant eligibility clearly marked.
🏠 Home Chargers
13 smart wallboxes for overnight home charging. All SEAI €300 grant-eligible. Works with any Type 2 EV. Installed by a Safe Electric Ireland registered electrician.
🏢 Business Chargers
11 chargers for workplace car parks, retail forecourts, fleet depots and hospitality venues. Load management, RFID access control and OCPP back-office included.
🏠 Home Chargers
🏢 Business Chargers
💰 Irish EV Charger Grants & Incentives
Grants are available for home, workplace and heavy fleet charging installations. Always verify current eligibility at the relevant source before purchasing.
🧮 Calculators
🏠 Home Charging Cost Calculator
See exactly how much it costs to charge your EV at home in Ireland — based on your tariff, nightly mileage and charger output. Compare night rate vs peak savings.
Calculate my home charging cost →🚛 Fleet & Grant Calculator
Calculate the full SEAI and ZEHDV grant entitlement for your fleet or business vehicle purchase. Cars, vans, trucks, buses — all grant tiers covered.
Calculate fleet grants →How to choose the right EV charger in Ireland
For most Irish homeowners, a 7kW smart wallbox is the right choice. It works with your existing single-phase electricity supply, qualifies for the €300 SEAI Home Charger Grant, and charges a typical EV from near-empty to full overnight — adding roughly 40–50 km of range per hour. If you want the simplest possible setup, the EO Mini Pro 3 and Ohme ePod are the most common starter picks. If you have solar panels or are planning to install them, the Zappi v2.1 is the clear standout for its Eco divert mode. For smart-home integration with Apple or Google, the Hypervolt Home 3 Pro is unique in the Irish market. For a full breakdown of costs and how to apply for the SEAI grant, see our complete guide to home EV charging in Ireland.
Home vs business charging — what's the difference?
Home chargers are designed for personal use at a single address. They are typically 7kW single-phase units with a Type 2 connection, app-based scheduling, and increasingly include solar integration. Business chargers are built for multi-user environments and must handle RFID access control, usage reporting, back-office billing, and load management across multiple charge points on the same supply. The Zaptec Pro, available exclusively through Core Solutions Ireland, is the most widely deployed commercial solution in Irish apartment complexes, hotels, and business parks. The Wallbox Copper SB is the go-to for semi-public sites like retail car parks and hospitality venues. Note: as of March 2026, there is no active workplace EV charger grant in Ireland — the old SEAI WCP pilot ended and has not been replaced. Businesses operating zero-emission HGV or bus fleets may qualify for the ZEHDV vehicle purchase grant of up to €50,000 via Transport Infrastructure Ireland.
The SEAI €300 Home Charger Grant — what you need to know
The SEAI offers a €300 grant toward the purchase and installation of a home EV charger. To qualify, you need a BEV or PHEV, off-street parking, and a Safe Electric Ireland registered electrician. The charger must be a smart charger on the SEAI approved list. Critically, you must apply and receive a Letter of Offer before any installation work begins — starting work first is an automatic disqualification. All 10 home chargers in this directory are SEAI grant eligible when installed by a registered contractor.
Do you need a three-phase connection for faster home charging?
Most Irish homes have a single-phase electricity supply, which caps a wallbox at 7.4kW. This is sufficient for overnight charging — adding around 250–300 km of range per night for most EVs. Three-phase unlocks 22kW charging (3–4 hours for a full charge), but requires an electrical upgrade typically costing €2,000–€4,000 and is only worth it if you regularly need a very fast turnaround or are running multiple EVs. Your installer will confirm your supply type during a free site survey.
What is OCPP and why does it matter for business chargers?
OCPP (Open Charge Point Protocol) allows a charger to connect to any network management system. For businesses, this means central monitoring across all chargers, usage reporting, access control, pricing configuration, and the ability to switch software providers without replacing hardware. Look for OCPP 1.6 as a minimum; the Schneider EVlink Pro AC and Kempower T-Series support OCPP 2.0, the current standard for smart grid integration and future-proofing at scale.