Pairing Electric Vehicle Charging with Solar in Pennsylvania
Pairing rooftop or ground-mounted solar generation with electric vehicle charging infrastructure allows Pennsylvania property owners to offset transportation fuel costs with locally produced electricity. This page covers the technical architecture of solar-plus-EV systems, the regulatory and permitting framework governing such installations in the Commonwealth, the most common deployment scenarios, and the decision points that determine whether a combined system is feasible for a given site. Understanding how these two technologies interact is essential before committing to equipment selection or utility interconnection applications.
Definition and scope
A solar-EV charging integration is a system in which photovoltaic (PV) generation feeds, either directly or through the grid, a Level 1, Level 2, or DC Fast Charge (DCFC) station installed at a residential, commercial, or institutional property. The PV array produces alternating current (via an inverter) that can serve EV charging loads in real time, export surplus power to the utility grid, or charge a battery storage system for later dispatch to the vehicle charger.
Pennsylvania's regulatory framework for such systems sits at the intersection of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) interconnection rules, the Pennsylvania Alternative Energy Portfolio Standard (AEPS) (Pennsylvania AEPS Act 213 of 2004), National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 625 (covering electric vehicle power transfer infrastructure), and local municipal building codes.
Scope coverage: This page applies to solar-EV charging systems installed on properties located within Pennsylvania. It does not address federal tax credit mechanics in detail (those are governed by the Internal Revenue Code and administered by the IRS), utility-scale fleet charging depots operating under Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) jurisdiction, or EV charging installations in states outside Pennsylvania. Adjacent topics such as net metering in Pennsylvania and solar battery storage in Pennsylvania are covered separately and are not duplicated here.
How it works
A solar-EV charging system operates through four functional layers:
- Generation layer — The PV array converts solar irradiance into direct current (DC) electricity. Pennsylvania's average solar resource yields approximately 4.0–4.5 peak sun hours per day, depending on region (NREL PVWatts Calculator).
- Conversion layer — A string inverter, microinverter, or hybrid inverter converts DC to grid-compatible 120/240 V AC. Hybrid inverters additionally manage a battery bank if one is installed.
- Distribution layer — The converted AC power flows to the main service panel and then to the EV charging equipment. A dedicated 240 V, 50-amp circuit is standard for Level 2 EVSE (Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment), as specified in NEC Article 625.
- Metering and interconnection layer — A bidirectional net meter, installed under Pennsylvania's interconnection and net metering rules, records excess solar export and allows the property owner to draw credits against EV charging loads consumed overnight or during low-generation periods.
When solar output exceeds combined household and EV charging demand, surplus electrons flow to the distribution grid and accumulate as net metering credits. When demand exceeds solar output — typically during morning EV charge-up before peak sun — grid power fills the gap. The conceptual overview of how Pennsylvania solar energy systems work provides foundational context for understanding this energy flow model.
Battery storage changes the dispatch equation: stored daytime solar energy can charge the vehicle during off-peak hours, reducing grid dependence and potentially qualifying for time-of-use rate arbitrage available through utilities such as PECO, PPL Electric, and Duquesne Light.
Common scenarios
Scenario 1: Residential rooftop solar with Level 2 EVSE, grid-tied, no storage
This is the most common configuration in Pennsylvania. A 7–10 kW rooftop system paired with a 7.2 kW Level 2 charger (the most common residential charger output) can offset the majority of annual vehicle miles for a typical passenger EV consuming approximately 3–4 miles per kWh. System sizing guidance is addressed in detail at Pennsylvania solar system sizing and output.
Scenario 2: Solar carport with integrated EV charging
Ground-level solar carports and canopies can co-locate the PV array directly above parking spaces, feeding dedicated Level 2 or DCFC stations. This configuration is common at commercial and municipal properties and may qualify under the AEPS Tier I category for solar photovoltaic.
Scenario 3: Solar plus battery storage plus EVSE
Adding a battery bank (typically 10–20 kWh for residential applications) allows solar energy captured midday to dispatch to the EV charger in the evening. This setup is examined within solar battery storage in Pennsylvania and is relevant where time-of-use utility rates create economic incentive for load shifting.
Scenario 4: Agricultural or commercial solar with fleet EV charging
Farm operations and commercial facilities pairing agricultural solar installations or commercial solar systems with light-duty fleet chargers follow the same NEC Article 625 and PUC interconnection requirements but may involve larger array sizes and three-phase service panels.
Decision boundaries
The principal variables governing whether a solar-EV pairing makes technical and economic sense for a specific Pennsylvania property are:
- Available roof or ground area — A Level 2 charger adding 30–40 miles of range per hour of charging consumes roughly 7–10 kWh per session. Each additional kilowatt of PV capacity requires approximately 65–100 square feet of unshaded surface area.
- Utility territory and rate structure — Net metering treatment, time-of-use rate availability, and interconnection queue timelines differ across PECO, PPL Electric, Met-Ed, and Duquesne Light service territories. The regulatory context for Pennsylvania solar energy systems details these distinctions.
- Service panel capacity — Adding a 240 V / 50-amp Level 2 circuit alongside a new solar inverter often requires a panel upgrade. The 2023 NEC (adopted by reference in Pennsylvania under the Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code, 34 Pa. Code Chapter 403) governs panel and circuit requirements.
- Permitting — Both the solar PV installation and the EVSE circuit require separate permits under local building codes. Most Pennsylvania municipalities follow the Uniform Construction Code administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. Inspections cover PV array mounting, inverter installation, and the dedicated EVSE branch circuit.
- Incentives — The federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) under IRC §48E applies to both the PV system and battery storage but does not cover standalone EVSE hardware. Pennsylvania-specific incentives are catalogued at Pennsylvania solar incentives and tax credits.
A comparison of charger levels clarifies the sizing implications:
| Charger Level | Typical Power Output | Circuit Requirement | Daily Range Added (8 hrs) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Level 1 (120 V) | 1.2–1.4 kW | Standard 15/20-amp outlet | ~40 miles |
| Level 2 (240 V) | 3.3–19.2 kW | Dedicated 30–100-amp circuit | ~150–250 miles |
| DC Fast Charge | 50–350 kW | Commercial three-phase service | Not typical for residential |
For properties in early planning stages, the broader Pennsylvania Solar Authority index provides entry-point navigation across all major topic areas relevant to solar development in the Commonwealth.
References
- Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission — Net Metering
- Pennsylvania Alternative Energy Portfolio Standard (Act 213 of 2004)
- NREL PVWatts Calculator
- National Electrical Code Article 625 — Electric Vehicle Power Transfer Infrastructure (NFPA)
- Pennsylvania Uniform Construction Code — 34 Pa. Code Chapter 403
- Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry — Uniform Construction Code
- U.S. Department of Energy — Alternative Fuels Data Center: Electric Vehicle Charging