Every Nevada EV Charger Incentive, On One Page
A scannable summary of every rebate, tax credit, rate plan, and legal protection a Henderson homeowner can stack toward an EV charger install. Each card links out to the deep-dive when you want to actually claim it.
The five incentives worth knowing
Nevada EV charger savings come from five distinct sources: one utility rebate, one federal tax credit, one state-level program tied to vehicle purchases, one off-peak rate plan, and one piece of state legislation that protects your right to install. We summarize each below, then link you to the dedicated guide so you can pull the trigger.
NV Energy EV Charger Rebate
Residential NV Energy customers in Clark County can claim up to $500 back on a qualifying Level 2 home charger when enrolled in a Time-of-Use rate plan. Funds are first-come, first-served and renew annually. We file the paperwork on your behalf within 30 days of install.
Read full NV Energy guideFederal EV Charger Tax Credit (Section 30C)
IRS Form 8911 lets eligible homeowners claim 30% of equipment plus installation costs, capped at $1,000 for residential and $100,000 per charger for commercial. Your address must fall inside an eligible low-income or non-urban census tract. Available through 2032.
IRS Form 8911 instructionsNevada Clean Cars Rebate
Nevada periodically funds state-level EV purchase rebates tied to vehicle sales, not chargers directly. Current funding rounds are administered through the Governor's Office of Energy. Pair a vehicle rebate with your charger install for stacked savings when programs are open.
Check current funding roundNV Energy PowerShift TOU Rate Plan
Not a rebate, but the biggest long-term saver. PowerShift TOU rates make midnight–6am charging dramatically cheaper than the flat rate. Enrollment is also a prerequisite for the $500 NV Energy rebate, so most customers enroll on install day.
PowerShift enrollment pageHOA Right-to-Charge (NRS 111.239)
Nevada statute NRS 111.239 prevents HOAs and condo associations from unreasonably prohibiting EV charger installs in your deeded parking or garage. The HOA can set reasonable safety and aesthetic conditions, but cannot block installation outright. Permit pull required first.
See permit requirementsQuick eligibility checker
If you can answer yes to all five, you almost certainly qualify for the NV Energy $500 rebate. The federal 30C credit adds a census-tract check on top, which we run for you before quoting.
- 1Are you an NV Energy residential customer in Clark County?
- 2Will you install a hardwired Level 2 charger from the approved equipment list?
- 3Are you willing to enroll in a Time-of-Use rate plan?
- 4Is the install at your primary residence (not a short-term rental)?
- 5Do you have the original install invoice and equipment serial number?
Want us to confirm in 60 seconds?
Free eligibility checkKeep reading
NV Energy $500 rebate — full deep-dive
Application steps, approved equipment list, TOU rate plan details, common rejection reasons, and the 2026 funding outlook.
Read the guideHenderson permits unlock rebates
Most rebate programs require a pulled and inspected permit. Here is the exact permit, inspection, and timeline workflow for Henderson and Clark County.
See permit guideIncentive Hub FAQs
Can I stack the NV Energy rebate with the federal 30C tax credit?
Yes. They are administered by different bodies (utility vs IRS) and have independent eligibility rules. Most Henderson homeowners who qualify for both end up reducing their net install cost by $800–$1,500 once the rebate check and tax credit are applied.
Why is this page shorter than your NV Energy rebate blog post?
This page is a hub: a fast scan of every Nevada incentive in one place. The NV Energy blog post is a deep-dive walkthrough of one specific program (eligibility, application steps, approved equipment, common rejection reasons). Start here, then click into the deep-dive for the program you actually want to claim.
Do renters qualify for any of these incentives?
The federal 30C credit and the NV Energy residential rebate both require you to own the property where the charger is installed. Renters typically need their landlord or HOA to apply. The Right-to-Charge statute (NRS 111.239) helps tenants in condos with deeded parking, but the rebate filing must come from the owner.
How long does the NV Energy rebate check actually take?
From our last 40 Henderson installs, the average has been 7.5 weeks from submission to check arrival. NV Energy targets 6–8 weeks; delays usually trace back to missing serial number photos or incomplete TOU enrollment, both of which we handle upfront.
What if my address is not in an eligible 30C census tract?
Then you skip the federal credit but still get the $500 NV Energy rebate, which alone covers about 40% of a typical Henderson install. Roughly 55% of Henderson addresses currently fall inside eligible 30C tracts — we check yours before quoting so there are no tax-season surprises.
Let's find your stack
We'll tell you exactly which rebates and credits you qualify for — utility, federal, and state — before you commit to anything.
Page maintained by Mike Reynolds, NV License #0087341. Not tax advice — consult a licensed CPA for filings.