Understanding Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 charging is the key to choosing the right home EV charger, protecting your battery, and keeping your running costs low. This FAQ page answers the most common questions with real, practical examples based on two proven chargers:
A Level 2 charger is a 240V AC charger that typically delivers 3.3–11.5 kW of power. In practical terms, that means roughly 20–45 miles of range per hour, depending on the EV and amperage.
The EVIQO 40A Level 2 charger is a good example: it outputs 9.6 kW and can add up to ~38 miles of range per hour when your EV supports that rate. This makes it ideal as a daily home charger for most full battery electric vehicles (BEVs) and plug-in hybrids (PHEVs).
Check EVIQO Level 2 Specs on AmazonIt depends which Tesla charger you mean:
At home, Tesla owners usually use a Level 2 wall connector, or a J1772 charger like the EVIQO paired with a J1772–Tesla adapter.
The EVDANCE portable can work as both Level 1 (120V, 12A) and Level 2 (240V, 16A), while the EVIQO is a dedicated, high-power Level 2 wall charger.
For battery health, both Level 1 and Level 2 are considered gentle and safe. For daily convenience, Level 2 is far better because it charges 5–8x faster.
Level 1 makes sense if:
For most EV owners, a reliable Level 2 charger (such as EVIQO) is the most practical long-term solution.
No. Level 2 charging is the recommended daily charging method by all major EV manufacturers. What can accelerate battery wear is:
Using a smart Level 2 charger like EVIQO with schedules and current control is actually better for long-term battery health than relying on DC fast charging.
Rough rule of thumb: Level 2 is 5–8× faster.
So a full battery that takes overnight or longer on Level 1 can often be recharged in a single night (or even a few hours) on a stronger Level 2 unit.
The cost per kWh is the same whether Level 1 or Level 2. However, a Level 2 charger can indirectly save money because:
Over time, a home Level 2 charger often pays for itself compared with frequent public charging.
Level 1 is safe for the battery — but there are practical downsides:
A high-quality Level 1/2 portable charger like EVDANCE adds protections such as:
So Level 1 is fine for light use or backup, but most owners are happier with Level 2.
View EVDANCE Portable Level 1/2 on AmazonIt depends on the power (kW) and your car’s onboard charger, but common ranges are:
Many EV owners find that even 25–30 miles of range per hour is more than enough for overnight charging.
Yes, in most cases Level 2 is slightly more efficient because:
The difference isn’t massive, but over years of use, Level 2 tends to waste less energy than long, slow Level 1 sessions.
A Level 3 charger is a DC fast charger typically found on highways and commercial sites:
They are excellent for road trips, but not suitable or economical for home installation.
These terms usually refer to the connector standard, not the power level:
The EVIQO and EVDANCE chargers use J1772, so they’re Type 1 style and work with almost all EVs in North America (Tesla needs an adapter).
Tesla offers both:
EVDANCE gives you both modes in one portable unit, while EVIQO is designed as a full-time Level 2 home station.
Theoretical “fastest” Level 2 is around 80A / 19.2 kW, but most homes and EVs do not support that. In practice, 40A–48A (9.6–11.5 kW) is the sweet spot for home use.
The EVIQO 40A Level 2 (9.6 kW) is in this high-power range and will be close to the maximum speed supported by many EV onboard chargers.
The electricity price per kWh is the same. Level 1 is not more expensive per unit of energy — just much slower.
Where Level 2 can save money is by enabling scheduled, off-peak charging and reducing reliance on expensive public fast charging.
In IEC terminology, Mode 3 refers to AC charging where:
Most modern wall-mounted or pedestal AC chargers (like EVIQO) are Mode 3 devices.
A 240V outlet is just a power source. A Level 2 charger adds:
You plug the Level 2 charger into the 240V outlet (for plug-in units) or hardwire it.
Almost always cheaper at home. In most areas:
A good Level 2 home charger (like EVIQO) maximizes the benefit of cheaper home electricity.
Many homes can, but you need a licensed electrician to:
In some cases, if the panel is small or already near capacity, you may need a panel upgrade.
A 7 kW charger (around 32A at 240V) is better for most EV owners because it:
A 3 kW charger can work for plug-in hybrids or very low daily mileage, but many drivers outgrow it.
The “80% rule” has two common meanings:
Smart chargers like EVIQO make it easy to set charge limits and control current in 1A steps (6–40A).
“Best” depends on your needs: reliability, smart features, portability, budget, and certifications. Look for:
The EVIQO 40A and EVDANCE portable Level 1/2 are good examples of well-specified, safety-certified units with real-world user feedback.
Yes. The car’s onboard charger is the limit. A 7 kW onboard charger plugged into a 22 kW AC station will still only draw around 7 kW.
It’s safe, but you won’t gain speed beyond what your car supports.
Major factors that drain EV batteries faster:
Using a good home Level 2 charger lets you keep your state of charge in the “comfortable middle” and avoid unnecessary fast charging.
A few high-end models now approach or exceed 400–500 miles of rated range, but most mainstream EVs fall in the 220–330 mile range.
For daily life, having reliable Level 2 charging at home (EVIQO) plus a portable backup (EVDANCE) matters more than chasing the largest possible battery.
If you want a fast, smart, code-compliant primary home charger, the EVIQO 40A Level 2 is a strong option with Wi-Fi, app control, UL/ETL certifications and up to 9.6 kW charging.
If you also want a flexible backup or travel charger that can use both standard 120V outlets and 240V NEMA 6-20 outlets, the EVDANCE Level 1/2 portable is a very practical companion.
🔌 View EVIQO 40A Level 2 on Amazon 🚗 View EVDANCE Level 1/2 Portable on AmazonAlways follow your vehicle manufacturer’s charging recommendations and consult a licensed electrician before installing any Level 2 charger at home.
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