Alaska · Home EV Charger · Free 2026 rebate finder
Home EV Charger rebates & tax credits in Alaska
On a typical $1,800 home ev charger in Alaska, your stack: $540 federal tax credit. Total potential savings: $540.
Your quoted cost
Leave blank to use the typical home ev charger median, or paste your actual quote to refresh all dollar values below.
Net out-of-pocket — best to worst case
$1,260 – $1,260
Best case assumes HEEHRA-qualified household (pending in Alaska). Worst case = federal + state credits only.
Federal tax credit
30C Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit
$540
30% × $1,800 (capped at $1,000/yr)
30% federal tax credit up to $1,000 on residential EV chargers (equipment + installation labor). Only available in census tracts that are 'low-income' or 'non-urban' (≈ 2/3 of U.S. tracts). Check IRS Pub 5886 Appendix B for tract eligibility.
Now figure out how to pay for the $1,260–$1,260 net
HELOC vs cash-out refi vs personal loan vs cash — our renovation financing calculator runs the apples-to-apples math, with Alaska rates pre-loaded.
How to actually capture this stack
- Get a fair-price quote BEFORE telling the contractor you'll claim rebates (avoids quote padding)
- Confirm the equipment meets the ENERGY STAR / CEE tier required for 25C — model number on the invoice
- Save Form 5695 documentation: receipts, model numbers, contractor info — IRS may audit
FAQ — Home EV Charger rebates in Alaska
How much can I get back on a home ev charger in Alaska in 2026?
Total potential savings on a $1,800 home ev charger: $540. That breaks down as $540 federal tax credit (30C Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit). Net out-of-pocket: $1,260 (best case) to $1,260 (without HEEHRA).
Is the IRA HEEHRA rebate live in Alaska right now?
IRA HEEHRA does not apply to home ev charger — only federal tax credits do. Your savings come from the 30C Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit on your 2026 tax return.
Do I have to itemize to claim the 30C Alternative Fuel Refueling Property Credit?
No — 25C, 25D, and 30C are credits, not deductions. You claim them on Form 5695 (Residential Energy Credits) regardless of whether you itemize. Catch: they're NON-refundable. If your federal tax liability is smaller than your credit, the excess rolls forward (5 years for 25D solar; 25C does NOT roll forward — use it or lose it that year). Plan your install for a year when your tax bill is at least equal to the credit.
Can my Alaska contractor pad their quote to absorb my rebate?
Yes — this is the single most common abuse in the post-IRA market. The clearest red flag: a quote that's higher than your state's typical range for home ev charger by exactly the amount of the rebate. Always: (1) get the quote BEFORE mentioning rebates, (2) cross-check against Alaska fair-price data, (3) refuse "rebate handling fees" — HEEHRA point-of-sale is supposed to be applied without additional contractor markup.
Other energy upgrades in Alaska
Disclaimer: This page is informational, not tax or legal advice. Rebate amounts are upper bounds — actual eligibility depends on income, tax liability, equipment specs, and program-launch timing in Alaska. Confirm with a CPA before relying on these numbers for budgeting.