For wholesalers, importers, and professional installers, understanding the differences between AC chargers and DC fast chargers is essential for choosing the right product mix and advising customers correctly. The two categories differ not only in power levels and charging speed, but also in grid impact, installation requirements, CAPEX/OPEX, and expected ROI. Choosing the wrong technology for a site can lock in higher costs and lower utilization for years.
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AC chargers (often called “Level 2” in some markets) supply alternating current to the vehicle, and the car’s onboard charger converts AC to DC to charge the battery.
Key characteristics:
Typical power range: 3.7–22 kW per connector.
Hardware is relatively compact, suitable for wall‑mount or pedestal installations.
Charging speed depends heavily on the vehicle’s onboard charger rating (e.g., 7.4 kW, 11 kW, 22 kW).
Ideal for longer dwell times: workplaces, residential parking, hotels, destination charging.
DC fast chargers convert AC to DC inside the charger cabinet and deliver direct current directly to the vehicle’s battery via high‑power connectors.
Key characteristics:
Typical power range: 30–360 kW+, with modular systems scaling even higher.
Larger, cabinet‑style form factor; often installed on concrete foundations.
Charging speed mostly determined by charger power and the vehicle’s battery/thermal limits.
Designed for short dwell times: highway sites, commercial fleets, logistics depots, busy public stations.
Common configurations:
7–7.4 kW (single‑phase, residential and small commercial)
11–22 kW (three‑phase, commercial and fleet parking)
Typical time from 20–80% (mid‑size EV):
7 kW: several hours (ideal for overnight or workday charging)
11–22 kW: a few hours (suitable for workplace or long‑stay public parking)
Common configurations:
Typical time from 20–80% (mid‑size EV):
50 kW: roughly 40–60 minutes depending on vehicle
150 kW+: often under 30 minutes for compatible vehicles
For residential, workplace, and destination use, AC chargers deliver sufficient energy during the natural parking period.
For high‑turnover sites (highways, busy retail, fleets needing quick turnaround), DC fast chargers are usually mandatory to meet user expectations and utilization targets.
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Lower power per point means less strain on existing infrastructure; many sites can integrate multiple AC chargers without immediate major grid upgrades.
Installation usually involves:
Running cable from existing distribution boards.
Adding appropriate protection and metering.
In some cases, simple load management to avoid exceeding building capacity.
Smart load balancing solutions can further minimize demand peaks by dynamically allocating available power across multiple AC charge points.
High‑power DC units can draw tens to hundreds of kilowatts each, leading to:
Potential need for new transformers, upgraded switchgear, or dedicated feeders.
Coordination with the utility for capacity studies and connection agreements.
Installation commonly requires:
Detailed site design (cable routing, foundations, accessibility).
Higher‑rated protection and earthing systems.
Sometimes integration with battery storage or on‑site generation to reduce peak grid demand.
AC is attractive where existing grid capacity is limited or costly to upgrade.
DC fast charging is best where sites can justify grid reinforcement or where energy management solutions (storage, demand management) are part of the project from the start.
Lower upfront cost per unit and per connector.
Civil works and electrical upgrades typically limited, especially for small to mid‑sized deployments.
Ideal entry point for smaller businesses, residential complexes, and early‑stage fleets.
Higher hardware cost due to power electronics, cooling, and cabinet construction.
Civil and electrical works (foundations, trenches, higher‑capacity cabling, new transformers) can match or exceed hardware cost in some projects.
Better suited to revenue‑generating public sites and fleets where high utilization is realistic.
Lower standby consumption and lower demand charges (where applicable).
Maintenance typically limited to periodic inspections, firmware updates, and occasional component replacement.
Suitable for flat‑rate billing or simple energy cost recovery models.
Higher energy throughput, but also higher exposure to demand charges and time‑of‑use rates.
More complex maintenance: cooling systems, high‑power contactors, and power modules need periodic checks and occasional replacement.
Attractive for usage‑based revenue models (per kWh, time‑based, or session‑based billing) where high turnover offsets operating costs.
Best for:
Residential developments and apartment blocks.
Workplace and corporate parking.
Hotels, shopping centers, and long‑stay parking.
Revenue & ROI characteristics:
Lower revenue per connector per hour but lower CAPEX reduces payback time.
High value when combined with parking fees, loyalty programs, or as an added service for tenants/employees.
For wholesalers and installers, AC portfolios offer high volume sales and repeat business with relatively low risk.
Best for:
Highway corridors and travel hubs.
High‑traffic retail and food venues on main routes.
Commercial fleets and logistics depots with tight schedules.
Revenue & ROI characteristics:
Higher potential revenue per session and per kWh, especially where drivers value speed.
Requires sufficient traffic and utilization; under‑used DC sites can struggle to cover CAPEX and fixed operating costs.
For wholesalers, DC fast chargers are higher‑margin products but need careful site qualification and business‑case support for customers.
Whether you focus on AC or DC, standards and certifications are critical for project bankability and long‑term compatibility.
Key standards and certifications
Safety and quality: CE, TUV, UL, and equivalent marks depending on region.
Communication: OCPP (for backend connectivity) across both AC and DC products.
Vehicle communication & advanced functions: ISO 15118 for plug‑and‑charge and potential V2G/V2B use cases (more common on DC, but increasingly relevant to AC as well).
Ensure both your AC Chargers and DC Fast Chargers lines offer OCPP‑compatible models to avoid vendor lock‑in on the software side.
Prioritize products with firmware upgradability and roadmaps that track emerging standards and security requirements.
For larger commercial and fleet projects, highlight chargers with ISO 15118 capability and strong certification documentation as part of your value proposition.
Drivers are parked for several hours or overnight (residential, workplace, hotels).
The site has limited grid capacity or budget constraints for infrastructure upgrades.
Charging is positioned as an amenity or added value, not the primary revenue driver.
The customer wants to start with lower CAPEX and scale gradually.
The site relies on short dwell times, such as highway stations, busy retail near major routes, or fast‑turnover fleets.
There is sufficient traffic or a committed fleet to ensure utilization.
The owner wants to offer premium charging services and can charge higher prices per kWh or per minute.
Grid upgrades or energy management solutions are feasible within the project budget.
A resilient EV charging business is rarely “AC or DC only.” Instead, it blends both:
Use AC chargers to build a broad base of residential, workplace, and destination charging projects with predictable payback and repeat sales.
Use DC fast chargers strategically where traffic patterns, fleet operations, or location advantages justify the higher investment and support strong utilization.
Ensure all key models—AC and DC—are certified, OCPP‑ready, and firmware‑upgradable, so your customers can adapt to new standards, tariffs, and business models over the next decade.
This combination enables wholesalers to maintain a balanced inventory and installers to offer tailored solutions that match each client’s business case, grid conditions, and ROI expectations.
For wholesalers, importers, and professional installers, understanding the differences between AC chargers and DC fast chargers is essential for choosing the right product mix and advising customers correctly. The two categories differ not only in power levels and charging speed, but also in grid impact, installation requirements, CAPEX/OPEX, and expected ROI. Choosing the wrong technology for a site can lock in higher costs and lower utilization for years.
![]()
AC chargers (often called “Level 2” in some markets) supply alternating current to the vehicle, and the car’s onboard charger converts AC to DC to charge the battery.
Key characteristics:
Typical power range: 3.7–22 kW per connector.
Hardware is relatively compact, suitable for wall‑mount or pedestal installations.
Charging speed depends heavily on the vehicle’s onboard charger rating (e.g., 7.4 kW, 11 kW, 22 kW).
Ideal for longer dwell times: workplaces, residential parking, hotels, destination charging.
DC fast chargers convert AC to DC inside the charger cabinet and deliver direct current directly to the vehicle’s battery via high‑power connectors.
Key characteristics:
Typical power range: 30–360 kW+, with modular systems scaling even higher.
Larger, cabinet‑style form factor; often installed on concrete foundations.
Charging speed mostly determined by charger power and the vehicle’s battery/thermal limits.
Designed for short dwell times: highway sites, commercial fleets, logistics depots, busy public stations.
Common configurations:
7–7.4 kW (single‑phase, residential and small commercial)
11–22 kW (three‑phase, commercial and fleet parking)
Typical time from 20–80% (mid‑size EV):
7 kW: several hours (ideal for overnight or workday charging)
11–22 kW: a few hours (suitable for workplace or long‑stay public parking)
Common configurations:
Typical time from 20–80% (mid‑size EV):
50 kW: roughly 40–60 minutes depending on vehicle
150 kW+: often under 30 minutes for compatible vehicles
For residential, workplace, and destination use, AC chargers deliver sufficient energy during the natural parking period.
For high‑turnover sites (highways, busy retail, fleets needing quick turnaround), DC fast chargers are usually mandatory to meet user expectations and utilization targets.
![]()
Lower power per point means less strain on existing infrastructure; many sites can integrate multiple AC chargers without immediate major grid upgrades.
Installation usually involves:
Running cable from existing distribution boards.
Adding appropriate protection and metering.
In some cases, simple load management to avoid exceeding building capacity.
Smart load balancing solutions can further minimize demand peaks by dynamically allocating available power across multiple AC charge points.
High‑power DC units can draw tens to hundreds of kilowatts each, leading to:
Potential need for new transformers, upgraded switchgear, or dedicated feeders.
Coordination with the utility for capacity studies and connection agreements.
Installation commonly requires:
Detailed site design (cable routing, foundations, accessibility).
Higher‑rated protection and earthing systems.
Sometimes integration with battery storage or on‑site generation to reduce peak grid demand.
AC is attractive where existing grid capacity is limited or costly to upgrade.
DC fast charging is best where sites can justify grid reinforcement or where energy management solutions (storage, demand management) are part of the project from the start.
Lower upfront cost per unit and per connector.
Civil works and electrical upgrades typically limited, especially for small to mid‑sized deployments.
Ideal entry point for smaller businesses, residential complexes, and early‑stage fleets.
Higher hardware cost due to power electronics, cooling, and cabinet construction.
Civil and electrical works (foundations, trenches, higher‑capacity cabling, new transformers) can match or exceed hardware cost in some projects.
Better suited to revenue‑generating public sites and fleets where high utilization is realistic.
Lower standby consumption and lower demand charges (where applicable).
Maintenance typically limited to periodic inspections, firmware updates, and occasional component replacement.
Suitable for flat‑rate billing or simple energy cost recovery models.
Higher energy throughput, but also higher exposure to demand charges and time‑of‑use rates.
More complex maintenance: cooling systems, high‑power contactors, and power modules need periodic checks and occasional replacement.
Attractive for usage‑based revenue models (per kWh, time‑based, or session‑based billing) where high turnover offsets operating costs.
Best for:
Residential developments and apartment blocks.
Workplace and corporate parking.
Hotels, shopping centers, and long‑stay parking.
Revenue & ROI characteristics:
Lower revenue per connector per hour but lower CAPEX reduces payback time.
High value when combined with parking fees, loyalty programs, or as an added service for tenants/employees.
For wholesalers and installers, AC portfolios offer high volume sales and repeat business with relatively low risk.
Best for:
Highway corridors and travel hubs.
High‑traffic retail and food venues on main routes.
Commercial fleets and logistics depots with tight schedules.
Revenue & ROI characteristics:
Higher potential revenue per session and per kWh, especially where drivers value speed.
Requires sufficient traffic and utilization; under‑used DC sites can struggle to cover CAPEX and fixed operating costs.
For wholesalers, DC fast chargers are higher‑margin products but need careful site qualification and business‑case support for customers.
Whether you focus on AC or DC, standards and certifications are critical for project bankability and long‑term compatibility.
Key standards and certifications
Safety and quality: CE, TUV, UL, and equivalent marks depending on region.
Communication: OCPP (for backend connectivity) across both AC and DC products.
Vehicle communication & advanced functions: ISO 15118 for plug‑and‑charge and potential V2G/V2B use cases (more common on DC, but increasingly relevant to AC as well).
Ensure both your AC Chargers and DC Fast Chargers lines offer OCPP‑compatible models to avoid vendor lock‑in on the software side.
Prioritize products with firmware upgradability and roadmaps that track emerging standards and security requirements.
For larger commercial and fleet projects, highlight chargers with ISO 15118 capability and strong certification documentation as part of your value proposition.
Drivers are parked for several hours or overnight (residential, workplace, hotels).
The site has limited grid capacity or budget constraints for infrastructure upgrades.
Charging is positioned as an amenity or added value, not the primary revenue driver.
The customer wants to start with lower CAPEX and scale gradually.
The site relies on short dwell times, such as highway stations, busy retail near major routes, or fast‑turnover fleets.
There is sufficient traffic or a committed fleet to ensure utilization.
The owner wants to offer premium charging services and can charge higher prices per kWh or per minute.
Grid upgrades or energy management solutions are feasible within the project budget.
A resilient EV charging business is rarely “AC or DC only.” Instead, it blends both:
Use AC chargers to build a broad base of residential, workplace, and destination charging projects with predictable payback and repeat sales.
Use DC fast chargers strategically where traffic patterns, fleet operations, or location advantages justify the higher investment and support strong utilization.
Ensure all key models—AC and DC—are certified, OCPP‑ready, and firmware‑upgradable, so your customers can adapt to new standards, tariffs, and business models over the next decade.
This combination enables wholesalers to maintain a balanced inventory and installers to offer tailored solutions that match each client’s business case, grid conditions, and ROI expectations.