LaadNederland
Costs

What does it cost?

Clear price indications for an EV charger, a home battery and solar panels, plus what determines the final price. You always receive a fixed quote up front.

What does an EV charger, home battery or solar cost?

In short: a fully installed home EV charger costs between EUR 1,000 and EUR 3,000, a home battery between EUR 3,000 and EUR 12,000, and a set of 10 to 20 solar panels between EUR 3,800 and EUR 8,350. The exact price always depends on your situation, and you receive a fixed, all-in quote up front, so there are no surprises afterwards.

For an EV charger, the main cost factors are the charger model, whether you need a 1-phase or 3-phase connection, the cable distance from your meter box to the parking spot, and any meter box or grid upgrade. Because charging at home (around EUR 0.28 per kWh) is roughly half the price of public charging (EUR 0.59 or more), a charger typically pays for itself within 1.5 to 2.5 years.

At a glance

  • EV charger: EUR 1,000 to 3,000 installed
  • Home battery: EUR 3,000 to 12,000
  • Solar (10 to 20 panels): EUR 3,800 to 8,350
  • Fixed, all-in price up front
  • Charger pays back in 1.5 to 2.5 years

For batteries and solar, the payback depends on your usage and the end of net metering in 2027. We calculate the return for your specific home.

Price indications

Indicative prices (2026)

Final price always depends on your situation; the quote is fixed.

EV charger

EUR 1,000 to 3,000

Including installation. Depends on 1-phase or 3-phase, cable length and meter box work.

Home battery

EUR 3,000 to 12,000

Depending on capacity (roughly 5 to 15 kWh). Payback around 7 years with solar.

Solar panels

EUR 3,800 to 8,350

From 10 to 20 panels including installation. 0% VAT in 2026, payback 5 to 8 years.

Frequently asked questions

Costs

Yes. After the free site check you receive a fixed all-in price up front, so there are no surprises afterwards.

Mainly the charger model, whether you need 1-phase or 3-phase, the cable distance from the meter box to the parking spot, and any meter box or grid upgrade.

Charging at home is far cheaper than public charging. For an average household a home charger often pays for itself within 1.5 to 2.5 years.

There is no fixed national subsidy for private home chargers, but more than 120 Dutch municipalities offer their own schemes. Businesses can use the SPRILA scheme (around EUR 800 per charge point) and owners' associations (VvE) the SVVE and SPRILA schemes. We advise on what applies to you.

Yes. Our prices are all-in: the charger or system, materials, labour and a NEN 1010 certified installation, agreed as a fixed price before we start.

Want an exact price?

Request a free, no-obligation quote and receive a fixed price within 24 hours.