EV Chargers Compared
Honest reviews of what to actually buy. No affiliate links, no sponsorships, no nonsense.
Quick recommendation if you don't want to read
For most Tesla owners: Tesla Wall Connector Gen 3 ($420 from Tesla, hardwired).
Best looks, native NACS, app integration, 48A.
If you might switch brands later: ChargePoint Home Flex ($650). J1772 with Tesla adapter,
works with anything.
If you want cheap and bulletproof: Grizzl-E Classic ($450). No app, no wifi, just charges.
The comparison table
Tesla Wall Connector (Gen 3)
Price: $420 direct from Tesla · Max: 48A continuous (11.5 kW) · Connector: NACS (Tesla)
The pros
- Native NACS connector — no adapter needed for any Tesla. Just plug in.
- Best industrial design — looks at home on the side of a garage in a way most other chargers don't.
- Power sharing — install up to 6 Wall Connectors on a single circuit, they automatically split power. Great for multi-EV households or rentals.
- WiFi-connected — firmware updates, usage tracking, schedule.
- 24-foot cable on Gen 3, plenty for most garages.
- Tesla's warranty and service network — if it dies, Tesla replaces it.
- 48A continuous — full 11.5 kW that any current Tesla can accept.
The cons
- NACS-only — if you ever buy a non-Tesla EV that doesn't come with a NACS port (Ford, Hyundai, Kia from 2024+ have NACS, but most pre-2025 non-Tesla EVs use J1772 or CCS1), you'd need an adapter for them, not the other way around.
- Tesla app required for setup. Locks setup into a Tesla account.
- Hardwired install — no plug option. Permanent.
- Tesla's customer service. If you've dealt with Tesla support, you know.
Best for: Tesla-only households who plan to stay Tesla. The default choice and rightly so.
Tesla Mobile Connector
Price: $230 + adapters · Max: 32A (7.7 kW) · Connector: NACS
This is the cord that comes with the car. As of recent Model Y orders, Tesla no longer includes the Mobile Connector — you have to buy it separately. Check what shipped with your specific car.
The pros
- Portable — fits in the frunk, take it anywhere.
- Multiple plug adapters available — NEMA 14-50, 5-15, 6-50, etc.
- Costs less than a Wall Connector.
- Internal temperature sensor that cuts power if the outlet overheats (added after the recall — see why this matters).
The cons
- 32A max — you'll never get the full 48A speed even on a 50A circuit. ~30% slower than a Wall Connector.
- The cable is short — 20 feet. Tight in some garages.
- Requires a quality NEMA 14-50 outlet — see the outlets page.
- No smart features — no scheduling, no usage tracking, no app.
Best for: renters who need to take the cord with them, road-trippers, secondary "occasional" charging locations.
ChargePoint Home Flex
Price: $650-700 · Max: 50A (12 kW) · Connector: J1772 (Tesla needs a J1772-to-NACS adapter, free from Tesla)
The pros
- Works with everything — J1772 is the universal standard, every EV including Tesla can use it with the right adapter.
- Plug OR hardwire — flexibility on install. The "Flex" name is literal.
- Adjustable amperage — set 16/24/32/40/48/50A based on your circuit.
- ChargePoint app — actually well-built, shows energy use, schedules, costs.
- Built into the ChargePoint network — same app finds public ChargePoint stations.
- Solid build quality. The hardware feels premium.
The cons
- Tesla needs an adapter — small inconvenience, but it's the J1772 dongle that ships with your car.
- More expensive than Tesla's offering for similar capability.
- Bulkier physically than the Wall Connector.
Best for: households that may switch to non-Tesla EVs, renters who might bring it to a new house, anyone valuing future-proofing.
Grizzl-E (Classic and Smart)
Price: $450 Classic / $700 Smart · Max: 40A (9.6 kW) · Connector: J1772 (+adapter)
The pros
- Built like a tank — Canadian-made, NEMA 4 weatherproof rating, basically indestructible.
- Classic version has no electronics to fail — just an EVSE. Will probably outlast the car.
- Made in Canada — supports North American manufacturing, well-respected in cold climates.
- Dip-switch adjustable amperage.
- Plug or hardwire.
The cons
- 40A max, not 48A. ~15% slower than Wall Connector at full speed.
- The Smart version's app is meh — works, but not as polished as ChargePoint's.
- No power sharing between multiple units.
Best for: someone who wants charging that "just works" for a decade with no app drama, especially in harsh climates.
Emporia EV Charger
Price: $399 · Max: 48A (11.5 kW) · Connector: J1772 (+adapter)
The pros
- Best price-to-features ratio on the market.
- 48A capable — matches Wall Connector speed.
- Built-in energy monitoring — works with their Vue energy monitor for whole-home awareness.
- WiFi and app at this price point is rare.
- NEMA 14-50 plug standard — easy install if you have the outlet.
The cons
- Build feels less premium than the more expensive options. Plastic enclosure.
- WiFi setup can be finicky — read the install reviews.
- Younger brand — less track record than ChargePoint or Tesla.
Best for: budget-conscious buyers who still want 48A charging and energy monitoring.
Wallbox Pulsar Plus
Price: $649 · Max: 40A (9.6 kW) · Connector: J1772 (+adapter)
European design, very compact. Bluetooth + WiFi. The MyWallbox app is good. 40A limit. Cable is short at 25ft. Solid mid-tier choice.
Lectron V-Box / generic budget chargers
Price: $200-300 · Max: 32-40A · Connector: J1772 (+adapter)
Honestly, at this price tier you're getting a basic EVSE with no smart features and sometimes questionable build quality. For occasional use or as a backup, fine. For your primary home charger that you'll use 365 nights a year? Spend the extra $150 for a Grizzl-E or Emporia.
What about portable Level 2 EVSEs?
Tesla's Mobile Connector + NEMA 14-50 adapter is itself a portable Level 2 EVSE. Third-party alternatives that are slightly better:
- Lectron 40A portable ($250-300) — 40A capable vs Tesla's 32A, J1772 (needs Tesla adapter).
- Megear / Morec / Mustart portables ($150-250) — generic Chinese-made, 16-32A, mixed quality.
- Webasto TurboCord ($500) — premium dual-voltage 120/240V portable.
What you should not skimp on, ever
- The wire and outlet behind the charger. A $1,000 charger on a $5 outlet with undersized wire is a fire waiting to happen. Spend on the install first, the charger second.
- The breaker. Match the brand to your panel. Off-brand breakers from Amazon are a real fire hazard.
- The electrician. Cheapest quote often = newest electrician = highest chance of problems. EV-specific experience matters.
- Permits and inspection. The $200 you save by skipping permitting costs you $5,000 later when an insurance claim is denied.