EV charger guide

Blink HQ200 charger guide

Blink HQ200 planning should include circuit needs, cable placement, charging location, and qualified installation review.

Installer note

Use this guide to ask better questions. Final requirements must be verified by a qualified installer or electrician.

Quote checklist

Ask each installer to separate equipment, labor, permit handling, panel work, warranty, timeline, and exclusions.

Panel checkpoint

Confirm panel amperage, breaker space, load management options, and distance from the panel to the parking location.

Buying checkpoint

Choose charger hardware only after confirming connector type, circuit size, indoor/outdoor placement, and installation requirements.

Installation next step

Review the installed setup, not just the charger.

If you are researching a specific charger brand, the next useful step is comparing installation scope: circuit size, panel readiness, mounting, permits, setup, warranty, and whether hardware is included.

Before you choose
panel capacityhardwired vs plug-incharger amperageWiFi or app setuppermit handlinginstaller warranty
What shoppers are trying to compare

Key details to confirm before requesting quotes

People searching this topic are usually trying to avoid buying the wrong charger, missing an electrical requirement, or getting quotes that are difficult to compare.

HQ200 setupcable reachcharger placementpanel review
Guide objective

What this guide helps you decide

Compare charger brands without losing sight of the installation details that decide the final quote.

Professional review

Verify before installing

Pricing, permits, circuit sizing, panel capacity, and final installation requirements should be confirmed by a qualified electrician, installer, local authority, or product manual.

Real-world example

How this can change the installation quote

Example: a Blink HQ200 setup should be reviewed for circuit sizing, placement, cable reach, and whether the home panel can support the charger.

Pro tip: Ask whether the installation quote includes the charger, labor, permit, inspection, and warranty.

Decision flow
1. Project details2. Panel review3. Installer quote4. Permit or inspection5. Installation

What to do first

Confirm the exact charger model and connector version.Ask whether the quote is hardwired, plug-in, or equipment-only.Check app, WiFi, load-management, and outdoor requirements before installation.Compare installer labor, permits, warranty, and configuration support.

What to ask installers

What exact electrical work is included?Is permit handling included or separate?What charger amperage is being quoted?Is panel work, load management, or a new outlet included?What warranty applies to labor and installed equipment?

Mistakes to avoid

Choosing a charger brand before checking panel capacity.Assuming every model from the same brand installs the same way.Ignoring whether the installer supports customer-supplied equipment.
Quote comparison

Review installation quotes using the same terms.

A useful quote should separate charger hardware, labor, panel work, permits, materials, timeline, warranty, and exclusions. If one proposal is much lower than another, ask what is not included.

Quote fields
charger typeamperagepanel workpermit handlinginstallation distancelabor scopeequipment includedwarrantytimelinetotal cost

Common questions

Can EV.marketing give an exact installation price?

No. Pricing depends on the home, panel capacity, wiring route, permit requirements, charger type, and installer scope.

Should I verify this with an electrician?

Yes. Final electrical requirements, permits, and code details should be verified by a qualified electrician or installer.

What is the best next step?

Collect your ZIP, parking setup, panel details, charger preference, and timeline, then compare installer quotes on the same fields.