Tesla in California 🌴
The #1 EV market in the world. Most generous state programs in the US. Most charging infrastructure. Highest electricity prices.
California at a glance
~700,000 Teslas registered. Federal §30D + state CVRP + utility rebates can stack. Tesla HOV decals available. Right-to-Charge protects condo/apartment owners. Electricity is expensive ($0.30-0.50/kWh peak) but TOU plans make overnight charging affordable.
🏛️ State programs
Clean Vehicle Rebate Project (CVRP)
Administered by CARB. NOTE: CVRP closed to new applications November 8, 2023 due to funding exhaustion. As of mid-2026 it remains closed, though the legislature has discussed restarting it.
- Historical amounts: $2,000-7,500 depending on income and vehicle type
- Status: Closed. Check cleanvehiclerebate.org for any restart announcements.
Clean Cars 4 All
For income-eligible buyers replacing an older gasoline vehicle:
- Up to $12,000 grant for replacing an older vehicle with a new or used EV
- Income caps: 400% of federal poverty level (~$120k for family of 4)
- Available in air quality districts: South Coast (LA/OC), Bay Area, San Joaquin Valley, Sacramento
- Stack-able with federal Clean Vehicle Credit
Clean Vehicle Assistance Program (CVAP)
For low-to-moderate income buyers, up to $5,000 grant + financing assistance. Available statewide for new or used clean vehicles.
HOV Lane access (Clean Air Vehicle decals)
- Yellow/Purple Clean Air decals grant solo-driver access to HOV lanes
- Currently issued through January 1, 2027 (program sunset date — may extend)
- $22 application fee to DMV
- Valid for the duration of the program regardless of when you got it
- Used vehicles can qualify if previous owner did not exhaust the decal
Sales tax — yes, you pay it
Unlike some states, California does NOT exempt EVs from sales tax. Expect to pay 7.25-10.5% depending on county. Tesla's California prices on their site exclude this.
Annual registration fees
California charges a ~$118 annual "Road Improvement Fee" for zero-emission vehicles to offset lost gas tax revenue. This is on top of regular registration.
⚡ Utility programs by territory
PG&E (Northern California)
- EV2-A rate plan: TOU optimized for EV owners. Off-peak (midnight-3 PM weekdays) is ~$0.30/kWh; peak (4-9 PM) is ~$0.52/kWh.
- EV-B rate plan: Separate meter for EV charging. Lower than EV2-A but install cost ~$2-3k.
- EV Charge Network rebate: up to $1,000 toward residential charger purchase + install for income-qualified.
- Charge Local program: $2,500-7,500 toward Multi-Unit Dwelling chargers.
Southern California Edison (SCE)
- TOU-D-PRIME: EV-friendly TOU rate. Off-peak (9 PM - 8 AM) ~$0.21/kWh, mid-peak weekends and peak (4-9 PM weekdays) ~$0.60/kWh.
- Pre-Owned EV Rebate: $1,000-4,000 for used EV purchases (income-tested).
- Charge Ready Home: $250-1,000 toward charger install for income-qualified.
San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E)
- EV-TOU-5: Best EV rate in CA — super off-peak (midnight-6 AM) can hit $0.08/kWh.
- Power Your Drive program: Free Level 2 charger install at MUDs and workplaces (limited).
LADWP (Los Angeles)
- EV TOU rate: Lower than IOU rates. Off-peak (9 PM - 9 AM) ~$0.06-0.10/kWh.
- Used EV Rebate: $1,500 for income-qualified used EV purchase.
- Charger rebate: $500-1,500 toward Level 2 charger.
SMUD (Sacramento Municipal Utility District)
- SmartHome rate with EV TOU optimization.
- $599 Clean Cars Pre-Owned rebate for income-qualified used EV buyers.
- $1,500 home charger rebate for income-qualified.
🏠 Multi-family dwelling charging (Right to Charge)
California's Right to Charge laws (Civil Code §4745 and §1947.6) protect EV owners in HOAs and apartment buildings.
Condominium owners (Civil Code §4745)
- HOAs cannot prohibit EV charging station installation in your designated parking spot.
- HOA can require reasonable architectural review, but not block.
- You pay all costs and insurance.
- HOA cannot impose unreasonable conditions or excessive fees.
Renters (Civil Code §1947.6)
- Applies to leases entered into or renewed after July 1, 2015, in buildings with 5+ units.
- Landlord cannot prohibit Level 1 or 2 charging in your dedicated parking spot.
- You pay for install, electricity, and removal upon move-out.
- Must use licensed contractor; landlord can require insurance and standards compliance.
If you're being denied: document everything in writing. The law is on your side. Contact the California Department of Real Estate (for HOAs) or your local tenants' rights organization.
🛣️ Charging infrastructure
Supercharger coverage
California has the densest Supercharger network in the world — 400+ stations. Every freeway corridor has stations every 50-100 miles. Long-distance EV travel is essentially a solved problem here.
Other DC fast charging
Major networks all have strong CA presence:
- Electrify America: 100+ stations, often at Walmart and Target
- EVgo: 200+ stations, urban-focused
- ChargePoint: thousands of Level 2 + some DCFC
- EVGo+Pilot/Flying J: rural highway corridors
Notable charging deserts in CA
- Highway 395 north of Lone Pine — Supercharger gaps approaching Tahoe
- Eastern Sierra in winter — chargers exist but reliability drops at high elevation
- Highway 1 between Big Sur and Cambria — coastal route is scenic but charging-sparse
- Death Valley — Furnace Creek has Supercharger, but stations sparse otherwise
🏢 Workplace charging
Many CA employers offer workplace charging due to incentive programs:
- CARB Workplace Charging Program: Funds installation at participating employers.
- SCAQMD Workplace Charging: Up to $4,000 per station in SoCal districts.
- Bay Area Air Quality Management District: Similar funding in the Bay.
If your employer doesn't offer it, the funding programs make it cheap to set up — point your HR/facilities team at these programs.
📜 California-specific quirks
- CARB-approved vehicle list. California has its own emissions standard that's stricter than federal. All Teslas qualify.
- Permit required for Level 2 installation in essentially every city. Inspectors are EV-familiar. Process is straightforward but adds 2-4 weeks.
- Title brand "FLOOD" or "SALVAGE" on a used Tesla disqualifies Supercharger access. Verify before purchase.
- Wildfire season power shutoffs (PSPS). PG&E intentionally cuts power during high fire risk. Keep your Tesla charged October-November in fire country.
- Rolling blackouts in extreme heat. Summer peak strain. Avoid charging during 4-9 PM in heat waves; utility may request voluntary curtailment.
- VEC-style "EV-only" rates require separate utility meter in some territories. Pricey to install ($1,500-3,500).