EV charging infrastructure is a growing electrical scope with its own power, code, and utility requirements, and a subcontractor that does not read the EVSE package is pricing the wrong installation.

What an EVSE package sets

An EVSE package covers electric vehicle supply equipment: the chargers, the power distribution, the service upgrades, and the code requirements under NEC Article 625. The package sets the charger count and type, the load and service capacity, and the utility coordination the electrical sub must provide.

Why EVSE scope is easy to misprice

The charger type, the service capacity, the utility coordination, and the code requirements sit in the specifications and the drawings, not the title. A sub that underreads the service or utility scope carries the wrong cost into the bid.

How an AI bid agent reads EVSE packages

An AI bid agent reads each electrical package, identifies the EVSE scope, and surfaces the chargers, the service, and the code and utility requirements that drive the work. The electrical sub prices the actual installation.

You can see how the agent reads an EVSE package in our AI bid agent demo for MEP subcontractors. It pulls the charger scope, service capacity, and code requirements so the installation is priced correctly.