EV Charging

Home Energy Monitor for New EV Owners: What Changes After the First Utility Bill

The first utility bill after buying an EV can be a small shock. The car may be cheaper to drive than gasoline, but the electricity use is now visible at home. A home energy monitor helps separate normal EV charging from avoidable timing mistakes. The goal is not to make EV ownership complicated. It is to understand the new load well enough to charge with less waste.

The Car Becomes a Household Load

The U.S. Energy Information Administration explains that Level 2 charging uses 240 V AC and can add about 10 to 20 miles of range per hour. That makes home charging convenient, but it also means the EV may draw more power than many familiar appliances. The monitor should show when the car charges, how long it charges, and whether it overlaps with other major loads. A homeowner may discover that the car starts during peak pricing, or that it pushes the...

What Is a BESS Battery Energy Storage System, and Where Does It Fit in a Solar Home?

A solar home is not automatically an energy-independent home. Panels produce power when the sun is available, while the house may need the most electricity after dinner, during a storm, or when an EV is plugged in overnight. That timing problem is exactly where battery storage starts to matter.

BESS in Plain English

A BESS, or battery energy storage system, stores electricity and releases it when that electricity is more useful. In a home, that may mean holding excess solar from noon and using it at 8 p.m., or keeping selected circuits alive during a grid outage. The International Energy Agency reported in 2024 that battery additions to power systems reached 42 GW in the previous year. That global growth is not only a utility story. It reflects a broader shift: electricity is becoming more valuable when it can move across time, not just across wires. For homeowners, a battery can serve several jobs: ...