Process Framework for Indiana Electrical Systems

Indiana electrical systems — particularly those supporting EV charger infrastructure — move through a structured sequence of approvals, inspections, and coordination steps before any installation is energized. This page maps the full process framework: from initial load assessment through final utility coordination, identifying who holds decision authority at each stage and what technical conditions gate forward progress. Understanding this framework helps contractors, property owners, and project managers anticipate the mandatory touchpoints governed by the Indiana State Building Code and the National Electrical Code (NEC), as adopted by Indiana.


Scope and Coverage

This framework applies to electrical work performed within Indiana's jurisdiction, including residential, commercial, and multi-unit dwelling EV charger installations subject to Indiana's adopted building and electrical codes. The Indiana Fire Prevention and Building Safety Commission (FPBSC) administers the State Building Code, which incorporates the NEC by reference. Local jurisdictions — including Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, and South Bend — may adopt supplemental amendments, so final permit requirements must be confirmed with the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) for each project address.

This page does not cover federal utility interconnection approvals, interstate transmission infrastructure, or installations on federally owned property. Projects involving distributed energy resources (solar, battery storage, V2G) may have overlapping scopes addressed at regulatory-context-for-indiana-electrical-systems.


What Triggers the Process

Four primary conditions initiate a formal Indiana electrical permitting and inspection process:

  1. New EV charger installation — Any Level 2 EVSE (240V, typically 32–48A) or DC Fast Charger (DCFC) installation requiring a new dedicated circuit triggers a permit application under 675 IAC 12 (Indiana's electrical code framework).
  2. Panel upgrade or service entrance modification — Adding charging capacity that requires increased amperage (e.g., upgrading a 100A residential panel to 200A) constitutes a service change and requires separate permitting. See panel-upgrade-requirements-for-ev-charging-indiana for classification detail.
  3. Load calculation change — When a facility's calculated load under NEC Article 220 increases by more than 10% due to EV infrastructure, updated drawings must be submitted to the AHJ.
  4. Utility-side coordination requirement — Installations exceeding a utility's standard service threshold (which varies by provider — Duke Energy Indiana, AES Indiana, and NIPSCO each publish interconnection thresholds) require utility notification before energization.

A Level 1 (120V, 12–16A) installation using an existing receptacle on an already-permitted circuit does not independently trigger a new permit in most Indiana jurisdictions, though the underlying circuit must meet NEC 210.17 outlet requirements for EV charging.


Handoff points

The process framework contains four critical handoff points where responsibility transfers between parties:


Decision gates

Decision gates are binary pass/fail checkpoints that stop or allow forward progress:

  1. Permit issuance gate — AHJ reviews application completeness. Missing load calculations or unspecified equipment models are the two most common causes of rejection at this stage.
  2. Rough-in inspection gate — Inspector verifies conduit fill, grounding electrode conductor sizing per NEC 250.66, and GFCI protection placement per NEC 625.54 for EVSE outlets. A failed rough-in requires re-inspection before any insulation or wall closure.
  3. Final inspection gate — Covers device installation, equipment labeling per NEC 110.21, and circuit continuity. DCFC installations additionally require verification of conductor ampacity under NEC 625.41.
  4. Utility approval gate — The utility verifies metering configuration and transformer capacity before authorizing energization. For commercial DCFC installations drawing above 100kW, transformer and service entrance review (addressed at transformer-and-service-entrance-considerations-for-ev-charging-indiana) may extend this gate by 30–90 days depending on infrastructure queuing.

Review and approval stages

The full review sequence for a standard Indiana EV charger electrical installation follows this ordered structure:

  1. Pre-application site assessment — Load calculation prepared per NEC Article 220; existing panel capacity confirmed. A conceptual walkthrough of this methodology is available at how-indiana-electrical-systems-works-conceptual-overview.
  2. Permit application submission — Submitted to the AHJ with single-line diagram, equipment cut sheets, and load calculations. Most Indiana municipalities use a paper or portal-based submission system; Marion County uses the Accela platform.
  3. Plan review — AHJ plan examiner reviews for NEC compliance and local amendments. Residential installations typically complete plan review within 3–5 business days; commercial DCFC projects may require 10–20 business days.
  4. Permit issuance — Permit card is issued and must be posted on-site during all phases of work.
  5. Rough-in inspection — Required before any wiring is concealed. The licensed electrician requests inspection through the AHJ portal or office.
  6. Final inspection — Covers all exposed work, device installation, labeling, and GFCI/AFCI compliance per the installed system's NEC classification.
  7. Certificate of completion / occupancy endorsement — Issued by AHJ upon final inspection approval. This document is typically required by utilities and, for commercial properties, by insurance carriers.
  8. Utility service coordination — Utility authorizes meter set or service modification. Smart meter enrollment and time-of-use rate programs (relevant to smart-meter-and-utility-coordination-for-ev-charging-indiana) are configured at this stage.

The distinction between a residential pathway (Steps 1–8 in sequence, typically 2–4 weeks total) and a commercial pathway (which may run Steps 3–4 in parallel with utility pre-application, reducing total timeline) is the primary structural variant in Indiana's process framework. Residential installations under 200A service rarely require utility pre-application; commercial DCFC projects above 50kW always do.

Readers seeking a structured reference for the full Indiana electrical systems landscape, including the regulatory and code hierarchy that governs all stages described above, can start at /index.

📜 6 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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