Tesla Supercharger host opportunities, grants, and revenue projections for truck stops in San Bernardino, California.
Enter your property address to see incentive eligibility and estimated annual revenue and net income — results vary by location.
Pick a suggestion as you type, or enter the full address and click Continue.
Your address is used only to check potential incentive eligibility. We never share or sell your information.
San Bernardino is a major Inland Empire logistics hub with maximum disadvantaged-community grant access. With roughly 20,000+ registered EVs in San Bernardino County and major demand drivers around the I-10/I-215 freight crossroads, EV charging sessions at truck stops here run 25-50 per day per Level 3 charger. That puts gross monthly revenue per typical truck stop site in the $15K-$40K range.
Truck Stop sites combine 30-60 minutes of dwell time with the EV-driving demographic San Bernardino attracts. Local utility rates of about $0.26/kWh through SCE, paired with the property's heavy-duty corridor charging — nevi's #1 funding priority through 2030. make this combo one of the highest-ROI opportunities in Inland Empire.
NEVI prioritizes heavy-duty corridor sites with explicit HD funding pools
MD/HD fleets are electrifying along I-5, I-10, and I-15 corridors right now
Existing pull-through layouts and high-power service make truck stops shovel-ready
San Bernardino truck stops can stack federal, state, utility, and air-district programs. Estimated grant coverage: up to 80% of installation cost for qualifying sites.
Many San Bernardino census tracts qualify as low-income or non-urban — eligible for the maximum federal credit up to $100K per charger.
Make-ready electrical infrastructure for commercial and fleet sites.
Federal NEVI funding for DC fast charging along designated Alternative Fuel Corridors near San Bernardino.
Air-district rebates for commercial EV charger installations in the SCAQMD region.
California Energy Commission rebates for Level 2 and DC fast chargers, varying by region.
Ongoing per-kWh revenue from California's Low Carbon Fuel Standard credit market.
Eligibility, award amounts, and program availability vary and may change without notice. Charge ROI helps you check which programs your specific site may qualify for — we do not guarantee any grant award.
Recommended setup for this property type: 6-20 high-power 350kW+ DC fast chargers with HD pull-throughs. Adjust the calculator to match your site.
Adjust the sliders to model revenue based on your site's unique characteristics. See how charger count, utilization, and pricing impact your bottom line.
$981K
Gross charging revenue
$327K
33% margin
5.6K kWh
~160 sessions/day
Includes 7% annual EV demand growth
Requires Tesla NDA for price.
Tesla restricts hardware and installation pricing under NDA. Request a sealed quote and financing terms via the Fast-Track assessment.
Revenue grows with EV adoption
EV charging demand is growing ~7% annually. Long-term projections compound this growth year over year as EV adoption accelerates.
Lending Options Available
Flexible financing and lending programs may be available to help with equipment and installation costs.
Inquire for more information →Truck Stops in San Bernardino typically see 25-50 charging sessions per day per Level 3 charger, generating $15K-$40K in monthly gross revenue. With grants covering up to 80% of installation cost, payback periods are commonly 2-3 years. Actual results depend on site visibility, charger count, and utility costs (about $0.26/kWh via SCE).
Most truck stops benefit from 6-20 chargers. Recommended mix: 6-20 high-power 350kW+ DC fast chargers with HD pull-throughs. The optimum depends on parking capacity, electrical service, and expected dwell time at your site.
Truck Stops in San Bernardino can stack the federal 30C tax credit (often at the enhanced level for disadvantaged-community tracts), SCE utility programs, SCAQMD air-district rebates, NEVI corridor funding for sites near I-10 or I-215, CALeVIP, and ongoing LCFS credit revenue.
Yes. Tesla evaluates Supercharger host sites on visibility, parking capacity, electrical service, and proximity to demand. San Bernardino truck stops near the I-10/I-215 freight crossroads typically score well on these criteria. Charge ROI helps fast-track the Tesla Supercharger host application and stack additional grants on top.
Installation costs vary widely based on electrical service, trenching, and site conditions. Hardware plus install for DC fast chargers typically runs $80K-$150K per port. The federal 30C tax credit, SCE make-ready coverage, and CALeVIP rebates can reduce net out-of-pocket cost by 60-80% for qualifying San Bernardino sites.
60-second eligibility check. No commitment.
Check my property