Auto Dealerships
- EV chargers can quietly trigger demand spikes, infrastructure strain, and rising utility costs—turning electrification into a margin risk.
- We plan your full energy system around charging—combining infrastructure strategy, incentives, and smart energy integration to support growth without cost surprises.
Energy Infrastructure for Auto Dealerships
Prepare for EV growth without driving up operating costs.
As dealerships add EV chargers and prepare for changing OEM requirements, energy infrastructure becomes a real business issue. More chargers can mean higher demand charges, costly utility upgrades, and tough decisions around what to install now versus later.
We help dealerships plan the bigger picture. Not just the chargers themselves, but the full energy setup around them.
The Challenge
For many dealerships, EV charging creates a chain reaction:
- higher electricity demand
- pressure on existing infrastructure
- rising utility costs
- incentive and rebate complexity
- uncertainty around future capacity needs
Installing chargers is one part. Making sure the whole site can support them properly is the harder part.
How Sprocket Power Helps
We work with dealerships on charger planning, infrastructure upgrades, utility coordination, incentives, and long-term energy strategy.
Where it makes sense, that can also include solar, battery storage, and microgrid integration to reduce costs and improve resilience.
Why It Fits Dealerships
Sprocket Power already has strong experience in the dealership space. Our work is built around the real issues dealers face: EV rollout, electrical upgrades, rebate programs, and protecting margins while preparing for future demand.
What This Can Include
- EV charger and software planning
- utility and electrical upgrade strategy
- rebate and incentive support
- future expansion planning
- battery storage and solar integration
- energy management and resilience planning
Maria Fields
CEO and Co-founder
Book a dealership energy assessment
Get a clear view of your charging needs, infrastructure requirements, and next best steps.