Can I have one of these chargers at my home and another at the cottage?
In most cases yes, as long as each location has its own qualifying setup: separate address, separate charger serial number, separate account, reliable internet. ChargeLab explicitly limits one account per charger. Grizzl-E and SWTCH do not appear to restrict multi-property enrolment, but you should confirm directly with the program before signing up for a second location.
Do I need a specific charger model to join Grizzl-E Club?
Yes. The Grizzl-E Club ships you a Grizzl-E-brand Level 2 charger (Classic, Pro, or Pro Plus, depending on plan). You cannot enrol an existing third-party charger in the program. The hardware is Canadian-built and rated for cold-weather installs.
Does the SWTCH program still require a deposit?
No. With the December 11, 2025 launch of the SWTCH Canada Home Charging Program, the Level 2 charger ships free with no upfront deposit. Members earn 3 cents per kWh charged at home, and once your balance reaches $100, SWTCH pays it out by direct deposit. Earlier coverage that described a $300 deposit and a 1,500 kWh refund threshold reflects an older version of the program.
What happens if my cottage internet drops out?
All of the hardware rewards programs (Grizzl-E Club, SWTCH, ChargeLab) rely on internet telemetry to track charging sessions and pay rewards. Extended offline periods can delay refund qualification, reduce payouts, or in extreme cases affect membership status. If your cottage runs on Starlink, LTE, or unstable DSL, expect occasional gaps. Programs do not usually penalise short outages, but a seasonal property that sits offline for months is worth flagging to the provider before you enrol.
Are these programs available in my province?
Grizzl-E Club, SWTCH, and ChargeLab Rewards are open to eligible homeowners across Canada. IESO Peak Perks is Ontario-only. The BC Hydro EV Charger Rebate is British Columbia-only. Hilo is Quebec-only. The comparison table above shows province availability for each program at a glance.
Do these programs stack with provincial EV rebates?
In most cases yes. Charger reward programs are independent of vehicle-purchase rebates. The Quebec, BC, and PEI vehicle rebates apply to the car, not the charger. Some provinces (notably Quebec via Roulez Vert and BC via CleanBC) offer separate charger rebates that you may be able to claim alongside a charger reward program. Confirm with each program that combined participation is allowed before you apply.
Do these programs stack with the federal EVAP rebate?
Yes. The federal EV Affordability Program (EVAP) rebate is a vehicle-purchase incentive. It is independent of any home charger reward program. You can claim EVAP on the vehicle and enrol your home charger in Grizzl-E Club, SWTCH, or any of the other programs without affecting EVAP eligibility.
Can I leave the program later and keep the charger?
It depends on the program. Hardware rewards programs typically include language about charger ownership in their terms. Sometimes the charger transfers to you outright after the refund threshold, and sometimes it remains program-owned. Check the ownership clause in the specific program terms before you sign up.
What's the difference between hardware rewards, utility demand-response, and a charger rebate?
Hardware rewards programs (Grizzl-E Club, SWTCH, ChargeLab) pay you per kWh you charge through their connected charger network. Utility demand-response programs (IESO Peak Perks, Hilo) pay you, or lower your rate, in exchange for letting your utility briefly reduce or shift your load during grid stress events. The BC Hydro EV Charger Rebate is different again. It is a one-time installation rebate, not ongoing rewards. The three categories can often be stacked. SWTCH, for example, lists BC Hydro's rebate and Quebec's Roulez Vert as compatible incentives.
Do I need smart-meter or time-of-use billing to participate in utility programs?
For utility demand-response programs, yes. Your utility needs to read your usage at fine enough granularity to verify the load reduction and pay you for it. Most Canadian provinces already operate on smart-meter billing for residential customers, but if you are on a flat rate or a non-time-of-use plan, contact your utility about switching before you enrol.
How often do these program terms change?
Frequently. The hardware rewards programs in particular (Grizzl-E Club, SWTCH) have updated their deposit structures, refund triggers, and member benefits multiple times since launch. The "Last verified" stamp at the top of this page shows when we last confirmed the program details against official sources. Always click through to the official program page before you sign up.
Are any of these programs accepting new members from rural or northern areas?
All six programs accept rural and northern members in principle, subject to eligibility. The practical constraint is internet reliability. Programs that rely on telemetry need a usable connection. Demand-response programs also need a smart meter and a utility that operates the program in your service area. Northern off-grid or satellite-internet-only locations can participate, but expect more friction.