Guide

How to Create a Workplace Charging Policy: Template & Checklist

ChargeSlot · Redaktion
Published on Jul 17, 2026
How to Create a Workplace Charging Policy: Template & Checklist

A workplace charging policy sets out who may use the company chargers, when, and for how long. The core building blocks: who's eligible, maximum charging duration, fair sharing when points are scarce, what to do once a session ends, and the cost and tax angle. This checklist walks you through all of them β€” with a free template to download.

Why write a charging policy at all?

As soon as more employees drive EVs than you have charging points, friction follows: blocked bays, "who's on the charger" chat threads, resentment. A written policy creates clear, fair rules β€” and is the basis a booking tool needs to enforce them.

The 7 building blocks of a good policy

  1. Eligibility: who may charge β€” all staff, company cars only, guests too?
  2. Maximum duration: e.g. 3 hours per booking, so bays rotate.
  3. Fair sharing: book in advance, a limited advance window, no standing reservations.
  4. End of session: move the car or release the bay once it's full or time is up.
  5. Cost & tax: in Germany, workplace charging is tax-free under Β§ 3 Nr. 46 EStG; define private vs. business charging.
  6. Safety: approved cables and wallboxes only, and how to handle faults.
  7. Point of contact: who owns this, and how are issues reported?

Tick-box checklist

  • Audience and eligibility defined?
  • Maximum duration and advance window set?
  • End-of-session / move-the-car rule written?
  • Tax treatment clarified?
  • Booking method (tool or calendar) named?
  • Owner and escalation path documented?

Download the free template

You don't have to start from a blank page: download our workplace charging policy template, adapt it to your company, and share it with the team.

From policy to practice

A policy on paper stops nobody from hogging a charger. A booking tool enforces the rules in software: it caps duration per booking, only allows reservations within the defined window, and reminds people when their session ends β€” without OCPP or per-kWh billing.

FAQ

Is a charging policy mandatory?

It isn't legally required, but it's strongly recommended once several employees share charging points β€” it prevents conflict and creates fairness.

Who should write it?

Usually facility management or HR, in consultation with the works council where one exists.

Put this into practice with ChargeSlot

Booking software for shared EV charging stations β€” fair time slots, notifications, set up in minutes. Free for 14 days.

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