
Rivian
Standard
Affordable adventure electric. Before you spend $2,000–$8,000 on a panel upgrade you may not need, get a real NEC 220.82 load calculation from an IBEW Master Electrician.
Sharing this link prefills the calculator with your Rivian R2.
These specs feed directly into the NEC 220.82 load calculation for your home panel.
Built for the Rivian R2. Same five NEC methods we run for every car.
Real NEC 220.82 load calculation
The same math an electrician does — broken out line by line so you can verify it.
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Confidence score (0–100)
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Upgrade scenarios with real costs
If you do need work, you see the options ranked by price — not the one your installer profits from.
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The math comes from the same NEC 220.82 calculation we run in the assessment.
Not necessarily. The Rivian R2 draws up to 48A on Level 2 charging, which requires a 60A breaker under NEC continuous-load rules. Whether your panel can add that depends on its size and existing loads — many 200A panels and even some 100A panels have room. A NEC 220.82 load calculation is the only way to know before you spend $2,000–$5,000 on a service upgrade.
The Rivian R2 Standard accepts up to 11.5 kW (about 48A) on Level 2 AC charging. A matched 48A charger on a 60A breaker fully utilizes the car's onboard charger. A smaller 32A or 24A charger still works and may avoid a panel upgrade.
At its maximum 11.5 kW Level 2 rate, a Rivian R2 takes about 6.5 hours to go from empty to full on its 75 kWh battery. Most owners charge overnight from 20%–80%, which takes roughly 3.9 hours.
For the maximum 48A charging speed the Rivian R2 supports, NEC 625.41 requires a 60A breaker (continuous load = charger amps × 1.25). A smaller breaker is acceptable if you set the charger to a lower amperage.
The Rivian R2 Standard uses a NACS connector for AC and DC fast charging. Most Level 2 home chargers ship with the matching plug or include an adapter.
Sometimes — especially with gas heat. A 100A panel has a safe continuous capacity of 80A. The Rivian R2 draws 48A at max Level 2 speed. Whether that fits depends on your existing loads (HVAC, range, dryer, water heater). Many 100A homes with gas heat can add a 24A or 32A charger without a service upgrade.