Official Statistics

Electric vehicle charging device statistics: October 2022

Published 26 October 2022

About this release

This release presents experimental statistics on the number of publicly available electric vehicle charging devices in the UK, broken down by Local Authority for July to September 2022. Data is provided by the electric vehicle and charging point platform Zap-Map and is correct as at midnight 1 October 2022. In addition to the usual information presented throughout the publication, this release now includes new breakdowns including speed and location of charging devices.

The timeline of this publication series includes periods of coronavirus (COVID-19) related restrictions. As such, figures in this release may be affected and should be interpreted with caution.

The next quarterly report is scheduled for release in January 2023.

We welcome feedback on these new breakdowns in addition to feedback on the compact HTML format our quarterly publication is now presented in. If you have any feedback, please email environment statistics.

Headline figures

As of 1 October 2022, there were 34,637 public electric vehicle charging devices installed in the UK, within which:

Charging Speed:

  • 6,395 were rated “rapid” devices or above
  • 19,746 were rated “fast” chargers

Location:

  • 17,179 were designated as “destination” chargers, this represents 50% of all charging devices
  • 11,218 were designated as “on street” chargers, this represents 32% of all charging devices

Compared to 1 July 2022:

  • total installed devices increased by 2,626, an increase of 8%
  • rapid charging or above devices increased by 421, an increase of 7%
  • there was an increase in total charging devices and those rated rapid or above in all regions of the UK, except the North East

Charging device speed definition, kilowatts

Total Devices represent publicly available charging devices at all speeds, including: slow, fast, rapid and ultra-rapid devices

Rapid charging or above devices are those whose fastest connector is rated at 25kW and above and includes chargepoints classified as either rapid or ultra-rapid

  • Slow Charging Devices represents 3 kilowatts (kW) to 6 kW
  • Fast Charging Devices represents 7kW to 22kW
  • Rapid Charging Devices represents 25kW to 100kW
  • Ultra Rapid Charging Devices represents 100kW plus

UK growth in public charging devices

Since 1 October 2021, the number of installed public devices has increased by 8,710, a 34% increase. The number of rapid charging or above devices increased by 30%, an additional 1,472 public devices installed.

Table EVCD_01a and Table EVCD_01b provide a breakdown of public charging devices in each local authority in the UK whilst Table EVCD_02a shows the change in the number of devices since 2015. These tables are published alongside this report.

Chart 1: Growth in installed UK public charging devices since 2015 (table EVCD_02)

Chart showing quarterly increase in public charging devices from 2015 to present. Device numbers have increased from 2283 in January 2015, to 34637 in October 2022.

Chart 2: Growth in UK public rapid charging or above devices since 2015 (table EVCD_02)

Chart showing quarterly increase in public rapid charging or above devices from 2015 to present. Rapid or quicker numbers have increased from 195 in January 2015 to 6395 in October 2022.

Speed of charging devices

Chart 3: Public charging devices by charging speed 1 October 2022 (table EVCD_02b)

Chart showing the number of charging devices by speed of charging device from January 2022 to October 2022.

Chart 3 compares the relative growth in charging devices seen across all speed categories throughout 2022. Proportionately, the largest increase in installations was within the ultra-rapid device category, which increased by 16% in the last quarter (albeit from the lower base than other categories), accounting for 295 charging devices. Ultra-rapid charging devices are still the smallest overall category with 2,084 devices.

Proportionately, the smallest increase in charging devices installations was in the slow charging devices categories, with an increase of 4% or 337 charging devices. Fast charging devices are still the most common category to be publicly installed, growing by 10% or 1,868 devices.

Location of charging devices

Chart 4: Public charging devices by destination of charging device 1 October 2022 (table EVCD_03)

Chart showing the percentage of public charging devices in the UK; Destination 49.6%, On Street 32.4%, En-Route 6.3%, Other 11.7%.

Chart 4 shows the most common location category for charging devices is “destination” with 17,179 charging devices or approximately half of all publicly available charging devices. “On street” charging devices is the second largest category accounting for 32% of charging devices or 11,218. Further information can be found in Annex B.

Charging device location categories are defined based on both the physical type of facility they are located in and who can access this but also the type of charging service they are designed to deliver:

  • On Street Charging devices located on residential streets only.
  • En-route Charging devices located for charging to continue a journey. Located in motorway service areas, service stations, electric forecourts and ferry terminals. Additionally Rapid or Ultra-Rapid devices in hotels, restaurants and attractions.
  • Destination Charging devices located at the end of an Electric Vehicle journey or where a driver may typically stop for an extended period of time. Consists of both Rapid or Ultra-Rapid and Fast or Slow devices located in retail car parks, car parks, leisure, education areas and transport (except ferries); in addition Fast or Slow devices located at hotels and restaurants.
  • Other Charging devices which are semi-public with some level of access restrictions such as workplace car parks and dealership forecourts.

Regional distribution of charging devices

There is an uneven geographical distribution of charging devices within the UK. Some UK local authorities have bid for UK Government funding for charging devices, and others have not. Most of the provision of this infrastructure has been market-led, with individual charging networks and other businesses (such as hotels) choosing where to install devices.

Chart 5: Public charging devices per 100,000 of population by UK country and region: 1 October 2022 (table ECVD_01a)

Public devices per 100000 population: North East 43, North West 30, Yorkshire and Humber 33, East Midlands 38, West Midlands 42, East England 36, London 122, South East 49, South West 42, Wales 39, Scotland 60, Northern Ireland 18.

Chart 6: Public rapid charging or above devices per 100,000 of population by UK country and region: 1 October 2022 (table ECVD_01b)

Rapid or above devices per 100000 population: North East 9.7, North West 7.5, Yorkshire and Humber 9.6, East Midlands 10.1, West Midlands 10.6, East England 8.6, London 9.1, South East 10.3, South West 9.8, Wales 7.0, Scotland 15.1, Northern Ireland 1.2.

Chart 5 and Map 1 show that London and Scotland had the highest level of charging provision per 100,000 of population, with 122 and 60 devices per 100,000 respectively. In comparison, the average provision in the UK was 52 per 100,000.

Northern Ireland had the lowest level of charging device provision in the UK, with 18 devices per 100,000, followed by the North West and Yorkshire and the Humber with 30 and 33 devices per 100,000 respectively.

Chart 6 and Map 2 indicate that Scotland had the highest rate of rapid device provision of 15.1 rapid or quicker devices per 100,000, whilst the average provision in the UK was 9.5 per 100,000. Rapid or quicker device provision was lowest for Northern Ireland with 1.2 rapid or quicker devices per 100,000. Wales and North West were the second and third lowest regions with 7.0 and 7.5 rapid or quicker devices per 100,000 respectively.

An interactive map of this data is available.

Maps 1 and 2: Total and rapid or above public charging devices per 100,000 of population by UK region 01 October 2022

Map 1 shows the UK regions, with devices per 100000 population. Map 2 shows the UK regions, with rapid charging or above devices per 100000 population. Please refer to Annex A: Table 1 for further information.

Change in public charging devices

Maps 3 and 4: Change in public charging devices, per region between July to September 2022; percentage and (number of devices)

Map 3 shows UK regions, quarterly growth in percentages for all devices. Map 4 shows UK regions, quarterly growth in percentages for rapid charging or above devices. Please refer to Annex B: Table 2 for further information.

As Map 3 shows all regions, apart from North East, across the UK saw an increase in total charging devices between July and September 2022. West Midlands had the greatest increase at 16.7%, whilst Northern Ireland had the smallest increase at 4.3%. London had the greatest increase in absolute number of devices at 546 devices, contributing to 20% of the increase in devices across the UK in this period. After having the largest increase in the previous quarter (14.2% from April to July 2022), North East saw a decrease in the number of chargepoints by 1.1%, this represents a decrease of 13 devices.

The number of available devices can fluctuate for a range of reasons. Increases likely reflect the installation of new devices, whilst owners and operators can choose to temporarily or permanently decommission or replace devices. Charging devices can also be unavailable due to faults, maintenance or other restrictions in the area where they are located, though data on the status of charging devices is not held by Department for Transport (DfT).

Map 4 shows that rapid charging or above devices have increased in every region apart from North East in the UK. The smallest percentage increase in the number of rapid charging or above devices was East of England at 3.5%. North West had the largest percentage increase in rapid charging or above devices at 12.6%, corresponding to an increase of 62 rapid charging or above devices. North East saw a decrease of 8.2% compared to July 2022, this attributes to a reduction of 23 rapid charging or above devices.

Further detail on the change in charging device numbers between July and September 2022 displayed in Maps 3 and 4 can be found in Annex C.

Background notes and limitations of data

This is a quarterly statistical release on electric vehicle charging devices. We would welcome feedback from users of the statistics. As we have added to the contents of this publication, we would welcome feedback from users of the statistics. This can be provided via environment statistics.

A charging device is a unit capable of charging the batteries of plug-in electric vehicles. Devices are classified by their power output, and each device may offer one or more connecting points. The term ‘chargepoint’ is also sometimes used, including in previous statistical publications from DfT. This may refer to either a single device or a number of connectors on a device which can be used simultaneously.

Charging devices have largely been funded by private sector investment, however a number of the devices have been Government funded via a number of grant schemes operated by the Office for Zero Emission Vehicles (OZEV). OZEV also provides grant funding for private domestic charging and workplace charging devices, which are included in the quarterly electric vehicle charging device grant scheme statistics publication. Private domestic and workplace charging devices are not included within these statistics, as they are not necessarily available to the general public.

Charging device location data is sourced from the electric vehicle charging platform Zap-Map and represents devices reported as operational at midnight, 1 October 2022. Zap-Map report they cover 95% of publicly accessible devices. The total count of charging devices in the UK (when accounting for privately installed devices) will therefore be higher and we have no way of assessing whether data coverage is better in some geographical areas than others.

As we source the data from Zap-Map, we request that any reference to this report is clearly attributed to Zap-Map as the source of the data as well as this DfT report.

There are no other sources with such comprehensive coverage against which we could verify the Zap-Map devices. As of 11 October 2022, the National Chargepoint Registry (NCR) covers 23,304 devices so cannot be used to verify the Zap-Map counts. The NCR, whilst covering fewer devices, does contain more detailed information on each charging device including the exact location and number of connectors.

A device can have several connectors of varying types and speeds. Some devices can charge only one vehicle at once, whilst others can charge multiple simultaneously. The Zap-Map data does not indicate how many cars can be charged by a single device, therefore the statistics count the device itself. There is often more than one device at a location. Charging capability in any given location (the number of cars able to be charged at the same time) will be higher than the number of devices.

There are varying definitions of rapid charging device. Common definitions used are 25kW or above, as used in this publication, and 50kW or above. In practice, these two definitions are not too different, with less than 100 charging devices between 25kW and 49kW in existence at last count.

Population figures by Local Authority are sourced from the Office for National Statistics Population Mid Year Estimates for 2020. The Local Authority administrative geographies are from April 2021, available from the ONS Geography Portal.

Data after July to September 2019 reflects charging devices which were available at the end of each quarter. Data previous to this uses charging devices which were available at July to September 2019, but were installed in previous quarters before this. Subsequently, these figures do not include any devices installed before July to September 2019 that were decommissioned or unavailable at the time.

This quarterly statistical series complements three earlier releases presenting statistics on observed usage and charging patterns for electric vehicle charging devices funded under various OZEV schemes:

Experimental Statistics

These quarterly statistics are badged as Experimental Statistics. Users should be aware of the status and cautions of these series, which will vary for each statistic and will be explained within each publication. The statistics are new but still subject to testing in terms of their volatility and ability to meet customer needs. They do not meet the rigorous quality standards of National Statistics, for example with respect to partial coverage. Further details on the limitations of Experimental Statistics can be found at the Office for National Statistics.

To hear more about DfT statistical publications as they are released, please follow us on Twitter via DfTstats.

Annex A: Public charging device by 100,000 population table

Table 1 - Total and rapid or quicker public charging devices per 100,000 of population by UK region 1 October 2022 (Maps 1 and 2)

Region Devices per 100,000 population Rapids or quicker per 100,000 population
United Kingdom 52 9.5
North East 43 9.7
North West 30 7.5
Yorkshire and the Humber 33 9.6
East Midlands 38 10.1
West Midlands 42 10.6
East of England 36 8.6
London 122 9.1
South East 49 10.3
South West 42 9.8
Wales 39 7.0
Scotland 60 15.1
Northern Ireland 18 1.2

Annex B: Location of Charging Devices

Table 2 - Location of Public Charging Devices 1 October 2022; percentage and number of devices

Location Number of Devices Percentage of Total
On Street 11,218 32%
Destination 17,179 50%
En-Route 2,197 6%
Other 4,043 12%

Annex C: Regional changes table

Table 3 - Change in public charging devices, per region between July to September 2022: percentage and (number of devices)

Region Total devices change Rapid or quicker devices change
United Kingdom 8.2% (+2,626) 7.0% (+421)
North East -1.1% (-13) -8.2% (-23)
North West 9.2% (+184) 12.6% (+62)
Yorkshire and the Humber 13.9% (+225) 8.1% (+40)
East Midlands 7.2% (+124) 10.1% (+45)
West Midlands 16.7% (+360) 8.6% (+50)
East of England 8.9% (+286) 3.5% (+18)
London 5.2% (+546) 7.9% (+60)
South East 12.4% (+505) 7.6% (+67)
South West 6.9% (+155) 8.0% (+41)
Wales 4.8% (+57) 4.7% (+10)
Scotland 9.5% (+283) 6.5% (+50)
Northern Ireland 4.3% (14) 4.8% (1)

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