Charging Ahead: India’s EV Charging Network Quadruples in 15 Months

Raghav Bharadwaj
Chief Executive Officer

India’s electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure is growing at a breakneck pace. Over the past 15 months, the public charging network didn’t just grow; it exploded to four times its size. Public EV charging stations increased from roughly 6,000 in early 2023 to about 24,000 by mid-2025. That’s an addition of 18,000 new charging stations in just over a year. This charging boom is great news for anyone eyeing an electric car or scooter, and it makes a critical step forward in India’s green mobility mission. But how did this happen so fast, and what does it mean for EV drivers, businesses, and the country at large?
This article explores key questions about India’s EV charging infrastructure journey:
- How did India manage to quadruple its EV charging infrastructure in just 15 months?
- What impact is this rapid expansion having on EV adoption and usage?
- What challenges remain, and what is the strategic outlook toward 2030?
From Scarcity to Surplus (Almost)
Not long ago, EV owners in India had to plan trips meticulously, worrying whether a charging point would be available en route. Today, the landscape looks dramatically different. Several states and union territories now boast 100% fast-charger coverage on their National Highways.
Major regions like Karnataka, Haryana, Delhi, Kerala, Punjab and even smaller ones like Tripura and Sikkim, have achieved this milestone. In total, 91% of India’s national highways offer a charger within 50 km, a huge improvement that slashes “range anxiety” for EV drivers. That’s a night-and-day change from a few years agowhen inter-city EV travel felt like a daring adventure.
This rollout has been widespread. EV charging stations have popped up in all corners: from bustling metros to smaller towns and highways connecting remote regions. 65% of India’s pin codes now have at least one registered EV in use, indicating that the EV revolution is reaching a majority of communities.
For instance, Maharashtra and Delhi were early leaders (each had thousands of public chargers by early 2024), but other states are catching up. The public charging station count jumped nearly five-fold from 5,151 in 2022 to 26,367 by mid-2024. This growth, averaging approx. 72% annually, reflects aggressive expansion efforts across the board. Government policies and state-level EV programs provided a strong push, while private companies stepped in with investments and partnerships. It’s a classic case of demand meeting supply: more EVs on the road created pressure for more chargers, and more chargers, in turn, encourage more people to consider EVs.
What Charged Up This Growth?
India’s central and state governments have been actively supercharging the charging infrastructure. They rolled out incentives, mandates, and funding to ensure charging stations kept pace with the rising EV sales. Various states announced their own EV policies, often including subsidies or land incentives for setting up charging points. This public-sector push unlocked investments from power companies, oil marketing firms, automakers, and start-ups, everyone wanted a slice of the emerging EV charging pie.
Crucially, industry collaboration has played a major role. A recent report by Tata Motors’ EV division revealed that an “Open Collaboration Framework” between automakers, charge point operators, and oil companies helped identify where chargers were needed most. By pooling real driving data (1.4 billion km of EV travel!) and working together, these partners strategically installed chargers in high-demand locations.
The result? Over 18,000 new public charging stations were added in just 15 months through coordinated effort. This marks a big shift from the early days when a few players installed chargers in isolation. Now, with car companies, fuel station chains, and independent charging providers teaming up, the rollout is faster and smarter.
Private companies have also been racing to expand the network. For example, giants like Tata Power recently announced crossing 100,000 home chargers installed (for private use) and are rapidly increasing public chargers as well. Partnerships like Tata Motors with Shell and HPCL (to set up chargers at gas stations) and MG Motor with various CPOs have become common. Other automakers such as Hyundai, Mahindra, and start-ups are also installing charging stations to support their EV customers. Even oil companies (IOC, BPCL, HPCL) jumped in to install 22,000+ EV charging stations at their petrol pumps by end of 2024. It’s a concerted effort from all sides, because everyone realizes that without enough places to charge, EV adoption will stall.
Government policies have also made it easier to set up and use chargers. New guidelines allow individuals to install chargers at homes and offices using existing electricity connections. Regulations were introduced to streamline electrical connections for new public charging stations and even capped the electricity tariffs that charge point operators pay, making the business more viable. Some states offer revenue-sharing or provide public land at nominal rates to encourage companies to build stations. All these supportive policies created the right environment for the EV charging sector to flourish.

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More EVs, More Charging – A Virtuous Cycle
What’s the impact of this surging charger network? In short, it’s changing how Indians buy and use EVs. With charging easier to find, EV owners are now driving their vehicles a lot more than before. A study in 2025 found that Indian EVs are driven about 1,600 km per month on average, that’s 40% more mileage than comparable petrol cars. Just two years earlier, EVs only had an 11% edge in usage over conventional cars. As charging infrastructure improved, EV owners started using their vehicles almost daily (27 days a month on average). Many have essentially ditched their petrol vehicles for good, with 84% of owners now calling their EV their primary ride (up from 74% in 2023). This indicates growing confidence; people aren’t keeping the EV just for short city commutes; they rely on it day-to-day.
Another big change is in long-distance travel. With chargers along highways, EV road trips are becoming mainstream. According to the Tata.ev report, EVs can now travel on over 95% of India’s motorable roads and remain within reach of a charger. Popular routes like Delhi–Manali, Mumbai–Goa, and Hyderabad–Bengaluru are now dotted with charging points, and half of Tata’s EV customers have completed journeys of 500 km or more on such corridors.
And it’s not just personal cars, electric two-wheelers and buses are also benefitting from the infrastructure spread. Cities are seeing more e-scooters and e-bikes, which often use the same public charging stations or battery-swap points. Transit agencies launching electric buses need depot and en-route charging, which is easier to plan when the overall ecosystem has matured.
All of this feeds back into EV sales growth. Seeing chargers around gives consumers confidence to choose an EV, knowing they won’t be stranded. India’s EV market is picking up speed; as of 2024 EVs made up roughly 5% of all new vehicle sales (including two-wheelers), and the government is aiming for 30% by 2030.
With the current momentum, those targets look more reachable. In FY2024 alone, over 1.75 million EVs were sold across two-wheelers, three-wheelers, cars, and more, a 40% jump from the previous year. A robust charging network is both a cause and an effect of this EV surge: it’s paving the way for mass adoption.
The Other Side of the Coin: Challenges Remain
While India’s charging network expansion is impressive, it’s not time to declare victory yet. For one, the charger-to-EV ratio is still low, only about one public charger for every 235 EVs on the road. So even though we have approx. 24,000 stations, millions of EVs (especially two-wheelers and rickshaws) are vying for those plugs. By comparison, countries leading in EV adoption aim for a much tighter ratio, making it as easy to find a charger as a petrol pump.
A ratings agency report highlighted that despite 5X growth in stations since 2022, the infrastructure isn’t proportionate to the boom in EVs. This could become a bottleneck if not addressed with the same urgency.
There’s also the issue of charger reliability and uptime. Simply installing thousands of chargers isn’t enough if half of them end up “out of order”. Alarmingly, as of early 2024, nearly 12,100 out of approx. 25,000 public chargers were found nonfunctional. That’s almost half the chargers offline due to maintenance issues, connectivity glitches, or power supply problems. Nothing is more frustrating for an EV driver than arriving at a charging station to find it out of service, especially on a highway with no alternative nearby. In fact, 38% of EV users cite unreliable chargers as a major barrier. One bad experience can shake a driver’s confidence in taking longer trips. So upkeeping and “hardening” the charging network is now a top priority.
Another challenge is the fragmented user experience. Imagine having to install 5–10 different apps just to use whatever charging station you find on a trip. That’s the reality right now: different charging operators have their own apps and payment systems, and an average EV owner might juggle 17 to 20 different apps or RFID cards to access various chargers. It’s akin to carrying a dozen credit cards because each gas station accepted a unique one, not exactly convenient.
Payment methods can also be a hurdle. While tech-savvy users manage multiple apps with ease, others, like senior citizens or drivers of fleet vehicles, wish for simpler options like a universal RFID tap card or even plain UPI/cash payments.
Then there’s the question of speed. As EVs batteries grow larger to deliver longer driving ranges, fast-charging infrastructure must keep pace. Currently, a significant portion of India’s public chargers are slow AC chargers, which are fine for a two-wheeler or plugging in for a few hours’ shopping, but not ideal for a quick top-up on a road trip. High-powered DC fast chargers (30 kW, 60 kW, 90 kW, and above) remain relatively scarce, especially beyond major city highways. This gap could become problematic as more long-range EVs hit the roads. Without access to fast chargers, even vehicles with 400 km-range may face hour-long stops when forced to charge on slower connections.
As one analysis noted, India still lacks a robust fast-charger network, and charging times will only get longer with bigger batteries if we don’t roll out more high-speed chargers.
The Road Ahead: Full Charge by 2030?
India has made a remarkable start in building out its EV charging network, quadrupling stations in just over a year is no small feat. It sends a strong signal to consumers and industry that the country is serious about its EV revolution. However, the journey is far from over. By all projections, demand for charging will skyrocket in the coming years. The government itself estimates that India may need at least 1.3 million public charging stations by 2030 to meet its EV targets. That’s roughly 50 times the number of stations we have today.
To hit that mark, we’d need to install around 400,000 chargers annually for the next several years, a colossal undertaking that makes the recent 18,000-in-15-month sprint look modest. Even if that exact number isn’t reached, it underscores the scale of infrastructure growth required as millions more EVs join Indian roads. Some forecasts suggest there could be 50 million EVs on Indian roads by 2030, including two-wheelers and three-wheelers. Supporting that volume means making charging as common and effortless as refueling is today.
Getting there will require continued teamwork: policy support, private investment, and technological innovation marching in lockstep. We will likely see more battery swapping stations for two- and three-wheelers (to reduce wait times), ultra-fast chargers at highway rest stops, and smarter grid management to handle the load. Reliability must improve too, perhaps through standards and audits for charger uptime, and by incorporating battery backup or solar power at stations to mitigate grid outages.
The user experience should also converge towards a unified system where a driver can pay and charge anywhere through a single interface. Initiatives like the charger program (which certifies chargers with 90%+ uptime and strong user ratings) are a step in the right direction, as is the push for interoperability and single-payment solutions. These efforts will build trust that chargers can be found and will work when you get there.
Ultimately, India’s EV charging story is one of rapid progress with a healthy dose of pragmatism. The recent fourfold expansion has shown what’s possible when government and industry collaborate. Range anxiety is gradually giving way to range confidence. Electric car owners are now planning weekend getaways that would have felt daunting just a couple of years ago, and fleet operators are considering electrifying routes knowing the support infrastructure is taking shape.
For CXOs and industry leaders in the mobility space, India’s example illustrates a key point: infrastructure can’t be an afterthought, it must lead from the front. The coming years will test how well we can sustain this charger rollout momentum. If the pace holds, India might just transform one of its biggest transportation challenges into a shining success story, powering millions of electric journeys every day.
Conclusion
The quadrupling of India’s EV charging network in 15 months is an electrifying development (pun intended) that signals a tipping point for electric mobility. There’s tangible excitement seeing charging stations go from rarity to regular sight. The task now is to build on this success, to charge ahead even faster, ensure those stations stay online and accessible, and make electric driving truly effortless for everyone. The chargers are coming, the EVs are coming; with sustained effort, India’s drive towards a cleaner, greener transport future is well on its way, and that’s a journey worth cheering.

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