All India EVAll India EVAll India EV
Notification
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • EV News
  • EV Launch
  • Market Insights
  • Investments & Funding
  • Guest Articles
  • EV Engineering
  • Contact
Reading: Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India’s EV Charging Expansion
Share
All India EVAll India EV
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • EV News
  • EV Launch
  • Market Insights
  • Guest Articles
  • EV Engineering
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
    • Home 1
    • Home 2
    • Home 3
    • Home 4
    • Home 5
  • Home
  • Categories
    • Electric
  • Categories
  • Shows
    • Rap
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Contact
  • Bookmarks
    • Customize Interests
    • My Bookmarks
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India's EV Charging Expansion
Home » Blog » Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India’s EV Charging Expansion
EV News

Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India’s EV Charging Expansion

Piyush
By
Piyush
Last updated: 13 May 2026
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE
Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India's EV Charging Expansion

What: India’s EV charging sector is struggling to scale despite record electric vehicle sales, with operators facing low charger utilisation, expensive urban real estate, weak returns, and fragmented policy execution.

Contents
  • The Core News
  • Breaking Down the Update
  • How EV charging expansion will help Indian EV Market
  • Conclusion & Next Steps

The Number: India had 29,151 public EV charging stations installed by December 2025, including 20,346 slow chargers and 8,805 fast chargers. India sold 24.52 lakh EVs in FY2025-26.

The Impact: The charging gap is becoming a structural bottleneck for India’s EV transition. Without commercially sustainable charging infrastructure, long-distance EV adoption and private investment could slow down significantly.

The Core News

India’s EV charging expansion is increasingly facing a business viability problem rather than just a technology challenge. Even as electric vehicle sales continue rising across passenger cars, two-wheelers, and commercial fleets, the pace of public charging deployment remains uneven. Industry operators say low charger utilisation rates, expensive land acquisition, and high grid connection costs are preventing faster scale-up of networks across highways and urban centres.

The economics of fast charging infrastructure remain difficult in India’s current EV market. Operators must invest heavily in transformers, power distribution systems, cooling infrastructure, and utility deposits before a station becomes operational. According to industry estimates cited in the report, DC fast chargers can cost 10–12 times more than AC setups, while utility security deposits alone can range between Rs 30 lakh and Rs 70 lakh for some projects. At the same time, many charging stations are operating at extremely low utilisation levels, limiting revenue recovery.

The issue is particularly visible on highways and express corridors, where charger availability remains inconsistent. EV users continue reporting operational failures, occupied chargers, and poor network reliability during long-distance travel. Real estate access has also emerged as a major constraint, with commercial property owners often preferring higher-yield retail tenants instead of dedicating premium space for EV charging infrastructure. This “land-locking” effect is becoming a major barrier in metro cities and high-traffic corridors.

More EV News

EvolveX Invests Undisclosed Amount in Pre-Seed Round of EV Startup NIKOL EV
EvolveX Invests Undisclosed Amount in Pre-Seed Round of EV Startup NIKOL EV
BYD India Aims for 90% EV Market Share
Statiq and BPCL Partner to Expand EV Charging in India
Magenta Mobility Partners with Switch Mobility to Deploy eLCVs for Last-Mile and Mid-Mile Delivery across India
Tesla’s $1 Trillion Pay Package for Elon Musk Sparks Governance Concerns

Breaking Down the Update

• India sold 24.52 lakh EVs in FY2025-26 across all vehicle segments
• Public EV charging stations reached 29,151 units by December 2025
• Slow chargers account for nearly 70% of India’s installed network
• Fast charger deployment slowed during the second half of FY26
• High utility deposits and transformer costs are hurting project economics
• Charger utilisation rates remain low for both public and oil marketing companies
• Housing societies are facing fire safety approval challenges for basement chargers
• Operators say fragmented policy execution is slowing private investment
• India may require nearly 1.32 million charging stations by 2030 to meet projected EV demand

How EV charging expansion will help Indian EV Market

India’s EV charging expansion is critical for unlocking the next phase of electric mobility adoption beyond early urban users. While two-wheelers and fleet operators have already started driving EV growth, passenger vehicle adoption still depends heavily on reliable public charging infrastructure. A stronger charging network can directly reduce range anxiety, improve long-distance travel confidence, and increase consumer trust in EV ownership.

For the Indian EV ecosystem, large-scale charging deployment also creates a multiplier effect across multiple industries. It increases electricity demand, supports domestic charger manufacturing, accelerates battery storage deployment, and creates opportunities for renewable energy integration. Public charging hubs can eventually become energy service businesses rather than standalone charging assets.

Highway charging expansion will be especially important as automakers launch larger battery SUVs and premium EVs aimed at intercity travel. Faster deployment near commercial corridors, fuel stations, malls, housing societies, and logistics hubs can improve utilisation rates and strengthen the business case for private operators.

At the policy level, successful EV charging expansion will require easier land access, standardised state regulations, faster utility approvals, and long-term tariff clarity. Without solving these execution issues, India risks building EV demand faster than its supporting infrastructure. A commercially sustainable charging ecosystem will ultimately determine whether India can achieve its long-term EV penetration targets by 2030.

Conclusion & Next Steps

India’s EV charging expansion now faces a critical execution phase. Vehicle demand is growing faster than charging economics can currently support, creating pressure on both policymakers and private operators. The next few years will determine whether charging infrastructure becomes a scalable business or remains subsidy-dependent. For the market, the focus will shift from installation numbers to charger uptime, utilisation, profitability, and corridor-level reliability

Read More: Catch up on All India EV’s related coverage on India’s evolving commercial EV subsidies and battery swapping policies at All India EV

MG Comet EV Launches Fast-Charge Models at New Prices
MG Comet EV Launches Fast-Charge Models at New Prices
Zypp Electric Joins Forces with Porter Enterprise for Innovation in India
Sun Mobility and Revfin Collaborate to Propel EV Adoption with Battery-as-a-Service Model
Axis Bank Becomes Tesla’s Preferred EV Financing Partner in India
PURE EV Secures $8 Million in Funding, Approaches $25 Million Fundraising Goal

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
Loading
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US
XFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
LinkedInFollow
Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India's EV Charging Expansion
Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India’s EV Charging Expansion
13 May 2026
Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India's EV Charging Expansion
Real Estate Hurdles, Low Yields Continue To Stifle India’s EV Charging Expansion
11 May 2026
Ather Energy’s low-cost EL platform set to boost profit margins and new plant launch
Ather Energy’s low-cost EL platform set to boost profit margins and new plant launch
11 May 2026
All India EV: Edition 49
What all happened in April 2026?
Click Here
All India EV

Daily EV Industry updates for you…

Categories

  • EV News
  • EV Launch
  • Investments & Funding
  • Market Insights
  • Guest Articles
  • EV Engineering

Quick Links

  • Community
  • Content Services
  • Branding Services
  • My EV Charger
  • Substack

© Developed and Managed by “The Energy Log”

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up