EV Chargers Are BoomingDespiteSlumping New Car Sales

US Chargers Get Faster and More Reliable

Chargepoint
A ChargePoint station in Hudson, N.Y. (Angus Mordant/Bloomberg)

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Despite the plunge in U.S. electric vehicle sales, it appears there’s a critical enough mass to sustain the companies building public charging infrastructure.

ChargePoint Holdings Inc. posted a 7% increase in salesin the last quarter of 2025, even as new EV sales fell bynearly 40%compared to the year-earlier quarter.

“Alot of people get fixated on the new EV sales,” ChargePoint CEO Rick Wilmer said. “But what really drives our business is not only new EV sales, but the cumulative number of EVs that are on the road.”

There are now roughly 5.8 million EVs zipping along American roads. Withdrivers increasingly relying on public charging, companies are racing to install more stations.



EVgo Inc.is anothercompanyexpanding itsnetwork. The firm aims to build up to 1,650 new slots to charge electric cars in the U.S. this year, which would be 38% more than it installed last year.

“We’re actually really excited about this year,” CEO Badar Khan said to investors March 3. “I think it’s a year of really ramping up.”

U.S. chargers have becomemore reliable and far faster, which encourages more people to use them, according toParen, a data platform focused on EV infrastructure. Charging networks added about11,300 ultrafast cordsacross the U.S. last year, up 48% from 2024. And the high-speed buildout is only accelerating: In the fourth quarter, nearly one in four new chargers were capable of pumping at rates of 250 kilowatts or more, which can typically add 100 miles of driving range in less than 10 minutes.

Despite the uptick in the number of chargers and their ability to sling electrons faster, the average U.S. charging station is still fairly busy most of the time.

The number of charging cords in the EVgo network has roughly doubled in the past three years. Yet each cord, on average, has steadily pumped more electrons in a given period.

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EV charging

Paren expects the U.S. to add slightly more chargers this year than last. “At some point, you would expect that the infrastructure would be growing so much that the utilization would go down,” said Bill Ferro, Paren co-founder and chief technology officer. “But we obviously aren’t there yet.”

To be sure, swooning EV sales complicate the road ahead for charging companies. Needham analyst Chris Pierce calls it an overhang, the type of bearish signal that drove EVgo shares down by about 8% this week despite its upbeat earnings call.

However, Pierce said charging results can continue to improve even with slumping car sales. “There are already too many EVs for too few fast charging stations,” he said.

EVgo expects that only10% of its revenue this year will come from relatively new electric cars and trucks.

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What’s more, EV prices are drifting lower and the used marketis booming, including among cost-conscious consumers who don’t have a private driveway or garage for charging. Meanwhile, rideshare drivers and autonomous taxi fleets are still electrifying quickly, a stable and growing source of demand for charging stations.

Ferro, at Paren, is keeping an eye onsurging gas pricesdue to the warin Iran and asuite of new affordableelectric SUVs, factors that could yet swing sales away from internal combustion engines.

“There’s room to grow,” he explained. “The [charging companies] we talk to are not building for 2025 or 2026; they’re building for 2035. They may slow down their deployment, but they’re still going to deploy.”

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