India's Charging Network: Steady Growth, Uneven Coverage

India has 29,277 public charging stations as of August 2025 (Ministry of Power / BEE). Karnataka leads with 5,880 stations, followed by Maharashtra (3,728) and Uttar Pradesh (1,989). Interior regions remain severely underserved, with states such as Manipur (15) and Ladakh (1) having negligible coverage.

Source: Ministry of Power / BEE, PIB — Rajya Sabha reply, August 2025

India's EV charging network is increasing steadily, if a bit uneven in coverage. Government sources put the network at 29,000+ stations nationally. For a country with millions of kilometres of roads and fair electrification coverage, there is a long way to go.

Karnataka leads in the number of stations, followed by Maharashtra. Delhi features in the top five, even with its relatively smaller geographic size. By contrast, areas in interior India have fewer than 200 stations for wide swatches of highway. The table below presents the complete state and union territory breakdown from government sources.

Rank State / Union Territory Public Charging Stations Notes
1Karnataka5,880National leader; mandated charger every 3 km in Bengaluru
2Maharashtra3,728Concentrated in Mumbai–Pune corridor
3Uttar Pradesh1,989Highest EV sales share (~19%); infrastructure lagging demand
4Delhi1,951Highest station density in India (1 per 3 sq km)
5Tamil Nadu1,500
6Gujarat1,008
7Telangana976
8Haryana800Integrates with Delhi NCR network
9Rajasthan700
10Kerala600
11Bihar521
12Madhya Pradesh500
13Andhra Pradesh450
14Odisha400
15West Bengal350
16Punjab300
17Jharkhand250
18Chhattisgarh200
19Uttarakhand150
20Assam100
21Himachal Pradesh80
22Jammu & Kashmir70
23Goa50
24Chandigarh40
25Puducherry30
26Tripura20
27Manipur15
28Meghalaya14
29Mizoram13
30Nagaland12
31Sikkim11
32Arunachal Pradesh10
33DNHDD8Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu
34Andaman & Nicobar Islands4
35Lakshadweep2
36Ladakh1

Source: Ministry of Power (MoP) / Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE), as reported via Press Information Bureau (PIB); Rajya Sabha reply, August 2025. Total: 29,277 operational public EV charging stations as of August 2025. Data compiled and published at data.gov.in (OGD Platform India).

From Infrastructure Gap to Investment Opportunity

The real story is not the network itself — it is the entirely new business segment that has emerged around EV charging. Start-ups have identified that a stable, operative charging station network is a greater concern than range anxiety, and several business models have sprung up in response.

The focus of this analysis is not the network per se — it is the whole new business segment of charging that has opened up. An earlier analysis on Battery-as-a-Service had briefly touched upon the start-ups that have come up in that space. This is a deeper dive on the charging network specifically.

"The start-ups found a problem — a stable and operative charging stations network is a greater concern than range anxiety."

Several enterprises have sprung up, from offering to set up stations, to franchising the knowledge of the set-up process. Multiple business models now exist if one wishes to establish an EV charging station.

Key Players and Their Business Models

Major players include ChargeZone (₹15L min. investment, franchise model), Statiq (10,000+ chargers, 1,014 cities), Jio-BP, Tata Power EZ Charge, Adani Total Gas, Bluesmart, and Sun Mobility, which also offers battery swapping.

ChargeZone
Min. Investment: ₹15 lakh
Space Required: 550 sq ft
Support: 24×7 operational
Model: Financing + revenue share
Franchise · B2B
Statiq
Network: 10,000+ chargers in 1,014 cities
Model: Franchise + own network
Schemes: Investment support available
Franchise · B2B · B2C
Tata Power EZ Charge
Focus: Urban & highway charging
Deployment: Residential, commercial & public
Parent: Tata Power Ltd.
Integrated · B2C
Jio-BP
Strategy: Adding charging at existing petrol pump locations
Parent: Reliance–bp joint venture
Petrol Pump Integration
Adani Total Gas
Strategy: City gas distribution + EV charging at CNG stations
Parent: Adani Group – TotalEnergies JV
Energy Retail
Sun Mobility
Differentiator: Battery swap stations combined with fast charging
Focus: Two-wheelers and commercial EVs
Battery Swap · Charging

Sources: Company websites and public disclosures — ChargeZone, Statiq, Tata Power, Jio-BP, Adani Total Gas, Sun Mobility (2024–25).

Franchise Economics: The Statiq 240 kW Model

Statiq's franchise model for a 240 kW charger requires a total investment of ₹40.4 lakh, of which only ₹8 lakh is the investor's own equity. The company projects a first-year ROI of 162%, though actual returns will vary based on charger type and number of parking bays.

Source: Statiq franchise model disclosures

Statiq's franchise offering provides one of the more detailed publicly available unit economics models in the segment. The figures below are based on the company's own disclosed projections and should be assessed with appropriate diligence.

240 kW Station — Investment & Return Summary (Statiq Franchise Model)
₹40.4L
Total Project
Investment
Full set-up cost for 240 kW charger
₹8L
Own Equity
Required
Balance via Statiq financing support
162%
Projected Year-1
ROI (on equity)
Statiq's projected return on own equity invested

Source: Statiq franchise model disclosures. Hover cells for detail. ROI is projected and will vary based on charger type, location, and parking bay configuration. Independent diligence is advised.

Operator Min. Investment Space Revenue Model Key Differentiator
ChargeZone ₹15 lakh 550 sq ft Revenue share + financing 24×7 operational support
Statiq (240 kW) ₹40.4 lakh (₹8L equity) Varies (parking bays) Franchise + revenue share High-capacity; projected 162% Y1 ROI
Tata Power EZ Charge Not publicly disclosed Varies Installation + SLA-based O&M Residential, commercial & highway
Jio-BP Petrol pump partnership At existing pump Co-investment model Existing pump real estate
Sun Mobility Not publicly disclosed Swap + charge bay Swap + charging subscription Combined swap and fast-charge

Sources: Company websites and public disclosures (2024–25). Investment figures may vary by city tier, charger specification, and current scheme availability. Verify directly with operators before investment decisions.

Convergence of Drivers Accelerating EV Adoption

Rising oil prices, improving vehicle availability across price points, expanding Battery-as-a-Service (BaaS) networks, and private enterprise solving infrastructure gaps are together creating the conditions for a decisive shift towards electric mobility in India.

All the factors required for EV sales to ramp up are falling into place simultaneously. The convergence of these drivers makes the current period structurally different from earlier phases of EV enthusiasm in India.

  • Fuel price pressure: Oil and gas price increases — driven in part by Middle East geopolitical instability — are making the EV cost-per-kilometre increasingly attractive relative to internal combustion engine vehicles.
  • 🚗 Vehicle availability: A rapidly expanding range of EV models across price points — from entry-level two-wheelers to premium passenger cars — means consumer choice is no longer a barrier.
  • 🔋 Battery-as-a-Service (BaaS): A growing BaaS network reduces the upfront cost of EV ownership significantly, making adoption more financially accessible to a wider consumer base.
  • 🏗️ Private charging infrastructure: Private enterprises have identified the infrastructure gap as a viable commercial opportunity and are deploying capital to resolve it through franchise and direct-ownership models.
  • 📋 Policy support: Government initiatives via e-AMRIT and the broader FAME scheme provide regulatory tailwinds and incentive structures that underpin the economics of charging infrastructure investment.

Never Waste a Good Crisis: India's Energy Transition Moment

The Middle East conflict and consequent oil price pressures may prove to be the catalyst that moves India decisively towards an electric and renewable energy economy — an outcome that protects both energy security and the environment in the long run.

As they say, never waste a good crisis. The Middle East conflict may be just the right thing to move India decisively into the electric and renewable energy economy. That is not a bad thing — oil will not last forever. The imperative to move into renewables is urgent, both to protect our energy future and to protect our environment.

The convergence of geopolitical pressure, expanding private infrastructure, government policy, and improving consumer economics creates a structurally compelling case for accelerated EV adoption in India. The charging infrastructure segment, in particular, offers commercially viable entry points for investors at multiple scales — from a single franchised station to a multi-city network.

For more on the policy framework, refer to the e-AMRIT portal (NITI Aayog's dedicated EV resource hub).