Electric vehicle being charged in London

EV Charging in London 2026

Where to charge, which networks to use, typical costs and the financial case for driving electric in the capital.

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ULEZ exempt
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CCZ exempt (registered)
10,000+ charge points
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Zero tailpipe emissions

Why London Works Well for EVs

London is one of the more practical places in the UK to own an electric vehicle, mainly because the regulatory environment has created financial incentives that stack up quickly. The combination of ULEZ exemption and Congestion Charge exemption alone can save drivers over £10,000 per year if they're commuting into central London regularly.

💡 Annual savings example

A driver commuting into central London five days a week switching from a non-compliant diesel to a registered EV could save approximately: ULEZ (250 days) = £3,125 + Congestion Charge (250 days) = £3,750 + fuel cost reduction = roughly £1,500–£2,500 depending on vehicle and charging habits. The total saving is often well over £8,000 per year before any other costs are considered.

Finding Charge Points

London has over 10,000 public charge points across the boroughs — one of the densest networks of any city in Europe. The challenge isn't finding them in principle; it's finding one that's working, compatible with your car, and available right now.

Zap-Map
UK's best EV charger map. Shows real-time availability and connector types.
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Google Maps
EV charger search is built in. Good for finding options on a route.
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PlugShare
Community-reported chargers including home sharers.
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Source London
TfL's own network. App required for member rates.

Main Charging Networks in London

BP Pulse
7kW – 150kW
One of the largest networks in London. Street chargers and car park installations. App or RFID card.
Source London
7kW – 22kW
TfL-managed network of around 1,500+ points across London boroughs. Annual membership for reduced per-kWh rate.
Pod Point
7kW – 22kW
Common in supermarket car parks and workplace installations. Contactless payment available on many units.
Osprey
50kW – 150kW
Rapid and ultra-rapid chargers. Contactless payment, no app required at most locations.
Char.gy
7kW – 22kW
Specialises in on-street lamp post charging. Common in residential London streets. App required.
Ubitricity
5.5kW – 22kW
Shell-owned lamp post charger network. Large footprint across London boroughs. RFID or app.

Typical Charging Costs

Charge TypeSpeedTypical Cost (per kWh)Notes
Home charging (overnight)3.5–7kW~£0.24–£0.30Off-peak EV tariff rate. Cheapest option by far.
Slow public (lamp post)3–7kW~£0.40–£0.55Ubitricity, Char.gy, Source London standard rate
Fast public7–22kW~£0.45–£0.65Supermarket car parks, workplace, BP Pulse
Rapid public50–150kW~£0.60–£0.85Osprey, Gridserve, BP Pulse rapids
Ultra-rapid150–350kW~£0.75–£1.00Gridserve, Pod Point ultra-rapids

Prices vary between networks and change regularly. Some networks also charge connection fees or idle fees (charged per minute once charging is complete). Check the network's app for current rates.

TfL Source London

Source London is TfL's own charging network, run as a membership scheme. Annual membership costs around £4 per year and gives access to reduced per-kWh rates across their 1,500+ charge points. The charge points are primarily 7kW slow chargers installed on-street in London borough car parks and public spaces — better suited to parking overnight or for several hours rather than rapid top-ups.

The network has grown significantly over recent years and is particularly useful for residents in inner London boroughs who don't have home charging capability. For anyone who relies primarily on public charging, the annual membership pays for itself quickly.

Tips for London EV Drivers

⚠️ Congestion Charge exemption — double check your vehicle registration

The plug-in vehicle exemption for the Congestion Charge requires TfL registration. Driving into the CCZ in a registered EV without having completed the registration process will result in a charge you weren't expecting. Check at tfl.gov.uk.

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