Public EV charging in St. Albert, Alberta. 17 charging locations (0 DC fast, 17 Level 2). Score any address with EV Data Map's free 0–100 site profitability analyzer — Canadian incentives via ZEVIP and provincial programs included.
St. Albert, Alberta is served by 17 public electric vehicle charging locations operating roughly 49 individual chargers. Of those, 0 (0%) offer DC fast charging suitable for road-trip stops and short-dwell sessions, while 17 (100%) provide Level 2 charging for longer dwell times such as workplace, retail and overnight parking.
The largest charging network in St. Albert is ChargePoint Network with 10 locations, followed by FLO with 5. Average DC fast power across the city is approximately 0 kW.
EV Data Map is an EVSE and DC Fast Charger location analyzer that scores every potential charging site in Canada from 0 to 100 for DC Fast Charger ROI, combining ZEV registration density, daytime population, traffic, demographics, nearby competing chargers, and grid context. Enter any St. Albert address below for an instant ROI score, demand projection, and recommended charger configuration — including ZEVIP, Alberta provincial, and utility incentive matching.
St. Albert, Alberta, is characterized by a completely Level 2 public charging infrastructure with 17 locations, all operated by three distinct networks, predominantly led by ChargePoint, which manages 59% of the sites. This unique scenario highlights a significant gap in fast charging options, as the city currently lacks any DC fast chargers, compelling drivers in need of a quick charge to venture outside its borders. The absence of fast charging infrastructure presents a promising opportunity for site developers and operators to address a growing demand in the market, ensuring that St. Albert's EV ecosystem can cater to both long-distance travelers and local residents seeking convenient, rapid charging solutions.
Other cities in Alberta we cover with full charging data and site profitability scoring.
St. Albert projects can typically stack three layers of funding: the federal Zero Emission Vehicle Infrastructure Program (ZEVIP) covering up to 50% of project costs, Alberta provincial programs for additional rebates and tax credits, and local utility incentives for grid-connected installations. Class 56 accelerated capital cost allowance (100% first-year writeoff) further improves project economics for commercial installations.
Use the analyzer to see which programs apply to a specific St. Albert address along with eligible award amounts.
Every score on EV Data Map blends location demand, competition and operating economics into a single 0–100 number. For Canadian sites, demand draws on Statistics Canada ZEV registrations (Table 20-10-0024) projected forward to 2026 using province-level CAGR, daytime population from StatCan census tracts, and traffic patterns. Competition uses the count and quality of nearby chargers — including DC fast power, network reliability and dwell-fit. Operating economics include provincial electricity tariffs, demand-charge exposure, expected utilization, and capital cost for the recommended hardware mix.
For St. Albert specifically, our model factors local commute corridors, the existing footprint of 0 DC fast and 17 Level 2 sites, and the dwell profile of surrounding land use. The result is a per-address score plus a recommended configuration — number of stalls, target power level and network — that maximises projected revenue.