Install EV chargers or score a site in South Carolina with EV Data Map by Charge Rigs. 715 existing public charging locations (236 DC fast, 478 Level 2). Free 0–100 profitability analysis on any South Carolina address.
South Carolina is served by 715 public electric vehicle charging locations operating 2,140 individual chargers. 236 of those locations (33%) provide DC fast charging suitable for road-trip stops, while 478 (67%) deliver Level 2 charging for longer-dwell parking such as workplaces, retail and hospitality.
The cities with the most public charging in South Carolina are Charleston (74), Greenville (74), Columbia (59), Myrtle Beach (31), North Charleston (27). Across the state, charging is provided by a mix of national networks and regional operators.
EV Data Map is an EVSE and DC Fast Charger location analyzer that scores every potential charging site in the United States from 0 to 100 for DC Fast Charger ROI — combining EV ownership density, daytime population, traffic, demographics, nearby competing chargers, dwell-time characteristics of surrounding land use, and grid capacity. Use the analyzer to enter any address in South Carolina and receive an instant score, demand projection and recommended charger configuration.
DC fast share: 33% · Level 2 share: 67% · 129 cities with public charging.
The strongest EV charging hubs in South Carolina — explore site analysis and coverage detail:
The following South Carolina cities have the most public EV charging locations.
Every score on EV Data Map blends location demand, competition and operating economics into a single 0–100 number. Demand inputs include the registered EV count, commute and through-traffic patterns, daytime worker population, retail and hospitality footprint, and tourism inflows. Competition uses the count and quality of nearby existing chargers — DC fast power, network reliability and dwell-fit. Operating economics include estimated electricity tariffs, demand-charge exposure, expected utilization, and capital cost for the recommended hardware mix.
For South Carolina the model accounts for the existing footprint of 236 DC fast and 478 Level 2 sites distributed across 129 cities, plus interstate corridor traffic and state-specific incentive programs such as NEVI awards.