Install EV Chargers in Vancouver, Washington

Install EV chargers or analyze a site in Vancouver, Washington. 102 existing public charging locations (26 DC fast, 76 Level 2). Free 0–100 profitability score on any Vancouver address from EV Data Map by Charge Rigs.

Vancouver, Washington is served by 102 public electric vehicle charging locations operating 335 individual chargers — an average of 3.3 chargers per site. Of those locations, 26 (25%) offer DC fast charging suitable for road-trip stops and short-dwell sessions, while 76 (75%) provide Level 2 charging for longer dwell times such as workplace, retail and overnight parking.

The largest charging network in Vancouver is ChargePoint Network with 66 locations, followed by Blink Network with 13. Average DC fast power across the city is approximately 200 kW, which puts most fast-charging stalls in the modern 150 kW–350 kW class capable of delivering a meaningful state-of-charge top-up in 15–30 minutes for a typical EV.

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 below to enter any address in Vancouver and receive an instant ROI score, demand projection, and recommended charger configuration.

What to know about charging in Vancouver

Vancouver, Washington presents a compelling environment for EV charging with a notable predominance of ChargePoint Network, operating 65% of the city's 102 public locations, which could influence site reliability and pricing for prospective operators. The robust DC fast charging network consists of 26 locations, averaging 200 kW with the potential for ultra-fast charging at 400 kW. Impressively, 77% of these fast charging sites exceed 150 kW, positioning new entrants within the competitive power landscape critical for attracting drivers. With one-quarter of Vancouver's public chargers dedicated to DC fast options, and a strategic mix of Level 2 chargers catering to longer dwell times, the city's infrastructure offers unique opportunities for innovative site developers to address unmet demand effectively.

Vancouver charging by the numbers

Locations
102
Chargers
335
DC Fast locations
26
Level 2 locations
76

DC fast share: 25% of locations. Level 2 share: 75%. Average chargers per site: 3.3. Average DC fast power: 200 kW.

Vancouver charging — local snapshot

Top operator share
ChargePoint Network runs 65% of public locations across 15 networks.
Average DC fast power
200 kW (fastest stall: 400 kW)
High-power share
77% of DC fast sites are 150 kW-class or higher
Mix
25% DC fast / 75% Level 2 across 102 locations
Estimated DC ports
99 fast-charging ports city-wide

Charging networks in Vancouver

The following operators run public charging in Vancouver, ranked by number of locations.

Featured charging locations in Vancouver

A selection of higher-power public charging locations across Vancouver, sorted by power level.

  1. Vancouver, WA Rechargery Relay - SE 15th St — Vancouver, WA, 98683 (IONNA · DC Fast · 400 kW)
  2. Walmart 2947 (Vancouver, WA) — Vancouver, WA, 98665 (Electrify America · DC Fast · 350 kW)
  3. Walmart 5462 (Vancouver, WA) — Vancouver, WA, 98683 (Electrify America · DC Fast · 350 kW)
  4. Cafaro VANCOUVER PLAZA (Vancouver, WA) — Vancouver, WA, 98663 (Electrify America · DC Fast · 350 kW)
  5. DC VANCOUVER DC4 — Vancouver, WA, 98661 (ChargePoint Network · DC Fast · 250 kW)
  6. Vancouver, WA - Northeast Fourth Plain Boulevard - Tesla Supercharger — Vancouver, WA, 98661 (Tesla · DC Fast · 250 kW)
  7. WinCo Foods - Tesla Supercharger — Vancouver, WA, 98661 (Tesla · DC Fast · 250 kW)
  8. Vancouver Mall - Tesla Supercharger — Vancouver, WA, 98662 (Tesla · DC Fast · 250 kW)
  9. DC VANCOUVER DC3 — Vancouver, WA, 98661 (ChargePoint Network · DC Fast · 250 kW)
  10. DC VANCOUVER DC1 — Vancouver, WA, 98661 (ChargePoint Network · DC Fast · 187 kW)
  11. DC VANCOUVER DC2 — Vancouver, WA, 98661 (ChargePoint Network · DC Fast · 187 kW)
  12. IN-N-OUT 3RD WAY 03 — Vancouver, WA, 98684 (ChargePoint Network · DC Fast · 160 kW)

Nearby cities with EV charging coverage

Other cities in Washington we cover with full charging data and site profitability scoring — useful for comparing footprints across the state.

How profitability scores work

Every score on EV Data Map blends location demand, competition and operating economics into a single 0–100 number. Demand is modeled from 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 — including 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 Vancouver specifically, our model accounts for local commute corridors, nearby interstate and US-highway traffic, the existing footprint of 26 DC fast and 76 Level 2 sites, and the typical dwell profile of the 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.

Frequently asked questions

How many EV charging stations are in Vancouver, Washington?
There are 102 public electric vehicle charging locations in Vancouver, Washington, with a combined 335 individual chargers. 26 locations offer DC fast charging and 76 provide Level 2 charging.
What is the largest EV charging network in Vancouver?
ChargePoint Network operates the most public charging locations in Vancouver with 66 sites, followed by Blink Network with 13 sites.
How much does it cost to install an EV charger in Vancouver?
Level 2 EV chargers in Vancouver typically install for $4,000–$12,000 per port including make-ready. DC fast installs run $80,000–$250,000+ per port depending on power level, utility upgrades and trenching.
What permits and incentives apply to EV chargers in Vancouver?
Most Vancouver projects need an electrical permit (and a building permit plus utility coordination for DC fast). Sites can typically stack the federal 30C tax credit (up to 30% / $100,000 per commercial charger in eligible census tracts) with Washington state, utility and NEVI-funded programs.
How long does it take to install an EV charger in Vancouver?
A typical commercial Level 2 installation in Vancouver energizes in 4–8 weeks from site survey. DC fast installs run 4–9 months because of utility service upgrades, transformer lead times and switchgear.
How long does an EV charger in Vancouver take to become profitable?
Payback in Vancouver depends on utilization, electricity tariffs (especially demand charges) and incentives captured. Well-sited Level 2 stations typically reach payback in 3–5 years; DC fast sites with strong throughput in 3–6 years.

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