EV Charger Near Me
Type any U.S. ZIP code. See every public charging station within 5–50 miles — Level 2, DC fast, access type, and network.
Find EV charging stations near any ZIP code in the U.S.
Data is pulled live from the U.S. Department of Energy's Alternative Fuels Data Center — the same source powering most major mapping apps and in-car navigation systems. Every publicly reported station appears in the results: charging network, port types, and access level. Works for New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, and every ZIP code in between.
The tool is free and requires no account. Bookmark it for road trips, share it with other EV owners, or embed it on your own site by appending ?embed=1 to the URL.
What the port types mean
Highway-speed charging — 50–350 kW. Adds 100+ miles in 20–30 minutes. What to look for on road trips.
240V stations found at shopping centers, hotels, workplaces, and home garages — 6–11 kW, adds 15–30 miles per hour.
A standard 120V wall outlet. Adds 3–5 miles per hour. Useful overnight at home if your daily commute is short.
Common questions
How do I find EV chargers near me?+
Enter your ZIP code in the search field above and choose a radius (5–50 miles). The tool pulls live data from the U.S. Department of Energy's Alternative Fuels Data Center and returns every publicly reported charging station in that area, sorted by distance.
Are public EV chargers free to use?+
Some are, most aren't. Chargers at shopping centers, hotels, and workplaces are sometimes free. Network chargers (ChargePoint, EVgo, Electrify America, Blink) charge by the kWh or by the minute. The results show the charging network for each station — look it up to see current pricing before you drive.
What's the difference between Level 1, Level 2, and DC fast charging?+
Level 1 is a standard 120V wall outlet — it adds about 3–5 miles of range per hour. Level 2 is a 240V station (the kind you install at home or find at shopping centers) — it adds 15–30 miles per hour. DC fast charging (also called DCFC or CCS/CHAdeMO) is the highway-speed option — it can add 100–200 miles in 20–30 minutes. Most public stations are Level 2; DC fast chargers are less common but growing fast.
Can I find Tesla Superchargers with this tool?+
As of 2024, many Tesla Supercharger locations have opened to non-Tesla vehicles. These appear in the results labeled under the Tesla network. However, non-Tesla EVs need either a NACS adapter or to use the Tesla app to initiate charging at these stations.
How current is the charger data?+
The data comes directly from the AFDC, which is updated continuously by station operators and network providers. Individual stations may occasionally be out of service — always check the network's app for real-time availability before driving to a public charger.
Does this work for cities like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Houston?+
Yes — the tool covers all 50 U.S. states. Enter any valid 5-digit ZIP code and it will find stations near that location, whether you're in a dense city or a rural area.