4 EV Charging Stations in Seward, AK

Locations, networks, and charger types — updated weekly from U.S. DOE data

4
Charging Stations

4 EV charging stations in Seward — 3 ChargePoint Network, 1 Non-Networked , 1 public DC fast chargers. Last updated May 9, 2026.

Where Are the 4 Charging Stations in Seward?

Exit Marine

1712 Alameda Rd
24 hours daily
Free
Non-Networked Other
Tesla

SEWARDCHAMBER SAK CHARGER

2001 Seward Hwy
24 hours daily
J1772 (Level 2)

CHUGACHMIUT CT4025-GW1

2035 Seward Highway
24 hours daily
J1772 (Level 2)

SEWARDCHAMBER SAK FAST

2001 Seward Hwy
24 hours daily
CCS/SAE Combo
All 4 stations active as of 2026-05-09 See full Alaska outage report →

Which EV Charging Networks Operate in Seward, AK?

Infrastructure Grade

13% DC Fast

Based on DC Fast Charger ratio

1 of 8 ports

How is this graded?

Based on DC Fast Charger ratio:

  • A: 40%+ DC Fast ports
  • B: 30–39%
  • C: 20–29%
  • D: 10–19%
  • F: Under 10%

Learn about charging levels

Density Metrics

Total Stations 4
Ports per Station 2.0

Data Status

Current

Last updated: May 9, 2026

Data sourced from U.S. DOE AFDC

As of May 2026, Seward, Alaska has 4 publicly accessible EV charging stations with 8 charging ports. ChargePoint Network operates 75% of stations in the area, followed by Non-Networked at 25% — part of Alaska's 84 stations statewide.

13% of ports (1) are DC fast chargers capable of adding 100+ miles of range in under 30 minutes, while 88% (7) are Level 2 chargers suited for longer stops. Available connector types include CCS, Tesla (NACS). Learn more in our ChargePoint network. View national charging statistics for broader context.

What Is the EV Charging Outlook for Seward?

Level 2 Focused Infrastructure

Seward's charging network emphasizes Level 2 charging (88% of ports), ideal for overnight and workplace charging.

ChargePoint Network Stronghold

ChargePoint Network leads the market in Seward with 75% of stations, making their membership particularly valuable here.

Where Else Can I Charge Near Seward?

Data sourced from the US DOE Alternative Fuels Station Locator (AFDC), maintained by NREL.

Last synced: May 9, 2026

"Charging stations are critical services, but when they're out of order or barely functional, it wastes consumers' valuable time."

Drew Toher

Sustainability Campaign Manager, Consumer Reports

Source: Consumer Reports (2025)