Data Update

EV Charging Station Updates — February 25, 2026

What changed in the latest Alternative Fuels Station Locator refresh: more stations, more cities.

119
Stations
83,221 → 83,340
275
Ports
268,159 → 268,434
196
Level 2
195,777 → 195,973
79
DC Fast
69,403 → 69,482
+33
New Cities
9,175 → 9,208

The February 2026 AFDC data refresh brought notable shifts to the national EV charging landscape. The total station count grew by 119 (0.1%), and ports increased by 275 (0.1%). At the same time, the network expanded geographically with 33 new cities gaining their first charging stations.

State-Level Changes

State Change Current Total
Largest Decreases
Massachusetts -34 4,352
Georgia -11 2,423
Missouri -10 1,368
Michigan -4 2,083
Rhode Island -4 361
Notable Gains
New York +9 cities +82 5,417
New Jersey +3 cities +65 1,878
Washington +1 cities +30 3,011
California +1 cities +6 20,137
Colorado +5 2,824

Network Changes

eVgo Network -5 stations
EV Connect -4 stations
RED_E -4 stations
Electrify America -1 stations
Blink Network 1 stations
FLO 1 stations
VIALYNK 2 stations
Non-Networked 31 stations

33 New Cities

The charging network expanded to 33 new cities across 18 states, extending coverage into rural and underserved areas.

Alaska

Adak

Arizona

Thatcher

California

Carmichael Ca

Connecticut

Hampton

Florida

Tequesta Trinity West Palm

Illinois

Bedford Park

Maine

Owls Head

Massachusetts

Millis

Michigan

Mason Wayne

Minnesota

Mendota Heights Puposky Tower

New Jersey

Seacacus Teterboro West Windsor

New York

Carmel Charleston Leroy Malden On Hudson Patterson Pattersonville Richmond Ruby Sea Cliff

Oklahoma

Seiling

Pennsylvania

Hunker

Texas

Windcrest

Virginia

Keller

Washington

Elma

Wisconsin

Crandon

What This Means

The increase of 119 stations signals continued expansion of the national EV charging network. Combined with 33 new cities gaining their first chargers, this reflects sustained investment from both public and private sectors. As more EVs hit the road, infrastructure buildout is keeping pace with demand.

For EV drivers, the key takeaway is that the national charging network continues to grow, with geographic reach expanding even as data quality improvements refine the overall numbers.

Data source: U.S. Department of Energy Alternative Fuels Station Locator. Station counts compare the previous week's snapshot with the February 25, 2026 data pull. This analysis covers public and private EV charging stations (ELEC fuel type) in all 50 states and DC.