There's nowhere to charge an EV in Australia
The reality
Australia has more than 1,200 public fast-charging locations as of early 2026 — and the network is growing faster than EV sales. The Electric Vehicle Council's State of EVs 2025 report tracks more than 3,500 public chargers nationally (DC and AC combined) across the major networks: Chargefox, Evie, Tesla Supercharger, Ampol AmpCharge, BP Pulse, NRMA, and the state-funded networks in Queensland, NSW and Victoria.
Coverage along major highways is now effectively complete — every interstate route between capital cities (Sydney–Melbourne, Sydney–Brisbane, Melbourne–Adelaide, Perth–Albany, the Hume, Pacific, Princes and Bruce Highways) has fast chargers spaced under 200 km apart, well within the range of any EV with more than 300 km WLTP.
The bigger point: about 80% of EV charging happens at home overnight, not at public stations. Public DC fast chargers are mostly used for road trips, not daily driving — much like petrol stations are for hire cars rather than commuters with home garages. If you can plug in at home or at work, your daily charging is invisible.
Apartment dwellers without dedicated parking can use kerbside chargers (now rolling out across NSW, Victoria and the ACT) and workplace charging — covered in detail in our forthcoming Apartment Charging Guide.