Retail EV Charging Solutions

Charging systems for retail, hospitality, and mixed-use commercial properties.

Retail charging follows how customers move through a site and how long vehicles remain parked during a visit.
Short stops and longer stays lead to very different system requirements across the same property.

Retail Charging Locations

Retail charging is installed where customers leave their vehicles during a visit.
Each site is used differently, and charging needs to fit that use.

EV charging infrastructure deployed for taxi and ride-hailing fleets with scheduled shift returns

01.

Shopping Malls

Visitors usually stay for several hours while shopping or dining.

EV charging solutions deployed for transport and logistics fleet vehicles with predictable usage cycles

02.

Supermarkets

Parking is brief, and vehicle turnover remains high throughout the day.

EV charging infrastructure for municipal and public service vehicles ensuring daily service consistency

03.

Hotels & Resorts

Guest vehicles remain on site overnight or for extended periods.

EV charging infrastructure for shuttle, bus, and corporate service fleets operating on defined routes

04.

Restaurants & Cafés

Most visits are short, with frequent vehicle movement.

EV charging infrastructure for shuttle, bus, and corporate service fleets operating on defined routes

05.

Entertainment Venues

Parking demand rises around events and drops outside those hours.

Key Challenges in Retail EV Charging

Retail sites operate very differently from depots or office parking.
Customer behavior, site power, and access rules all affect how charging can run day to day.

Variable parking duration

Some drivers stay for minutes, while others remain for several hours.

High vehicle turnover

Chargers serve many vehicles throughout the day, often back to back.

Grid capacity limits

Site power is shared with lighting, HVAC, and other building systems.

User access management

Charging must follow store policies and operating hours.

Revenue and utilization control

Usage needs to be balanced against operating costs.

Retail Charging System Structure

Retail charging systems are planned around parking behavior, site visibility, and customer flow. → Technical system guides

Parking Duration

Charging windows follow how long customers remain on site.

Power Allocation

Energy is shared across multiple chargers within site limits.

Traffic Flow

Vehicle movement guides charger placement and access.

User Access & Billing

Charging access follows site rules and payment policies.

Retail Charging Hardware & Software

Retail charging relies on on-site equipment supported by centralized control tools.


Public charging stations

Built to handle frequent use and open access across the site.

Site-level power control

Keeps charging within available electrical capacity.

Network monitoring

Shows charger status and session activity.

Access and transaction management

Controls who can charge and how sessions are recorded.

Retail Charging System Configurations

Retail charging depends on how long vehicles remain parked, how often spaces turn over, and how power is shared across the site.

Long-stay locations

Hotels and resorts with overnight or extended parking.

Medium-stay locations

Shopping malls with multi-hour dwell time.

Short-stay locations

Supermarkets, cafés, and quick-service retail.

Common Power Ranges for Retail Projects

Retail charging systems change based on how long vehicles remain on site and how much electrical capacity the location can support.

AC and low DC charging systems

Used where vehicles remain parked longer and site power is limited.

Mid-range DC charging systems

Applied where moderate dwell time requires faster energy delivery.

High-power DC charging systems

Chosen for short stays where vehicles need to charge quickly.

Plan Your Retail Charging Project

Retail charging projects often depend on details that are hard to judge from plans alone.
A short conversation can help outline the next technical step.