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Bridging the Gap: The Rollout of EV Charging Infrastructure in Rural UK

The UK’s EV charging network is expanding fast, but is it expanding evenly?
As of January 2026, just 17.1% of EV chargers are located in rural areas, compared to 82.9% in urban areas broadly mirroring the rural-urban population split (17.5% to 82.5%). On the surface that sounds proportionate. But with 13,281 new chargers added to the public network in the past year alone, and over 73,000 public charge points now installed nationwide, the question is whether rural rollout can keep pace with demand, or whether “charging deserts” will continue to form in remote parts of the country.
For any EV groundworks contractor or EV civils specialist working across the UK, understanding why rural areas lag is the first step toward closing the gap.

The Three-Phase Supply Problem

One of the biggest barriers to rural EV charging infrastructure is grid capacity. Most rural distribution networks were built for low, predictable residential demand not the high-power loads required for EV charging civils projects. Upgrading from single-phase supply (capped at 7.4kW) to three-phase supply (which supports 22kW AC charging) often requires significant electrical work, and in some remote locations may not be feasible within existing network constraints. Even where upgrades are possible, grid connection timelines can run into years, meaning many rural sites remain limited to slow or standard charging rather than rapid charging.

Weather as a Compounding Factor

The UK’s weather doesn’t help. Cold conditions reduce EV battery efficiency by 20–55%, increasing both charging frequency and duration, while charging systems themselves can run less efficiently under network strain. Rural areas are also more exposed to high winds, heavy snow, and flooding all of which pose real risk to charge point operators (CPOs) and the underlying EV charging infrastructure, from overhead lines to transformers to the charging units on site.

Why Installation Costs Run Higher in Rural Locations

Cost is the other major barrier facing any EV charging groundworks contractor working rurally. Grid reinforcement costs in rural areas run around 50% higher than urban equivalents, pushing up upfront investment before a site is even operational. Rural geography also means longer cable runs, and therefore more extensive groundwork and trenching  directly increasing the scope of work for EV charging trench excavation and EV charging base installation. Combined with lower population density and fewer EV users per charger, return on investment takes longer to materialise, which discourages private investment and slows commercial EV groundworks contractor activity in these regions.

Investment Is Starting to Target the Gap

The Local Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (LEVI) Fund’s £450 million allocation is weighted specifically toward rural and underserved areas, prioritising residents without off-street parking and focusing on low-power local charge points suited to overnight charging rather than the rapid charging corridors that dominate urban and motorway services EV charging contractor projects.
Rural areas cover the majority of Britain’s landmass. Closing the infrastructure gap will require coordinated investment in grid capacity, targeted policy support, and EV charging civils and groundworks delivery built specifically for the challenges rural sites present from land preparation and earthworks through to ducting, concrete base installation, and tarmac reinstatement.

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