char.gy lampost charge point

char.gy and YouGov study shows EV facts can shift public perception

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Zapmap
Published

A new nationwide study released today by char.gy has uncovered the influence that misinformation is having on electric vehicle adoption and the opportunity to reverse it through fact-based public education. 

The report, "What Everyone Should Know About EVs,” demonstrates that exposure to simple, fact-based  statements such as ‘EV batteries last 10–15 years’ led to a 12-point increase in willingness to consider an EV among long-term considerers. 

Myths and misinformation remain significant barriers, with 71% of UK drivers surveyed who are not yet driving  electric citing “range anxiety” as their number one concern, despite significant improvements in EV range. Purchase price also remains a top concern, despite the average used EV price dropping by over 20% since 2023 and expected to fall another 28% by 2030

The research highlights a blind spot in the debate: the second-hand EV market. More than half (53– 57%) of EV considerers surveyed now say they plan to buy second-hand, despite most public conversations focusing solely on new car sales. 

According to the report, perceptions of charging availability and awareness of charging options also continue to deter potential  buyers. Although 63% of UK drivers surveyed say they’re open to owning an EV within five years, only 5% currently do, with 72% of rejecters saying they don’t know where they’d charge. 

88% of current EV drivers surveyed also reported dissatisfaction with public charging - citing cost, availability, and reliability. 

Nearly two-thirds (63%) of non-EV drivers surveyed said that cheaper charging would persuade them to switch, rising to 78% of short-term and 76% of long-term considerers. 

While a majority of the EV adopters respondents charge at home (90%), 40% of the UK population has no access to a  driveway. Unlike rapid charging stations or driveway models, on-street charging meets drivers where they live at affordable costs, especially the 24% “short-term EV considerers” who are ready to switch  in the next 12 months, who tend to be younger and live in urban areas.  

John Lewis, CEO of char.gy, said: 

“EVs aren’t a distant future anymore: they’re here, they’re affordable,  and they’re rapidly outpacing combustion cars on performance and value. But the data shows the biggest  barrier isn’t the vehicles, it’s the stories we tell about them. If we can debunk the myths and meet people  where they are, especially at the kerbside, we’ll accelerate this transition faster and fairer.” 

Ginny Buckley, broadcaster and Founder and CEO of Electrifying.com, commented: 

“An  Electrifying.com survey of more than 11,000 UK drivers at the end of 2024 found that just over half said not having access to off-street parking would put them off switching to an EV. This is why it’s crucial we  get on-street charging right — to ensure nobody is left behind on Britain’s electric journey.” 

The report calls for a series of urgent interventions to address these pain points, including targeted myth-busting campaigns, the expansion of kerbside charging infrastructure in  underserved urban areas, and renewed financial incentives for both home chargers and EV  purchases, especially in the second-hand market.