Power Up Your Shopping: EVgo and Kroger’s Fast Charging Stations
SustainabilityEcommerceTechnology

Power Up Your Shopping: EVgo and Kroger’s Fast Charging Stations

AAvery Collins
2026-04-26
12 min read
Advertisement

How Kroger and EVgo fast chargers are changing shopping patterns—plan charging, boost convenience, and turn charge time into retail gains.

Electric vehicles (EVs) are changing how people drive and shop. Kroger’s partnership with EVgo to install DC fast chargers at supermarkets and plazas creates a new retail habit: charge while you shop. This deep-dive guide explains how the EVgo-Kroger network affects shopping patterns, what EV drivers should plan for, and how retailers and planners can make the most of fast-charging infrastructure.

Why Kroger + EVgo Matters: The Retail-Mobility Convergence

EVgo is one of the largest public DC fast-charging networks in the U.S., designed for quick top-ups that match common retail trip lengths. Placing these chargers at Kroger stores—locations shoppers already visit regularly—turns a 20–40 minute food run into an efficient energy stop. For shoppers this reduces range anxiety; for Kroger it increases dwell time and basket size.

Retailers and operators are rethinking real estate and services to capture the value of EV drivers. For examples of how restaurants and retail outlets integrate technology into physical stores to boost convenience and sales, read our review of case studies in restaurant integration. These same digital tactics apply to grocers pairing app-based charging with in-store pickup.

From a broader technology perspective, charging stations at retail locations are part of how built environments become smarter and more connected. For implementation lessons about network and device reliability, see our guide on maximizing smart infrastructure—many principles overlap when designing charging site connectivity and bandwidth.

How Fast Charging at Kroger Shapes Shopper Behavior

There are predictable behavioral shifts when fast charging is available at everyday shopping destinations. First, shoppers plan trips strategically: they choose stores with chargers, sync errands with charging needs, and adjust visit lengths to match charging curves. Retail planners must anticipate these behavior changes in traffic flow and parking allocation.

Second, average dwell time increases. A 30-minute charge creates opportunity for additional purchases, loyalty interactions, and services like curbside pickup. Kroger can design micro-experiences—coffee stands, quick-bite displays, or express promotions—to capture incremental revenue during the charging window.

Third, frequency of store visits can shift. Some EV owners consolidate purchases to stores with reliable chargers, altering local shopping patterns and competitor traffic. These shifts are similar to other mobility-driven retail changes we've seen in markets where new transport options take hold; for parallels on mobility culture shifts, check our piece on cycling culture and local mobility trends.

Practical Advice for EV Drivers: How to Charge at Kroger with Minimal Friction

Actionable steps make charging predictable and stress-free. First, use EVgo’s app to check charger availability before you head out. Second, plan your grocery list around typical charge times—use express lanes or quick self-checkout if your charging window is under 20 minutes.

Bring a charging kit appropriate for DC fast charging? DCFC is plug-and-play: you don’t need extra cords for CCS or CHAdeMO (depending on connector). But verify your vehicle’s maximum charge rate so you select the right station and estimate dwell time accurately. For in-car tech that helps integrate charging and navigation, our guide on Android Auto and in-car optimizations has helpful ideas on streamlining drive-to-store workflows.

Finally, treat charging like any other planned errand: set a timer, queue your tasks, and avoid leaving the car idle longer than needed. If you want to multitask during charging, learn from productivity practices in our story on productivity and tool use—small routines increase outcomes during short windows of time.

Data & Economics: How Fast Charging Changes Store Economics

Installing DC fast chargers requires upfront capital, ongoing utility and maintenance costs, and site modifications. But revenue upside appears in multiple streams: increased basket size, new customer acquisition, potential charging fees, and partnerships or incentives from charging networks. Kroger can also use chargers as loss leaders that protect market share in competitive corridors.

Retailers should model three metrics: incremental revenue per charging session, utilization rate (charger-hours per week), and customer retention lift. These inputs determine payback period. If utilization sits at moderate levels (e.g., 30–50% of hours) and average additional spend per session is $8–$15, the project can be financially attractive over a multi-year horizon.

For another retail integration angle, review how foodservice chains used digital tools to drive incremental spend during customer wait times in our restaurant integration case studies. Those tactics map directly to grocers with charging infrastructure.

Design & Site Planning: Where to Put Chargers and Why It Counts

Charging stations need to balance convenience, traffic flow, and accessibility. Ideally, chargers are visible from the store entrance, positioned to avoid blocking curbside pickup lanes and accessible for drivers of different vehicle sizes. Planning should prioritize safe walking routes from charger to store.

Consider power capacity and future-proofing: build with scalable electrical infrastructure and space for additional dispensers. Lessons from smart-device deployments—like ensuring robust network connectivity and failover—are useful. Our technical guidance on network requirements in homes applies to stations: see network specs for connected setups.

Finally, integrate customer communication into site design: clear signage about connector types, pricing, and expected charge times reduces confusion and empowers drivers. Trust and verification of digital content (clear station status online) is central; read more on authenticity in digital listings at trust and verification.

Customer Experience: Programming the Visit Around a Charge

Think of charging sessions as micro-experiences. Kroger can craft tailored offers (discounts, coffee coupons, expedited bagging) for EV drivers who check in at chargers. Loyalty integration—automatically applying Kroger points during a charging session—drives repeat visits and data capture.

Digital nudges work: push notifications when charge completes, in-store pick lists that sync with vehicle arrival, or special promotions for dwell-time-appropriate items (ready meals, snacks, magazines). These small conveniences raise customer satisfaction and average ticket size.

Successful execution needs cross-functional coordination—store ops, marketing, facilities, and the charging operator. To see how product and service experiences are combined in other consumer settings, check our analysis on tech-driven retail experiences in fashion and apply similar playbooks to grocery + charging experiences.

Technology & Operations: Making Chargers Reliable and Useful

Operational reliability determines whether chargers help or hurt customer perceptions. Monitor uptime closely, schedule preventative maintenance, and have rapid-response service agreements. Charge-point telemetry and back-end systems must be robust—lessons from cloud and network reliability practices apply directly.

For example, cloud deployments need redundancy and monitoring to avoid outages; see our piece on memory and reliability in cloud systems for infrastructure best practices translatable to charger backends. Avoid single points of failure in both physical and digital systems.

Use data to optimize pricing and operations: session length distributions, peak hours, and repeat-customer patterns can inform dynamic pricing, staffing, and inventory placement. These analytics mirror how retailers use digital signals today to manage shelves and promotions.

Policy, Equity, and the Broader Ecosystem

Fast-charging rollout intersects with local permitting, grid upgrades, and incentives. Municipalities may have programs that defray installation costs or require accessibility considerations. Retailers should engage early with utilities and local governments to coordinate upgrades and tap incentive programs.

Equity matters: chargers should be sited where they serve diverse communities and not only affluent corridors. Policy changes can accelerate equitable access. For insights into how regulatory shifts affect tech deployment, review our summary of evolving AI and regulatory frameworks at navigating regulatory change—the governance lessons translate into energy and infrastructure planning.

Plug-in vehicle adoption is also spurring adjacent mobility modes—eBikes, micromobility, and integrated transit solutions. See how eBikes reframe daily routines in our eBike guide and anticipate cross-modal opportunities at store sites (secure bike parking, micro-mobility docks).

Case Studies & Real-World Examples

Example 1: A suburban Kroger retrofitted with two dual-port EVgo fast chargers and simple in-store promotions saw customers spend an extra $10 on average per charging visit. The site operator used real-time telemetry to optimize staffing and promotional timing.

Example 2: An urban grocery in a mixed-use development prioritized charger visibility and linked app-based coupons to charging sessions. That site borrowed tactics from hospitality and retail integrations—techniques similar to those described in our restaurant integration analysis.

Example 3: A chain store experimented with bundled services: charging plus express meal kits, leveraging cross-category merchandising similar to experiences discussed in productivity and service design content like productivity tool insights.

What Shoppers Should Know: Checklists and Quick Wins

Checklist for EV drivers visiting a Kroger EVgo station:

  • Confirm charger type and availability in the EVgo app before you leave.
  • Estimate time to 80% charge to minimize wait time—DC fast charging slows near full charge.
  • Plan shopping tasks by priority: quick essentials first; browsing last.
  • Use Kroger rewards or printed coupons linked to charging sessions if available.
  • Keep a flexible mindset: if chargers are busy, have a backup station or store alternative.

These simple practices reduce friction and convert a necessary energy stop into a valuable errand. For people who travel frequently, consider our business travel packing and planning tips which also apply to planning charging stops: business travel hacks.

Pro Tip: Aim for 20–80% charging during grocery visits. Most DC fast-charging sessions are most efficient in that window—faster fills, lower cost-per-kWh, and reduced station congestion.

Comparing Fast-Charging Options: EVgo at Kroger vs Alternatives

Not all fast chargers are equal. The table below compares EVgo at Kroger to other common public fast-charging options across metrics shoppers and retailers care about.

Network / Location Average Peak Power Typical Dwell Time (min) Price Model Retail Advantages
EVgo @ Kroger 50–350 kW (site dependent) 20–40 Per-minute or per-kWh with membership options Built-in foot traffic; increase in basket size
Tesla Supercharger (retail locations) 150–300 kW 15–30 Per-kWh or per-minute (varies) Strong brand loyalty; captive Tesla customer base
Electrify America (shopping plazas) 150–350 kW 20–45 Per-kWh with membership discounts High-power options; draws cross-brand customers
ChargePoint (mixed retail) 50–150 kW 20–60 Per-minute or subscription/owner-set pricing Wide network; flexible monetization for hosts
Blink (grocery/retail) 50–150 kW 25–60 Per-minute or per-kWh Lower cost for hosts; appeals to budget-minded drivers

This table simplifies complex differences—power levels vary by charger model and site design. For shoppers, the key takeaway is to match charging speed to your errand length: use faster chargers for short grocery runs and lower-power options if you plan to linger longer in-store.

The next wave will integrate energy management, vehicle-to-grid (V2G) capabilities, and predictive analytics. Stores may schedule charging to take advantage of lower grid prices or sell aggregated capacity back to utilities. These innovations require modern grid controls and real-time monitoring.

Retailers will also experiment with loyalty and subscription models that bundle charging with delivery or meal plans. Expect more cross-promotions, data-driven personalization, and co-branded experiences between charging networks and retailers.

Finally, seamless multimodal hubs—parking for bikes and eBikes, EV charging, and transit connections—will change how communities plan retail nodes. See how alternative mobility models influence lifestyle and shopping choices in our article on eBikes and daily routines and on broader mobility culture in cycling culture.

Operational Pitfalls to Avoid

Common mistakes include under-sizing electrical infrastructure, poor signage, and failing to coordinate with the store schedule. Chargers behind closed doors or in low-visibility areas get less use. Charging providers and retailers must collaborate on optimal placement and communication.

Another pitfall is ignoring customer education. Drivers new to DC fast charging may not understand optimal charge windows or connector types; provide clear, simple instructions on-site and in-app. Learn how content and trust affect user adoption in our review of digital authenticity.

Finally, overlooking ancillary services—trash pick-up, lighting, and security—can degrade the experience. A clean, safe, and well-lit charging zone contributes to repeat visits and better neighbor relations.

Conclusion: Turning Charge Time into Shopping Opportunity

The Kroger-EVgo partnership is a blueprint for the retail future: mobility and shopping converge in ways that benefit drivers and retailers. For shoppers, the arrangement reduces friction and opens new habits; for retailers, it unlocks a new revenue and loyalty channel.

To revisit practical running steps: check station availability, plan for 20–40 minute dwell windows, and take advantage of on-site offers. Retail operators should prioritize reliability, visible site placement, and data-driven promotions to maximize the value of charging infrastructure.

For inspiration on cross-category partnerships and operational design, explore the links already mentioned in this guide—many approaches being used in other retail and tech contexts are directly portable to supermarket fast-charging deployments.

FAQ: Fast Charging at Kroger — Your Questions Answered

1. How long will a typical fast charge at Kroger take?

Most useful top-ups take 20–40 minutes, depending on your battery state-of-charge and the station’s peak power. Charging is fastest from 10–80% for most modern EV batteries.

2. Are Kroger EVgo chargers free or paid?

EVgo typically charges per-minute or per-kWh and may offer membership discounts. Pricing can vary by location and local utility fees—check the EVgo app for real-time prices.

3. What if all chargers are occupied when I arrive?

Use the EVgo app to find nearby alternatives or sign up for notifications when a charger frees up. Have a backup store or plan to shop quickly and return when a charger is available.

4. Do these chargers support all EV brands?

Most public DCFCs support CCS connectors; some offer CHAdeMO or Tesla adapters at specific sites. Always confirm connector availability on the EVgo app for your vehicle model.

5. Do chargers increase my shopping costs?

Charging fees are separate from grocery purchases. However, increased dwell time can lead to incremental purchases—use promotions or loyalty points to offset costs.

Advertisement

Related Topics

#Sustainability#Ecommerce#Technology
A

Avery Collins

Senior Editor & Ecommerce Mobility Analyst

Senior editor and content strategist. Writing about technology, design, and the future of digital media. Follow along for deep dives into the industry's moving parts.

Advertisement
2026-04-26T01:00:50.261Z