Fast Charging Price Comparison in Lithuania for 2026

Karlis

Kārlis Mendziņš

EV industry expert & Partnership manager at Eleport
Founder of Uzlādēts.lv. Drives an EV since 2017 and understands the complexities of having an EV while not having home charging. In the past 8 years has been deep diving into the EV sphere and has become one of the biggest e-mobility influencers in Latvia.
Jaan Juurikas

Jaan Juurikas

EV industry expert & author at Eleport
Founder of EVwire.com. A self-proclaimed “biggest EV geek out there,” he has spent the past five years diving deep into the complexities of the electric vehicle and charging industry. His work focuses on building a big-picture context that supports all players in the EV ecosystem.

About a year ago, we saw headlines in the media portraying Lithuania’s fast charging prices as among the highest in all of Europe, as well as the rest of the Baltics. Our unique analysis found that this is false.

Eleport analyzed 2026 EV charging prices across thousands of charging networks in 29 European countries to see how much EV drivers actually pay in each country. Because until now, reliably comparing these prices has been nearly impossible.

What did Eleport find out about public EV charging in Europe? We found that fast charging prices in Europe can cost more than double for every kWh charged on average, purely depending on which country you are in. This is why we created a leaderboard for each of the countries, and now we can take a closer look at what we found for Lithuania.

When it comes to EV sales, Lithuania, like the rest of the Baltics, is still below the European average, albeit growing: 3 150 EVs sold in 2025, growing +77,1% year-over-year. The EV market share rose from 5,9% to 7,5%. This puts Lithuania in the 21st spot in EV adoption in Europe.

How much does fast charging cost in Lithuania? It turns out from our analysis that Lithuania is the third-cheapest country in all of Europe in EV public charging cost, with 0.40€/kWh on average for a fast charging session. It is actually even tied with Latvia in the third and fourth place, with Estonia following right after in fifth place.

So, the average (median) fast charging price that an EV driver gets through paying right at the station (ad-hoc) or through a free subscription or app use, is 0.40€/kWh. This is quite significant considering the median for Europe in general is 0.54€/kWh, and the cheapest public EV charging on average is in Finland, which came in at €0.38/kWh. 

Here’s how the fast charging operators in Lithuania compare in pricing in 2026:

Fast Charging Price Ranking Lithuania

Overall, we found that the EV fast charging prices in Europe do not directly indicate how well the country is doing in EV adoption.

Some insights that we found to be unique to Lithuania across our European comparison:

Lithuania is perhaps the most contested Baltic market, even if all three average at nearly the same kWh price. All three major Baltic utilities compete head-to-head here:

  • Ignitis ON (home team in Lithuania, 98% coverage), 
  • Enefit VOLT (Estonian), and 
  • Elektrum Drive (Latvian, cheapest on the leaderboard due to dynamic tariff)

Even though Lidl is often among the cheapest EV charging offers in most markets, in Lithuania, Lidl charges a 43–79% markup over Elektrum’s own-brand pricing, showing how site partnerships can dramatically inflate prices.

Meanwhile, the independent charging network available across CEE, Eleport, is testing competitive non-dynamic tariffs of €0.29/kWh – €0.36/kWh depending on the location. 

Tesla supercharging price in Lithuania is somewhat of an outlier, given that the network, unlike in most European countries, is (yet) not available to all vehicles – Tesla owners in Lithuania pay 0.30€ per kWh as of February 2026.

IONITY, the pan-European charging network, tops off the highest end of the charging network pricing for now.

So, how much does fast charging cost in Lithuania? It depends on which charging operator you visit, but if you can avoid the highest-priced at 0.50€/kWh, the median comes down to €0.40 per kWh, and the lowest public EV charging cost you can find starts at around 0.26€ per kWh.

EV charging prices vary significantly across Europe

A total of 2 585 187 battery electric vehicles were sold in Europe in 2025, growing by a strong 29,7% in the full year of 2025. Nearly every 5th car sold in Europe is fully electric today, but just as the EV adoption varies between the countries, the fast charging prices do as well. 

This is often dependent on the local competitive landscape, grid situation, and overall energy systems as well.

Eleport found that there are no great fast charging price comparison tools in most countries for the 2,6 million new EV drivers that hit the road in 2025, and perhaps even nearly 3 million new EV drivers that go for EVs in 2026. So we built one

Average fast charging prices in Europe per kWh Eleport

From this overview, we can see that the 2026 EV charging prices for fast charging can vary from 0.38€/kWh on average in Finland, all the way to €0.82/kWh on average as public EV charging cost in the UK. What’s remarkable is that all of the Baltics made it to the top five, with Lithuania and Latvia tied for third and fourth place, and Estonia closely following in fifth.

The lowest fast charging prices we saw across Europe were at around 0.16€/kWh, and the absolute highest were nearing 1€/kWh. 

Map of fast charging prices in Europe per kWh Eleport

Which charging network offers cheapest public EV charging cost in Europe in 2026? While several of the retail store chains offered lowest prices in certain regions, the cross-European winner in pricing would be Tesla.

Tesla charging cost came in as the absolute lowest available-to-all price in 18 out of 29 countries, but with a specific caveat – the supercharger price for their off-peak times is what gave them the win. The Tesla charging cost varies significantly per time of day in most countries, and the supercharging cost can often even vary depending on the location itself.

But when taking the median fast charging price of each individual country, and then taking the median of all these 29 European countries, it comes down to 0.54€/kWh as the average public EV charging cost for all of Europe.

Methodology:

Showing only DC prices, this is our unique overview based on publicly available data and subject to changes. 

This research is commissioned by Eleport, put together with the EVwire.com team, with the help of the charging price platform Chargeprice.net. Some country-specific comparison tools used are noted in the relevant country sections.

Notes on the prices shown per CPO:

All ≥50kWh DC power tiers are banded into price ranges in the same cells. Any dynamic pricing is also shown in that price range. The tables are sorted for the best non-commitment price (ad-hoc and free app prices).

To dig deeper, see the complete report: European fast charging price comparison 2026.

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