Zapmap: EV charging points map

Why people leave Zapmap

If any of those frustrations are why you opened the Play Store, here are 7 Zapmap alternatives worth installing alongside or instead.

Which app should you choose?

  1. PlugShare if you want the deepest community-driven charger database with detailed user check-ins.

  2. Octopus Electroverse if you charge across multiple networks and want one card with transparent pass-through pricing.

  3. A Better Routeplanner if route planning for long trips with charger stops is your priority.

  4. Pod Point if the chargers near you are mostly Pod Point at supermarkets and workplaces.

  5. Chargemap if you drive across Europe and want one pass that works in 30+ countries.

  6. Google Maps if you want EV chargers built into the default navigation app.

  7. Waze if traffic-aware routing matters and you want chargers as a layer on top.

Stay on Zapmap if you charge mostly inside its network and the Zapmap card covers your usual stops, the Premium filters earn back the cost for you, and you trust the community status reports on your routes.

Comparison table

AppBest forCoverageOne cardFreeRating
PlugShareCommunity databaseGlobalNo (own card optional)Yes4.6
Octopus ElectroverseCross-network roamingUK + EU + globalYes (Electrocard, free)Yes4.6
A Better RouteplannerLong-trip planningGlobalNoYes4.7
Pod PointPod Point networkUK + IENetwork-specificYes4.2
ChargemapEuropean driving30+ countriesYes (Chargemap Pass)Yes4.5
Google MapsDefault navigationGlobalNoYes4.6
WazeTraffic-aware routingGlobalNoYes4.6

1. PlugShare -- the community database EV drivers actually trust

PlugShare is the largest community-maintained charging database. Every station carries detailed check-ins, photos of the bay, plug type confirmations, and notes about anything you would not see from a map pin: a tight kerb, a hotel guest restriction, a broken cable. UK coverage is comprehensive and the same data set works abroad.

PlugShare vs Zapmap for a typical UK trip returns similar maps with similar networks. PlugShare’s edge is the qualitative check-in layer. When two chargers near a motorway services look identical on Zapmap, PlugShare’s recent driver photos and notes tell you which bay actually works that week.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: Free to download and use. Optional PlugShare+ with no ads and extra map layers for a small fee.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick PlugShare if community check-ins decide which bay you actually pull into and you want every market in one app.

2. Octopus Electroverse -- one card, hundreds of networks

Electroverse pitches a single tap-to-charge experience across more than a million chargers in the UK and Europe. The free Electrocard (RFID) plus the app unlock charging on dozens of networks including MFG, Osprey, GRIDSERVE, Allego, and Ionity, with transparent pass-through pricing rather than marked-up rates.

Octopus Electroverse vs Zapmap is a question of role. Zapmap is the discovery and status app. Electroverse is the actual charging account. Many drivers run both, but if you only want one app that finds and starts charge sessions, Electroverse is the closer all-in-one.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: Free app and free Electrocard. Charging rates pass through from each network.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Electroverse if you want one card and one bill across the networks you actually use, not a discovery map with a charging add-on.

3. A Better Routeplanner -- long-trip planning, properly

A Better Routeplanner (ABRP) is the standard for long-distance EV trip planning. The app models your vehicle’s real-world efficiency, current state of charge, elevation, weather, and live charger occupancy, then returns a route with stops that include arrival state-of-charge predictions for each one.

ABRP vs Zapmap on a London-to-Inverness drive is a different conversation. Zapmap shows chargers on a map. ABRP plans the trip end to end with the right stops and tells you how long to charge at each. Pair it with Zapmap for the local discovery layer.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: Free with limited features. Premium subscription unlocks vehicle telemetry integration and more route stops.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick ABRP for any trip longer than your usable range. For local charging, fall back to Zapmap or PlugShare.

4. Pod Point -- the Tesco supermarket charger app

Pod Point is one of the largest UK charging networks, particularly at Tesco, Lidl, and workplaces. The first-party app shows live status from the network’s own systems rather than crowdsourced reports, starts a session on tap, and tracks the running cost per kWh.

Pod Point vs Zapmap for a supermarket top-up is the simpler flow when your nearest charger is a Pod Point bay. Direct network status beats crowdsourced status on accuracy. Outside Pod Point sites, the app does nothing.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: Free. Charging rates set per location, often free at some supermarket sites for short stays.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Pod Point if a Pod Point bay is your weekly default. It is more accurate than Zapmap on its own chargers.

5. Chargemap -- European cross-border charging

Chargemap is the French-headquartered equivalent of Zapmap with deeper Continental coverage. The Chargemap Pass works on more than 800,000 chargers across 30-plus countries, which makes it the go-to for UK drivers heading across the Channel for an extended trip.

Chargemap vs Zapmap on a Calais-to-Lyon trip returns better network coverage and pricing because the app’s home market is France. UK depth has improved but still trails Zapmap. If most of your charging is in the UK, Zapmap stays the discovery default and Chargemap is the EU travel app.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: App free. Chargemap Pass costs a one-off purchase plus per-session charging rates.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Chargemap when you cross the Channel and the trip is mostly inside continental Europe.

6. Google Maps -- EV chargers in the default app

Google Maps now lists EV chargers as a first-class category, with plug-type filters, live availability where the network supplies the data, and pricing on supported chargers. For drivers who already use Maps for everything else, the EV layer is the lowest-friction option.

Google Maps vs Zapmap for a roadside lookup is faster because the app is already open. Zapmap still beats it on filters, community notes, and Premium-only “newest devices” intel. As an always-on default, Maps wins on convenience.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: Free.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Google Maps as the everyday discovery layer if Zapmap’s Premium paywall is the reason you started looking.

7. Waze -- traffic-aware routing with chargers

Waze pulls real-time congestion, incidents, and police reports from a huge user base, then routes around the worst of it. EV charger support has grown in recent versions, with stations filterable by plug type and live traffic factored into arrival time at each charge stop.

Waze vs Zapmap is not a like-for-like swap, but for a long trip the traffic intelligence is sometimes worth more than the deeper charger filters. Waze surfaces detours Zapmap cannot see because Zapmap is not a traffic app.

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Pricing: Free.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play

Bottom line: Pick Waze when traffic is the bottleneck and chargers are a secondary concern.

How to choose

The right Zapmap alternative depends on the role you want it to play.

If discovery and community check-ins are what you came for, install PlugShare. It is the closest replacement for Zapmap’s map layer and the free tier covers what Zapmap Premium gates.

If you want one card to charge across multiple networks, install Octopus Electroverse. The pass-through pricing and Plunge Pricing discounts make it the most economical roaming option.

If long-distance trips are why you opened Zapmap, install A Better Routeplanner. It plans the trip your car can actually do.

If most of your charging is at one network, use that network’s first-party app. Pod Point covers a large chunk of supermarket and workplace charging in the UK.

If you want everything inside your default navigation, lean on Google Maps or Waze. Both handle the EV charger layer well enough for opportunistic top-ups.

Stay on Zapmap if its UK depth still beats your day-to-day needs, you charge mostly at networks the Zapmap card supports, and Premium pays for itself.

FAQ

What is the best free Zapmap alternative?

PlugShare is the closest community-driven free replacement. Octopus Electroverse is also free and adds a working RFID card. Google Maps and Waze are free and cover EV chargers as a layer inside their main maps.

Which Zapmap alternative has the most accurate live charger status?

First-party network apps like Pod Point and Octopus Electroverse usually have the most accurate status because the data comes directly from the charger. Crowdsourced apps lag where utilisation is low.

Can I charge across multiple networks without juggling multiple apps?

Yes. Octopus Electroverse and Chargemap both offer a single pass that works on dozens of networks across the UK and Europe. Coverage varies, so check both against your routes.

Does Google Maps show EV charger prices?

Yes, where networks supply the data to Google. Coverage is patchy compared with Zapmap or PlugShare and inconsistent across less common networks.

What is the best app for planning a long EV road trip?

A Better Routeplanner is the standard. It models vehicle-specific consumption and inserts charging stops with predicted state of charge at each.

Do I need to pay for Zapmap Premium?

Only if you regularly use the filters Premium gates: cheapest-near-me, newest devices, multiple-chargers-only. Otherwise the free Zapmap covers core discovery and PlugShare or Electroverse handle the rest.