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EV Charging Solutions for Commercial Businesses: Hotels, Offices & Retail

EV charging is becoming a key revenue driver for hotels, offices, and retail spaces, increasing customer dwell time and improving business returns.

EV Charging Solutions for Commercial Businesses: Hotels, Offices & Retail

The Untapped Opportunity Every Business Is Missing

The time is Saturday, 10 PM at the Mumbai R City Mall. An electric vehicle owner parks his vehicle in a parking space. There is a drive to a charging station installed close to the ground floor. During the 60 to 90 minutes of charging time, the driver can dine at mall restaurants, shop throughout the mall, and see a movie. The mall will gain a new customer who will spend more than usual during the two hours until his vehicle becomes available for driving.

This situation exists beyond theoretical boundaries. All over India, shopping centres, hotels, and retail shops are currently experiencing this situation. Yet, most entrepreneurs still think of EV charging stations as an afterthought, something nice to have, rather than something that can bring in real revenue. Well, let me tell you, in reality, EV charging stations are slowly and steadily becoming the game-changer they have the potential to be.

As per the latest EY Mobility Survey (2024), more than 60% of EV owners prefer to charge their EVs while shopping or dining. In a country where the EV charging industry is expected to grow from $348.5 million in 2024 to $1.6 billion by 2030, the question is not whether to set up EV charging points, but how soon you can do it before your competitors do. There is also a technicality that we are addressing in the blog, untapped potential profitable markets that are Hotels, Offices, & retails.

Why EV Charging Matters for Your Business Right Now

The Market is Exploding, But Infrastructure Is Still Behind!

India currently has around 26,367 public EV charging stations as of FY25, but this has to scale up to 1.32 million by 2030 to support the estimated 50 million EVs on the road. This huge gap in demand and supply presents a golden opportunity for pioneering businesses. Now that the market is already familiar with EVs, the next leap is in convenience.

What it means for you:
The consumers searching for charging points today are the high-end, environmentally conscious ones. These are not penny-pinching customers; they are ready to shell out more, spend more time, and return as regular customers if you can offer them the convenience they seek.

Numbers Don’t Lie: The Business Case

  • 20% increase in customer dwell time for properties with EV chargers (BloombergNEF 2023)
  • 12% increase in retail sales at properties that provide EV charging
  • 5–10% increase in total revenue per guest at hotels with EV charging (Green Hotelier research)
  • $1,400+ per year in additional spending at local businesses for every charger installed
  • 30–90 minutes is how long an EV driver spends at a location while their vehicle is charging—it’s the ideal time for a mall visit, restaurant meal, or office work session

Hotels: From Amenity to Revenue Engine

The Reality at Ground Level

When you envision a hotel guest using an electric vehicle, you know they are coming, they will charge their car, and they will spend money at your hotel to charge their vehicle. The reality is not as simple and has a lot of upside.

The hotel, known as the Fullerton Hotel Singapore, opened its EV station in September 2024, consisting of one 60kW DC charger and two 22kW AC chargers. They didn’t merely install chargers and expect patrons to use them, but integrated the offering with their overall service strategy, with prices around 0.48 SGD/kWh, and tied it with promotional offers for meals consumed by patrons who used the charging service. The result? A new revenue stream with patrons who use charging services, being able to spend more money on food and beverage consumption.

And Hilton's plan is even more audacious: putting 20,000 Universal Wall Connectors into some 2,000 hotels across the US, Canada, and Mexico. This isn't a test run—this is all-in corporate strategy based on the belief that electric-vehicle charging will be as ubiquitous in a few years as Wi-Fi is today. Those hotels without it will watch their bookings go elsewhere.

What Hotels Actually Make on EV Charging

The revenue model for hotels is threefold:

  • Direct charging: Revenue of ₹6–15 per kilowatt-hour depending on location and charger type.
  • Indirect spending: Visitors spend more on dining, retail, and amenities.
  • Occupancy premium: Attracts corporate guests who prefer sustainable practices.

Typical Hotel Scenario:
The cost of a Level 2 charger for overnight guest charging at 22kW capacity ranges between ₹4 to 7 lakh. Properly marketed and integrated with the guests, such a charger can provide an income of ₹15,000–25,000 per month from direct charging fees, apart from indirect revenue from on-site spending.

The Challenge Hotels Face: Installation Complexity

Here's the reality that travel trade publications tend to overlook: many hotels struggle with the electrical infrastructure that needs to be put in place. A 5-star hotel in Delhi NCR approached us (Savekar) with a simple question:
"We have 500 rooms, but our current electrical panel can only support 3–4 chargers at a time without spending ₹15–20 lakh on upgrades."

Hotels need to conduct a complete power audit before installation. The trick is a phased rollout strategy: install 2–3 chargers first, monitor usage, and then upgrade infrastructure accordingly.

Real Implementation: What Works

  • Level 2 chargers for overnight guests (7–22kW range)
  • Smart billing integration with property management system (PMS)
  • Partner with existing CPOs like Tata Power EZ Charge or ChargeMod
  • Install chargers in premium, well-lit parking spots near entrances

Offices: The Silent Revenue Generator

Offices have a unique advantage. Charging patterns are predictable, usage is steady, and grid load is easier to manage.

A tech firm in Bangalore with 500 employees installed 15 Level 2 chargers in its parking area. Setup cost was around ₹20 lakh. Initially expecting 5–7 users daily, usage grew to 12–14 users within three months.

Business Impact Beyond Revenue

  • Talent acquisition: Attracts and retains EV-owning professionals
  • ESG credentials: Supports sustainability goals and certifications
  • Direct revenue: ₹10/kWh pricing enabled payback in 15–18 months

The Profitability Question

  • Setup cost: ₹18–25 lakh (15 AC chargers)
  • Monthly users: 300–400 sessions
  • Revenue per session: ₹25–35
  • Monthly revenue: ₹7,500–14,000 (conservative)
  • Payback period: 18–32 months

Office complexes may also receive government subsidies reducing setup cost by 25–40%.

Operational Reality

Office chargers require lower maintenance due to controlled environments.

Required systems:

  • Remote monitoring software
  • Billing and access systems (RFID/apps/subscriptions)
  • Firmware and software updates

Retail, Malls & Cafes: The Real Money is in Dwell Time

The Dwell Time Revolution

EV charging naturally increases customer dwell time. Malls already benefit from long visitor stays, and charging aligns perfectly with shopping behaviour.

Example: R City Mall Mumbai partnered with Tata Power and installed eight charging points including 60kW DC fast chargers. During 60–90 minute charging sessions, customers spend more on food and shopping.

Similar adoption is happening at DLF Ambience, Select Citywalk, and DLF Mall of India.

Case Study: Retail Strategy That Works

Before Installation:

  • Average dwell time: 2–3 hours
  • Average parking time: 1–2 hours

Installation:

  • 4 AC chargers (22kW)
  • 2 DC chargers (60kW)
  • Total investment: ₹45 lakh

Results after 6 months:

  • Dwell time increased to 3–4 hours
  • Parking occupancy increased by 15%
  • Direct charging revenue: ₹25,000–30,000/month
  • Tenant sales up by 8%

Payback period: 15–18 months including indirect revenue.

Restaurant & Cafe Challenge: Charging Duration Mismatch

A restaurateur installed a 50kW charger expecting more customers. Result? EV users charged in 20 minutes and left without entering the restaurant.

Solution: Match charger type to business model

  • Casual Dining: 11–22 kW chargers
  • Quick Service Restaurants: 22–50 kW chargers
  • Specialty Cafes: 7–11 kW chargers

Business Math:

  • Cafes profit from longer dwell time and food sales.
  • QSRs profit mainly from charging fees.

Real Revenue Models for Retail

Scenario 1: Premium Mall (Loss Leader Model)

  • Free chargers for customers
  • 20% increase in dwell time → 12% increase in sales
  • Suitable for high-margin malls

Scenario 2: Commercial Retail/QSR (Pay-Per-Use)

  • Charging rate: ₹8–12/kWh
  • Utilization: 8–12 vehicles/day
  • Monthly revenue: ₹6,000–10,000 per charger
  • Payback: 22–30 months

Scenario 3: Hybrid/Partnership Model

  • Partner with anchor store (e.g., Shoppers Stop)
  • Free 30 minutes charging for purchases > ₹3,000
  • Revenue sharing between mall and partner store

The Ground-Level Realities Nobody Tells You but Savekar Will

Challenge 1: Grid Capacity is the Silent Killer

Example: Luxury hotel in Delhi required 150kW but grid provided only 100kW. Upgrade cost ₹12–15 lakh and approval time 3–4 months.

Solutions:

  • Detailed power audit
  • 25% extra load planning
  • Dynamic Load Management (DLM)
  • Smart charging schedules

Challenge 2: Utilization Rates Are Lower Than Expected

Public chargers in India operate at less than 25% average utilization (2025).

Typical utilization:

  • Offices: 60–70%
  • Hotels: 80%+ with good marketing
  • Malls: 40–60%
  • Cafes: Lower but improvable

Successful operators actively market charging and integrate it into customer experience.

Challenge 3: Technical Standards Are Fragmented

Common connector types:

  • Bharat AC-001
  • Type 2 (European AC standard)
  • CCS2 (DC Fast Charging)

Business requirement:

  • BIS certification
  • Type 2 AC + CCS2 DC connectors
  • OCPP protocol compliance

Challenge 4: Approvals and Compliance

Required approvals:

  • Fire Safety NOC
  • DISCOM grid approval
  • BIS certification (IS 17017)
  • IP55/IP65 outdoor protection
  • Structural approvals for rooftop/external installations

Ground reality: 6–8 weeks paperwork.

Challenge 5: User Awareness is Alarmingly Low

A cafe in Lucknow saw less than 5% usage because EV drivers didn’t know the charger existed.

Solution:

  • List on multiple EV apps (Tata Power, ChargeZone, JuiceBox, EV Motors)
  • Add Google Maps listing
  • Use digital signage and parking info

The Future is Here (And Early Adopters Win)

Five years from now, EV charging will be expected at commercial properties. Hotels, malls, and offices without charging infrastructure risk losing customers and talent.

Early adopters installed infrastructure 12–18 months ago and are already benefiting from data-driven optimization and customer loyalty.

The cost of entry is still reasonable, demand is growing, regulations are supportive, and competition is still fragmented.

The question isn’t whether EV charging will become the norm. The question is whether you will lead or follow.

Key Takeaways

  • EV charging increases customer dwell time by 20% and retail sales by 12%
  • Hotels can expect a 5–10% guest revenue boost
  • Offices and retail properties can achieve 15–22 month payback periods
  • Plan for grid limitations, utilization challenges, and approvals
  • Integrate charging into loyalty, marketing, and customer experience
  • Early movers are building market share now
  • Partner with CPOs for simplicity or operate independently for higher profits

The EV revolution isn't on the horizon. It's arrived.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why should hotels, offices, and malls install EV charging stations?

India’s EV adoption is growing rapidly, but charging infrastructure is limited. Early adopters gain competitive advantage.

2. How do EV charging stations increase revenue?

Customers spend 30–90 minutes charging, leading to higher spending on food, retail, and services.

3. What type of customers use EV charging?

Environmentally conscious, high-value customers who spend more time at properties offering charging.

4. How big is the market opportunity?

India’s EV charging market is projected to grow from USD 348.5 million in 2024 to USD 1.6 billion by 2030, requiring 1.32 million public chargers.

5. How do businesses earn directly from chargers?

Charging fees per kWh, parking fees, convenience fees, and additional on-site spending.

6. What is the installation cost and revenue potential?

Level 2 chargers cost approximately ₹4–7 lakh and can generate ₹15,000–25,000 additional monthly revenue with proper utilization.

7. Is EV charging a sustainability strategy or business strategy?

It is both. EV charging supports sustainability goals while creating a strong competitive business advantage.

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