BYD plans €2B investment in European charging infrastructure

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BYD is pouring nearly €2 billion into building out a charging network across Europe, a move that effectively tells the continent’s legacy automakers: we’re not just selling cars here, we’re building the gas stations too.

The investment centers on BYD’s proprietary Flash Charging technology, which can deliver roughly 400 kilometers of range in just five minutes. The stations operate at up to 1.5 MW, putting them firmly in the ultra-fast charging category that most existing European infrastructure simply cannot match.

The rollout is already underway

BYD’s first Flash Charging stations went live in Germany in May 2026, with the UK following in June. The company is targeting 3,000 charging stations across Europe by 2027, including 600 in the UK alone.

Each station costs approximately €580,000 to build, according to BYD Executive Vice President Stella Li. Quick math on 3,000 stations at that price puts the total somewhere around €1.74 billion, which tracks closely with the announced investment figure.

The European push is part of a broader global buildout. BYD aims to have 6,000 stations operational outside China by the end of 2026, alongside a domestic target of 20,000 stations within its home market.

The Flash Charging system works in tandem with BYD’s Blade Battery 2.0 technology, the company’s latest generation of lithium iron phosphate cells. Ultra-fast charging at 1.5 MW requires battery architecture that can handle enormous power input without degradation, and BYD is betting that its vertically integrated approach, controlling both the car and the charger, gives it an edge that third-party charging networks cannot replicate.

Why charging infrastructure is the real battleground

BYD’s strategy mirrors what Tesla did with its Supercharger network, but with a key difference in timing. Tesla built its network over a decade as the market matured. BYD is attempting to deploy thousands of high-power stations in roughly 18 months.

Legacy European automakers like Volkswagen, BMW, and Stellantis have made their own investments in charging through joint ventures like Ionity, but none have committed to a proprietary network at the scale or speed BYD is now pursuing. The €2 billion figure dwarfs most individual automaker commitments to European charging infrastructure.

What this means for investors

The risk side of the ledger is worth watching. Deploying €580,000 stations at this pace requires flawless execution on permitting, grid connections, and construction across multiple European regulatory environments. Scaling to 3,000 stations means navigating the bureaucratic landscapes of dozens of countries, each with different energy regulations, building codes, and utility arrangements.

There’s also the question of utilization. Charging stations are only profitable if enough compatible vehicles are on the road to use them. BYD’s European market share has been growing, but the company is still building its customer base on the continent.

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