Historic suburbs maybe, but things change. I live on a 1960s/70s built estate with some 3000 homes, mainly houses, and about 6000 population. Every one of us has a garage or in a few cases a car port, but none of us have an attached garage or parking space next to our homes and none of the garage blocks have electricity laid on. This is far from unique, I could show you a number of other estates in the south-east similarly unsuited to evs.
Ergo, none of us has an e-car, despite many of us able to afford and use one. As I discovered when I asked for quotes, laying on electricity to a garage can cost thousands, £6000 in my case.
The RAC have said that 25% of UK homes cannot have charging next to their home, but that is a large underestimate. They've made some false assumptions like assuming that houses with garages on estates like mine have them next to the houses when none of them do. It wouldn't surprise me if a third of UK homes can't have a next to home parking point.
The irony is that it's in large towns and cities where 85% of the UK population live and e-cars are best suited that homes are least likely to have adjacent charging, homes so often being terraced or flats. That facility is most likely for the 15% of the population in countryside homes where e-cars are often least suited due to distances.
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