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Trip planner · Free · Local calculation · 2026

Plan your electric car trip from Belgium

Charging stops calculated with a safety margin. 9 preset routes, from Brussels–Ardennes to Brussels–Barcelona. Free, local calculation, no data sent.

Preset routes

TRIP FEASIBLE WITHOUT STOPPING

120 km

Available range at departure : 300 km

Energy required

19.2 kWh

Range available

300 km

Charging stops

0

Battery at destination

~60%

20% safety margin applied. Charging times estimated at 50 kW DC (20%→80%). Consumption varies by speed, temperature and load.

Real-world motorway range: what you need to know

At 120 km/h on the motorway, expect a 20 to 35% range loss compared to the WLTP mixed cycle. In winter below 5°C, the battery loses another 15 to 25% due to heating and increased internal resistance. That’s why this planner applies a 20% safety margin: a stop is planned when 20% battery remains, giving 60 to 80 km of reserve depending on the vehicle.

Unlike Google Maps or Waze, this planner automatically calculates your required charging stops and integrates the safety margin into every calculation. Displayed charging times assume a 50 kW DC charger — 150 kW chargers (Ionity, Fastned) halve these durations. The real-world range you enter should account for your usual motorway speed.

Frequently asked questions — EV trips

Can you really go on holiday from Belgium in an electric car?

Yes, absolutely. Brussels–Barcelona (1,600 km) can be done in two days with 2 to 3 motorway charging stops, each 20 to 40 minutes on a 150 kW DC charger. Most European motorways are covered by networks like Ionity, Fastned, or Tesla Supercharger. The key is planning ahead: know your vehicle's real range at 120 km/h, allow a 20% margin, and locate DC fast chargers along your main stages.

What is the real-world range of an electric car on the motorway?

At 120–130 km/h on the motorway, expect a 20 to 35% loss compared to the official WLTP range. A vehicle rated at 500 km in mixed cycle will cover 325 to 400 real km at 120 km/h. In winter (< 5°C), the battery loses another 15 to 25% due to heating and increased internal resistance. This planner applies a 20% safety margin to account for these variations.

How do you plan an electric car trip?

Three variables are essential: 1) your real-world range under trip conditions (motorway = −25% vs WLTP), 2) your battery % at departure (100% recommended for long trips), 3) the location of DC fast chargers on your route. This planner automatically calculates the number of stops and the kilometre at which they fall. For charger locations, complement with PlugShare or your manufacturer's network.

How many charging stops from Brussels to Paris?

Brussels–Paris is about 310 km. With a real range of 300 km and a 100% departure, the trip is doable without stopping for most modern vehicles. With 250 km range or less, one 20 to 30-minute stop on a 100–150 kW DC charger is enough — several are available along the A2/E19 and around Paris. This planner calculates automatically based on your vehicle.

What is the best free EV trip planner?

The most popular specialised tools are ABRP (A Better Route Planner) and Tesla's built-in planner. Unlike Google Maps or Waze which ignore necessary charging stops, this MVE planner automatically calculates the number of stops and their position based on your real-world range, with a 20% safety margin. Its advantage: no data sent, 100% local calculation, and preset Belgian and international routes.

Why apply a 20% safety margin?

The 20% margin means the planner schedules a charging stop when 20% battery remains — about 60 to 80 km on a vehicle with 300–400 km real range. This margin covers three common contingencies: higher-than-expected consumption (headwind, incline, AC), an occupied or out-of-service charger, and slight battery degradation with age. Driving below 10% poses a real risk of breakdown on the motorway.