By the numbers.
This corridor needs a plan in winter.
Siskiyou Summit, just south of Ashland on the California border, sits at 4,310 feet and is the highest point on I-5 in Oregon. It is not part of this route, but if you are continuing south into California, Caltrans chain requirements are common there from November through April. If you are starting your trip in Ashland in winter, check Siskiyou Summit conditions before you commit to a southbound detour — it has stranded drivers in whiteout conditions with little warning.
Every stop, start to finish.
Plotted west to east. Scroll the route — each station lights up as you reach it.
The drive, in detail.
Interstate 5 is Oregon’s spine, and for EV drivers it is really two different roads. North of Roseburg, through the Willamette Valley to Portland, chargers are frequent and redundant — Eugene, Albany, Salem, and Wilsonville all have multiple fast-charging options within a few miles of the highway. South of Roseburg, through Grants Pass, Canyonville, and Medford to Ashland, the options thin out and the terrain gets more demanding.
The 40-mile stretch between Grants Pass and Roseburg, which climbs over Sexton Mountain and Stage Road Pass, is the one place on this corridor where non-Tesla drivers have a real gap. The Seven Feathers Casino Supercharger in Canyonville has filled that role for years. With NACS adapters now standard on most new EVs, that single site has become a lot more useful to a lot more people.
This guide runs south to north, Ashland to Portland, with a stop at every city that has fast charging. If you’re heading the other direction, read it bottom to top. For the broader trip-planning picture, see our EV road trip planner, and for what else is happening with charging across the state, see the Oregon EV charging hub.