Explore the full directors' dealings record of Blink Charging Co., a listed equity based in United States. Shares are listed on US US, under the supervision of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Energy sector, Blink Charging Co. has logged 34 insider filings. Market capitalisation: €119.5m. The latest transaction was disclosed on 23 March 2022 — Don. Among the most active insiders: Engel Donald. Every trade is openly available.
25 of 34 declarations
Blink Charging Co. is a U.S.-listed company on the NASDAQ (ticker: BLNK), headquartered in the United States, and focused on electric vehicle charging infrastructure. For international investors, it sits at the crossroads of energy transition, mobility, and connected hardware/software. Blink develops, operates, and sells EV charging solutions for consumers, businesses, property owners, fleets, and municipalities. Its business model is best understood as a hybrid platform: hardware sales, network services, charger operations, and recurring revenues tied to charging activity and network management. The company has built its profile over time as an EV charging infrastructure operator and equipment provider in the United States and abroad. Blink established its global headquarters in Bowie, Maryland, reflecting a push to consolidate corporate functions and reinforce North American manufacturing capabilities. In its 2024 annual report, Blink stated that as of December 31, 2024 it had contracted, sold, or deployed 109,596 chargers, of which 87,500 were on the Blink Networks. That installed base matters strategically, because network density, charger utilization, and service monetization are central to the investment case. In other words, Blink is not just selling hardware; it is trying to build a larger recurring-revenue ecosystem around charging infrastructure. Blink’s core product and service lines include Level 2 AC charging stations, DC fast charging equipment, fleet charging solutions, network connectivity services, and software-enabled charging management. The company emphasizes interoperability, customer flexibility, and a broad use-case footprint across retail, hospitality, commercial real estate, parking operators, municipalities, and fleet depots. It also highlights its hardware and firmware design capabilities, as well as compatibility with North American and European charging standards. Geographically, Blink operates in the United States and internationally, with offices and activity in the United Kingdom, Belgium, and India. Recent developments have reinforced Blink’s strategic shift toward a more scalable platform model. In 2025, the company announced the acquisition of Zemetric, a charging infrastructure company focused on fleet and high-utilization sites. It also launched a North American “seamless charging” pilot with WirelessCar and ChargeHub, announced an integrated EV charging, solar, and storage solution with Create Energy, and expanded interoperability through a collaboration with Hubject. Blink’s 2025 financial updates, published in March 2026, showed improving service revenues, supporting the thesis that the company is increasingly leaning on recurring service income rather than relying solely on equipment sales. From a competitive standpoint, Blink remains exposed to intense competition, pricing pressure, execution risk, and the pace of EV adoption. Still, its broad product portfolio, installed base, international presence, and strategic emphasis on network services give it a recognizable position in the U.S. EV charging market.