French leasing and mobility provider Ayvens has introduced a new electric vehicle charging service, Ayvens Power, built on a white-label platform from Berlin-based Plugsurfing, as the company seeks to expand its digital offerings for fleet customers across Europe.
The service launches initially in the Netherlands, where drivers can access more than one million public charging points across the continent through a dedicated mobile application. Ayvens said the rollout will extend to Germany, France, Italy, Belgium and the United Kingdom later this year.
Ayvens and Plugsurfing first announced their partnership in September. The platform provides roaming access to a wide network of charging operators, similar to services offered to other Plugsurfing partners including automakers and mobility providers. “The Netherlands is an important market for our EV customers. Ayvens Power helps us give drivers an easier charging experience while offering fleet managers clearer visibility into charging behavior,” said Sander Pleij, managing director of Ayvens Netherlands.
In addition to driver functionality, the service includes tools for fleet operators through the My Ayvens Power portal. At launch, features include charging insights showing where and how vehicles are charged, cost transparency across public and private charging, and reporting tools that allow companies to export data for internal accounting and allocation purposes. Ayvens said additional modules will be introduced over time.
The company currently manages more than 600,000 electric vehicles and aims to provide integrated solutions for corporate customers transitioning to electrified fleets. Ayvens was formed in 2023 after ALD Automotive acquired LeasePlan, creating one of Europe’s largest fleet management groups. The rebranding from ALD Automotive to Ayvens was completed in Germany in October 2025.
Plugsurfing, founded in Berlin in 2012, specializes in business-to-business charging services and white-label platforms. The company was acquired by Finnish energy group Fortum in 2018 and later sold to U.S.-based Fleetcor Technologies, which rebranded as Corpay in 2024. Its technology relies primarily on direct connections with charge point operators using the OCPI standard, supplemented by roaming hubs such as Hubject.
