Yes, that is correct. In general, electric charges tend to move from regions of low electric potential to regions of high electric potential. Electric potential is a measure of the electric potential energy per unit charge at a particular location. The electric potential at a point in an electric field is defined as the amount of work that would be required to move a unit charge from a reference point (usually taken as infinity) to that point.
For example, consider a negatively charged particle (such as an electron) located at a point with a low electric potential. The particle has a low amount of electric potential energy due to its position in the electric field. If the particle were to move to a point with a higher electric potential, it would absorb some of the electric potential energy, which could be converted into other forms of energy (such as kinetic energy). Thus, the particle will tend to move from a region of low electric potential to a region of high electric potential in order to absorb some of the energy.