Charging An EV Can Cost Less Than A Latte!
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MYTHBUSTING

Charging An EV Can Cost Less Than A Latte!

Close-up of a Hyundai Ioniq 6 electric vehicle charging at a home charger in a parking garage.
  • A full home charge for an EV can cost as little as $4-$5, which is less than the price of a $6 Starbucks latte.
  • The average EV owner spends $65 per month on charging—less than many people spend on coffee in a week.
  • Charging an EV at home overnight can be as low as $1 per day with off-peak rates.

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Think driving an electric car is expensive? Think again. Charging an EV at home can cost less than what you spend on a single latte. That is not an exaggeration—it is a fact backed by real numbers.

According to the U.S. Department of Energy, the national average electricity rate is around $0.16 per kilowatt-hour (kWh). Most EVs on the road today have battery capacities ranging from 40 kWh to 100 kWh.

If you drive something like a Tesla Model 3 Standard Range (58 kWh), a full home charge costs about $9.28. That is for 267 miles of range. For comparison, a 16-ounce Starbucks latte is about $6.00—and that is gone in 15 minutes.

Some EVs are even cheaper to charge. The Nissan Leaf (40 kWh) would cost around $6.40 to go 149 miles. That means you could charge your car for what you spend on a coffee, and it would last you all week, depending on your commute.

Electrify Expo San Francisco test ride demo NIssan LEAF
Red Nissan Leaf driving on a demo course at Electrify Expo in San Francisco, California.

Public Charging Is Cheaper Than You Think

Public charging costs vary, but even then, you are not spending what you would on gas. Tesla Superchargers, for example, typically cost around $0.25 per kWh. If you drive a Hyundai Ioniq 5 (77.4 kWh) and charge it from 10% to 80%, you are looking at around $13-$15—still cheaper than filling up a gas tank.

Electrify America offers membership plans that can lower the cost to $0.31 per kWh, meaning a charge for a Volkswagen ID.4 (77 kWh) would cost about $17 for 250 miles of range. Meanwhile, an average gas-powered SUV needs $50+ to cover that same distance.

2024 Volkswagen VW ID.4 electric car Grizzlie EV home charger charging
Volkswagen ID.4 plugged into a Level 2 home EV charger in a parking garage.

Home Charging Is Where the Real Savings Are

According to the International Energy Agency, most EV owners charge at home 80% of the time. With off-peak electricity rates (as low as $0.10 per kWh in some areas), a full charge can drop to $4-$5. That is less than a sandwich.

Let’s say you drive a Honda Civic that gets 32 miles per gallon and gas costs $3.21 per gallon. To cover the same 250 miles an EV can get on a full charge, you would need 7.8 gallons of gas—that is $25.04.

EVs are three to five times cheaper to ‘fuel’ than gas cars. That is not marketing hype; it is just math.


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Myth: “But My Electricity Bill Will Skyrocket”

Not really. According to Kelley Blue Book, the average EV owner spends $65.37 per month on charging. That is less than what many people spend on coffee runs in a week.

If you switch to an EV off-peak charging plan, your total monthly charging cost could be as low as $30—that is $1 per day. So next time someone says EVs are “too expensive,” just ask them how much they spend on caffeine.

Owning an EV is not some high-cost luxury—it is an affordable alternative to gas. With gas prices forcing drivers to shell out $50-$100 per tank, switching to electric can put hundreds of dollars back in your pocket every year. If a daily latte fits your budget, so does an EV.


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SOURCES | IMAGES: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, SOLAR REVIEWS, INTERNATIONAL ENERGY AGENCY, KELLEY BLUE BOOK | ELECTRIFY EXPO

FTC: We use income-earning auto affiliate links. Learn more.

AUTHOR: 

RANDI BENTIA

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