EV Charging
EV Savings Calculator
Compare electric car vs gas costs and calculate your total savings — instant results, no signup required.
Calculate My EV Savings
EV Savings Calculator: How Much Can You Save?
Our EV savings calculator compares electric vehicle costs against gas cars using your actual driving habits and local fuel prices. We analyze charging costs, maintenance savings, and total cost of ownership to show your complete financial picture — before you ever talk to a dealership.
Electric vehicles cost significantly less to fuel and maintain than gas-powered cars. The average American driving 12,000 miles per year spends about $1,800–$2,400 annually on gasoline, while the same miles in an EV cost just $400–$600 in electricity. That's a potential saving of over $1,500 per year — before factoring in lower maintenance costs.
What to Enter in the EV Savings Calculator
Annual Miles Driven: The average American drives around 12,000–15,000 miles per year. Check your car's odometer or last insurance renewal for an accurate number. More miles driven means more annual savings with an EV.
Gas Price ($/gallon): Enter your current local gas price. Even small changes in gas prices have a major impact on your 5-year total.
Electricity Rate ($/kWh): Most Americans pay around $0.14/kWh. Check your electricity bill for your exact rate. If you have solar panels, enter $0 to see the full benefit of free solar charging.
EV Maintenance Savings: The Hidden Advantage
Gas car owners typically spend $1,000–$1,500 per year on maintenance: oil changes, transmission fluid, spark plugs, exhaust repairs, and more. Electric vehicles have no oil changes, no transmission to service, and regenerative braking means brake pads last 2–3x longer. Our calculator uses a conservative $800/year maintenance savings estimate — real-world savings are often higher.
⛽ Gas Car (annual)
⚡ Electric Car (annual)
Home Charging vs Public Charging Costs
Home charging on a Level 2 charger (240V) is the most cost-effective option — typically 3–4 cents per mile. Public DC fast charging costs 25–50 cents per kWh, which is 2–3x more expensive. For the best EV savings, plan to do 80–90% of your charging at home overnight. A Level 2 home charger ($400–$700 installed) pays for itself within the first year of ownership.
Tesla Wall Connector
$475 | 240V, 48A
ChargePoint Home Flex
$699 | 240V, 50A
Grizzl-E Classic
$399 | 240V, 40A
Installation: $500–$2,000 (electrician required for 240V outlet)
Why Go Electric in 2026?
Electric vehicles offer dramatically lower fuel costs, minimal maintenance, and federal tax credits up to $7,500. With EV prices dropping, new models exceeding 300+ miles of range, and charging infrastructure expanding rapidly, 2026 is the ideal time to make the switch. Learn more about EV Basics and available EV Incentives before you decide.
Is it cheaper to drive electric or gas?
Yes — electricity costs 3–4 cents per mile vs 10–15 cents per mile for gasoline at current prices. Combined with lower maintenance, most EV owners save $1,200–$2,000+ per year.
What EV qualifies for the $7,500 tax credit?
Many popular EVs including the Chevrolet Equinox EV, Ford F-150 Lightning, and Tesla Model 3 qualify, subject to income limits. Visit FuelEconomy.gov for the current qualified vehicle list.
Can I charge an EV with solar panels?
Yes — pairing solar with an EV is the ultimate combination. Enter $0 for electricity rate to see how much you'd save with free solar charging.
Your EV Savings Report
Customized electric vehicle cost comparison
5-Year Total Savings
— by switching to electricGas Car 5-Year Cost
—Electric Car 5-Year Cost
—EV Charging Cost Breakdown
After tax credit • Excludes trade-in value
View EV Incentives →Break-Even Point
— years until EV pays for itself vs gas carResearch EV Models
Compare Tesla, Chevy Bolt, Ford Mustang Mach-E & more on our EV Basics Guide.
Check Incentives
Install Home Charger
Level 2 charger (240V) recommended for convenience. Read our EV Safety Guide.
Additional resources: FuelEconomy.gov
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