EV Savings vs Gas Calculator
Fuel, maintenance and purchase price — the honest 5-year EV-vs-gas total
| Gas car | EV |
|---|
Fuel, maintenance and purchase price — the honest 5-year EV-vs-gas total
| Gas car | EV |
|---|
With federal credits gone, the EV question is finally a clean spreadsheet: electricity-vs-gasoline at your rates, a real maintenance gap, a purchase premium, and your annual miles. The answer varies honestly — a 15,000-mile driver with cheap overnight power saves thousands; a low-mileage driver relying on public fast-charging in a cheap-gas state may not. This calculator runs your version, with the public-charging slider most comparisons hide.
| Scenario | Cost per mile |
|---|---|
| Gas car, 28 MPG @ $3.20 | 11.4¢ |
| EV, home charging @ $0.15/kWh | 4.5¢ |
| EV, off-peak plan @ $0.08 | 2.4¢ |
| EV, public fast-charging @ $0.42 | 12.7¢ — above gas |
The pattern that decides everything: EVs are cheap where you sleep. Homeowners with garages and off-peak plans get the 60–75% fuel savings; apartment dwellers on public DC fast-charging get roughly gas prices with extra steps. The slider models your real mix.
Efficient sedans: 3.5-4.2; crossovers: 3.0-3.5; trucks: 2.0-2.6. Winter cuts 20-30% (cabin heat); highway speeds cut more. Use 3.0-3.3 for honest planning unless you know your model.
12,000 miles at 3.3 mi/kWh ≈ 3,600 kWh/yr — about $45/mo at $0.15, or $24/mo on an off-peak plan. It typically shows up as a 25-40% bill increase that replaces a $130/mo gas habit.
$0.35-0.55/kWh at major networks — 2.5-3.5× home rates, putting per-mile cost at or above gasoline. It's road-trip infrastructure, not a fuel strategy; the apartment-dweller math has to be honest about this.
Modern packs are warrantied 8yr/100k and degrade ~1-2%/yr — replacement before 150-200k miles is rare, and prices are falling. It's a real tail risk priced into used-EV depreciation, not an expected line item.
For home-charging, normal-mileage drivers: usually yes — the fuel/maintenance gap carries it in 2-5 years. The credit used to make marginal cases easy; now the marginal cases genuinely depend on your inputs, which is what this tool is for.
The unglamorous winner for no-home-charging drivers: 45-55 MPG with zero infrastructure and no premium anxiety. Run this calculator with the hybrid's MPG as the 'gas car' — if the EV can't beat it at your inputs, the hybrid is your answer.
Yes — every figure computes locally in your browser.
Sleep-charging drivers with normal mileage: the EV pays for itself and then keeps paying. Everyone else: run your honest slider and let the verdict card, not the discourse, pick your drivetrain.