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Home charging cost: what does it cost to charge your EV?

Set your electricity price, the charge you add, and how far you drive. The calculator figures out what a charge costs, your running cost per 100 miles, and your monthly charging bill — including charging losses and an optional off-peak rate. Every value is editable.

What charging costs

This charge
$6.19
20% → 80%
Charging time
4 h 42 min
7.4 kW
Range added
+127 mi
+60%
Full charge: $10.31Price per 100 mi: $4.86Energy from grid: 38.7 kWh

Monthly spending

7.3 charges/mo · 932 mi

$45 per month

20%
80%
20% → 80%+60%

Electricity rate

Battery, car & usage

3.66
100%
7.4 kW

How to read the result

A charge costs the energy you draw from the grid times your electricity price. You pay for grid energy, not the energy that reaches the battery: home AC charging loses about 10% in your car's onboard converter, so the bill is a little higher than the battery's size suggests. The running cost per 100 miles is the figure to compare against gas — multiply it by your monthly mileage to see the real saving. If you're on a day/night rate, charging overnight on the cheaper rate is where most of the savings come from.

Good to know

  • The effective price blends your day and night rates by how much you charge on each — set the off-peak share to match your real habits.
  • Charging losses (~10% on AC) are included, so the cost is grid-side, like your meter. A cold battery and a long, slow trickle on a 120 V outlet lose a little more.
  • Public fast charging costs much more per kWh than home charging — this calculator is for charging at home. For a road-trip stop, use the charging-speed calculator.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to charge an EV at home?
It's the energy you put in times your electricity price, plus about 10% for charging losses. For a typical 60 kWh car at $0.16/kWh, a full charge is roughly $11 and a 20–80% top-up about $7. Enter your own battery size and price above for an exact figure.
Is it cheaper to charge at night?
Usually, yes — if you're on a time-of-use (day/night) rate. The off-peak rate can be a half or a third of the peak rate, and since most home charging happens overnight you can shift nearly all of it to the cheap window. Switch on the day/night rate above and set how much you charge off-peak to see the difference.
Why is the cost higher than battery size × price?
Because of charging losses. Some of the electricity from the wall is lost as heat in your car's onboard charger — around 10% on AC. You pay for what the meter records, not what reaches the battery, so the real cost is a little above capacity times price.
How do I work out my cost per 100 miles?
Take your consumption, divide by the charging efficiency, and multiply by your electricity price. The calculator does this for you and shows it as the running cost — the cleanest number to compare against the gas cost of a conventional car.

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