Updated for 2026 · federal EV credit ended Dec 31, 2025

Is an electric car actually cheaper to drive?

Compare the real cost per mile and yearly fuel savings of an EV versus a gas car — using your state's actual electricity and gas prices. Home and public charging included.

Is an EV cheaper to run in 2026? For fuel, usually yes — charging at home is often like paying $1–$1.50 a gallon. But the gap narrows where electricity is expensive, gas is cheap, or you lean on public fast charging (2–4× the home rate). There's no federal EV tax credit in 2026. See your honest number below. How we calculate →
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Your EV vs gas estimate

Estimated annual fuel savings (EV vs gas)

EV cost per mile
Gas cost per mile
EV fuel / year
Gas fuel / year
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🎯 How sure is this? This compares fuel/running cost only — not insurance, maintenance, depreciation, or purchase price (add a price premium above for a rough payback). EVs usually also win on maintenance. Your real result depends on your exact rate plan and how much you fast-charge. We don't invent a precision score.

Estimate generated by electrifypayback.com. Compares fuel/running cost only, 2026 rules (no federal EV credit). Estimates only — not financial advice.

How to read your result

The core comparison is simple: cost per mile. A gas car's is your gas price divided by its MPG. An EV's is the electricity it uses per mile times what you pay to charge. Because an EV converts energy far more efficiently, its per-mile cost is usually much lower — but three things decide by how much.

1. Your electricity price vs local gas price

This is the whole ballgame. In a cheap-power state, home charging can be the equivalent of paying about a dollar a gallon. In a high-rate state like California or the Northeast, the EV still usually wins, but the margin is smaller. Very cheap gas plus a fuel-efficient hybrid can close the gap further.

2. How much you fast-charge

Home charging is the cheapest fuel most people can buy. Public DC fast charging often costs two to four times as much — sometimes more than gasoline per mile. If you can't charge at home, run the numbers with a high public-charging share before assuming big savings.

3. The car you're comparing against

Swapping a 40 mpg hybrid for an EV saves less than swapping a 20 mpg SUV. Enter the MPG of the specific gas car you'd otherwise buy for an honest comparison.

2026 note: The federal clean-vehicle tax credit ended after 2025, so a 2026 EV purchase gets no federal credit. Some states and utilities still offer EV or home-charger rebates — check yours. This tool compares running costs, not purchase price.

Frequently asked questions

Is an EV cheaper to run than a gas car in 2026?

Usually yes for fuel. Charging at home on average US electricity is roughly like paying $1.00–$1.50 per gallon versus $3+ for gasoline. Savings shrink where electricity is expensive, gas is cheap, or you rely on public fast charging.

How much does it cost to charge an EV per mile?

A typical EV uses about 0.28–0.32 kWh per mile. At the US average home rate (~16¢/kWh) that's roughly 4–5 cents per mile, versus about 11–13 cents per mile for a 28 mpg gas car at $3.30/gallon.

Does this include the cost of buying the car?

No — it compares fuel and running cost. Enter an "EV price premium" in the advanced options to see a rough payback on a higher purchase price. EVs also tend to cost less to maintain, which this tool doesn't yet monetize.

Is there still an EV tax credit in 2026?

No federal credit — it ended after 2025. Some states and utilities still offer purchase or home-charger rebates.

How long does it take to charge an EV at home?

On a standard 120V outlet (Level 1), you add only ~3–5 miles of range per hour — fine for low-mileage drivers. A 240V Level 2 charger (like a dryer outlet) adds ~20–30 miles per hour, so an overnight charge easily covers a typical day. Most home charging happens overnight while you sleep, which is why it's so cheap.

Do EVs cost less to maintain than gas cars?

Generally yes. No oil changes, no spark plugs, no exhaust or timing components, and regenerative braking means brake pads last far longer. Studies consistently put EV maintenance costs below comparable gas cars. This tool compares fuel only, so your total savings are usually a bit larger than what you see here.

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