EV Charging Cost Calculator

Estimate the cost to charge your electric vehicle

This EV Charging Cost Calculator helps you estimate how much it costs to charge your electric vehicle based on battery size and electricity price. It is useful for home charging estimates and for comparing EV running costs with petrol or diesel vehicles.

Enter your details above to calculate charging cost.

Typical estimates and examples

You can use the figures below as a starting point if you are not sure what to enter.

Reference Typical value
Small EV battery 40 to 50 kWh
Mid size EV battery 55 to 75 kWh
Large EV or SUV battery 75 to 110 kWh
Home off peak electricity $0.15 to $0.25 per kWh
General home charging example $0.30 per kWh
Public fast charging $0.40 to $0.80 per kWh

These values are examples and starting points only. Actual charging cost depends on your electricity plan, vehicle variant, charging setup and charging losses.

Quick examples

Scenario Estimated charging cost
50 kWh battery, 20% to 80%, $0.30 per kWh $9.00
60 kWh battery, 20% to 80%, $0.30 per kWh $10.80
75 kWh battery, 20% to 80%, $0.30 per kWh $13.50
100 kWh battery, 20% to 80%, $0.30 per kWh $18.00

Use your own electricity tariff if you know it. Public DC charging can be much higher than home charging.

How EV charging cost is calculated

The cost to charge an EV depends on how much electricity is added to the battery and the electricity price per kilowatt hour. If you are only charging part of the battery, the calculator works out the portion of total battery capacity being used and then multiplies it by your power rate.

Formula:

Charging cost = Battery size × (Target % − Start %) ÷ 100 × Electricity price per kWh

Example charging cost calculation

If your EV has a 60 kWh battery, your electricity price is $0.30 per kWh, and you are charging from 20% to 80%, then:

Energy added = 60 × (80 − 20) ÷ 100 = 36 kWh

Charging cost = 36 × 0.30 = $10.80

Why charging cost varies

EV charging cost can vary depending on where and when you charge. Home electricity rates are often lower than public fast charging rates. Time of use tariffs can also change your charging cost depending on whether you charge during peak, shoulder or off peak periods.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to fully charge an EV?

It depends on battery size and electricity price. A 60 kWh battery at $0.30 per kWh costs about $18 for a full charge.

Is home charging cheaper than public charging?

In most cases yes. Home charging is usually the cheapest option.

Related EV calculators and guides