Home charging is where EV economics really shine. The US average residential electricity rate in 2026 is $0.17 per kWh, which translates to roughly 4โ€“5 cents per mile for most EVs โ€” compared to 12โ€“18 cents per mile for gasoline vehicles. Here's what you'll actually pay, with a Tesla example you can benchmark against.

Tesla Model Y โ€” The Benchmark

The Model Y Long Range AWD has an 80.5 kWh battery. At $0.17/kWh with 90% charging efficiency, a full 0โ€“100% home charge costs about $15.20. Driven 13,500 miles per year at 3.7 miles/kWh, annual home charging runs approximately $650 โ€” compared to $1,700+ for a comparable 28 MPG gas SUV at $3.50/gallon.

StateRateFull Charge (Model Y)Annual Cost
Louisiana / N. Dakota~$0.10~$9~$382
US National Average$0.17~$15~$650
New York~$0.22~$20~$840
California~$0.32~$29~$1,221

Three Charging Methods Compared

Level 1 (120V standard outlet): Uses your existing outlet, no installation needed. Adds 3โ€“5 miles of range per hour. Fine if you drive under 40 miles/day and plug in overnight. Cost: your normal electricity rate.

Level 2 (240V home charger): Adds 25โ€“35 miles per hour. A full charge overnight for any EV on the market. Installation runs $500โ€“$1,200 including hardware and labor. This is the recommended setup for EV ownership โ€” the same per-kWh cost as Level 1 but dramatically faster. Many utilities offer $200โ€“$500 rebates.

DC Fast Charging (public stations): Tesla Superchargers typically cost $0.25โ€“$0.50/kWh; third-party networks (Electrify America, EVgo) average $0.41โ€“$0.61/kWh. A full charge can cost $25โ€“$50 โ€” 3โ€“4ร— more than home charging. Best for road trips, not daily use. Network membership plans ($7โ€“$15/month) reduce rates by $0.10โ€“$0.12/kWh.

Off-peak rates are the biggest hidden saving: Many US utilities offer time-of-use (TOU) pricing with overnight rates as low as $0.08โ€“$0.12/kWh. Setting your EV to charge between 11pmโ€“7am can cut your annual charging cost by 30โ€“50%. Check your utility's website for EV-specific rate plans.

How DC Fast Charging Stations Work โ€” Is Energy Stored?

A common question: do DC fast chargers have batteries on-site, or do they pull straight from the grid? Most public DC fast chargers draw directly from the grid with no local storage. However, newer ultra-fast installations (350 kW+) increasingly use on-site battery buffers โ€” typically 100โ€“500 kWh lithium packs โ€” to avoid expensive grid capacity upgrades. Tesla's V4 Superchargers and Electrify America's latest sites use these "battery-backed" designs in high-demand locations.

The electricity flows from the grid โ†’ transformer โ†’ charger power electronics โ†’ DC directly into your vehicle's battery pack, bypassing the car's onboard AC-to-DC converter. This is why DC fast charging is so much faster than AC charging โ€” the conversion happens in the station, not the car, allowing much higher power levels.

Calculate Your Own Cost

Formula: Cost per mile = electricity rate รท EV efficiency (miles/kWh)

Example: $0.17 รท 4.0 mi/kWh = $0.0425/mile. Over 13,500 miles: $573/year.

VoltEV's cost calculator does this for every model in the database. Enter your electricity rate and annual mileage for your exact number โ€” and see how it compares to petrol equivalents in your country.