This question is more or less directed to current owners of EVs. I am not focusing on other aspects of an EV, like power, acceleration, range, etc., but purely on a cost of 'fuel' per mile driven.
I own a 2016 Prius that gets about 65 miles to a gallon of gas. In my area right now gas is under $3 a gallon, so rounding it to 60 mpg and $3 a gallon, my Prius costs me 5 cents a mile.
I compared this to a Chevy Bolt that I was interested in buying. From the numbers I can find online, owners of this vehicle report around 4.5 miles per kWh. Electricity at my house costs around 11 cents per kWh. If I owned this vehicle and charged at home it would cost me about 2.5 cents per mile in 'fuel', so about half of what the Prius costs.
However, prices at public charging stations range from 30 to as high as 50 cents per kWh according to what I can find online. Is this what you are experiencing? If this is correct, if I charged my EV at public chargers, it would cost me way more per mile than driving my Prius. The break even for me would be about 23 cents per kWh where it would cost the same to drive my Prius or a Chevy Bolt. Anything over 23 cents per kWh would cost more to drive the EV.
Anybody keeps track of what it costs to drive your EV per mile? Am I correct in my calculations? It seems that if you charge at home it is worth to own an EV, otherwise an EV is more expensive to operate.
I own a 2016 Prius that gets about 65 miles to a gallon of gas. In my area right now gas is under $3 a gallon, so rounding it to 60 mpg and $3 a gallon, my Prius costs me 5 cents a mile.
I compared this to a Chevy Bolt that I was interested in buying. From the numbers I can find online, owners of this vehicle report around 4.5 miles per kWh. Electricity at my house costs around 11 cents per kWh. If I owned this vehicle and charged at home it would cost me about 2.5 cents per mile in 'fuel', so about half of what the Prius costs.
However, prices at public charging stations range from 30 to as high as 50 cents per kWh according to what I can find online. Is this what you are experiencing? If this is correct, if I charged my EV at public chargers, it would cost me way more per mile than driving my Prius. The break even for me would be about 23 cents per kWh where it would cost the same to drive my Prius or a Chevy Bolt. Anything over 23 cents per kWh would cost more to drive the EV.
Anybody keeps track of what it costs to drive your EV per mile? Am I correct in my calculations? It seems that if you charge at home it is worth to own an EV, otherwise an EV is more expensive to operate.