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How much does it really cost to charge an EV in the UK?
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How much does it really cost to charge an EV in the UK?
The real cost of charging an electric vehicle (EV) in the UK varies massively depending on where you charge, when you charge, and the speed of the charger.
At one extreme, home overnight charging can be extremely cheap. At the other, motorway ultra-rapid charging can cost almost as much or even more than petrol.
A typical EV uses around 60 kWh for a full charge, giving roughly 200–250 miles of range.

1. Home charging (standard domestic tariff)
This is the baseline most UK households start with.
- Typical UK electricity price (2025–2026): ~25–30p per kWh
- Cost for a full 60 kWh charge: ~£15–£18
- Cost per mile: ~7–9p per mile
Key takeaway
Home charging is already the cheapest general option without specialist tariffs.
2. Night / EV smart tariffs (cheapest charging in the UK)
This is where EV running costs become extremely low.
Typical EV off-peak tariffs:
- ~7–12p per kWh overnight (smart tariffs like Octopus-style plans)
Cost examples:
- Full 60 kWh charge: ~£4–£7
- Cost per mile: ~2–3p per mile
- Annual driving (10,000 miles): often ~£200–£400/year charging cost
Key takeaway
This is the cheapest way to run an EV in the UK by far
Can be up to 4–5× cheaper than standard home rates
3. Public slow & fast chargers (AC chargers, 3 – 22 kW)
These are found in:
- supermarkets
- car parks
- workplaces
- towns
Typical price range:
- ~40–55p per kWh
Cost examples:
- Full 60 kWh charge: ~£24–£33
- Cost per mile: ~10–15p per mile
Key takeaway
Roughly 2× to 3× more expensive than home charging
Still usable, but not ideal for regular charging
4. Fast & rapid public charging (motorways & service stations)
This is the expensive end of EV charging.
Typical motorway charging:
- ~55–85p per kWh
- Ultra-rapid hubs often at the top of that range
Examples of costs:
- Full 60 kWh charge: ~£33–£51
- Cost per mile: ~15–25p per mile
Real-world insight:
Recent UK data shows motorway charging can cost as much as or more than petrol per mile if used exclusively
EV charging vs petrol (real comparison)
Typical UK petrol car (2026):
- ~13–17p per mile (depending on fuel price and efficiency)
EV comparison:
- Home charging: 2–9p per mile (cheapest)
- Public rapid charging: 15–25p per mile (expensive end)
This means:
- EVs are very cheap if you can charge at home
- EVs can be similar cost to petrol if you rely only on motorways
Summary table (UK 2026 averages)
| Charging type | Price per kWh | Full 60 kWh cost | Cost per mile | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Home (standard tariff) | 25–30p | £15–£18 | 7–9p | Good baseline |
| Night EV tariff | 7–12p | £4–£7 | 2–3p | Cheapest option |
| Slow/fast public (AC) | 40–55p | £24–£33 | 10–15p | Medium cost |
| Motorway rapid charging | 55–85p | £33–£51 | 15–25p | Expensive |
Key insights (what really matters)
1. “Where you charge” matters more than “what you drive”
Two identical EVs can have:
- £200/year running cost (home charging)
- £1,500 – £2,000/year (motorway charging)
2. Night tariffs are the real EV game-changer
They can reduce charging costs by 70–80% compared to standard electricity prices.
3. Motorway charging is convenience pricing
You are paying for:
- ultra-fast charging (20–30 minutes)
- expensive grid connections
- infrastructure + location premium
4. The UK average EV driver mixes charging types
Most drivers:
- charge at home (majority)
- occasionally use public chargers
- rarely rely only on motorway charging
That’s why real-world average costs are usually:
- £400–£800 per year for typical drivers
Final conclusion
- Cheapest: Night EV tariffs (~2–3p per mile)
- Normal home charging: Still very cheap (~7–9p per mile)
- Public charging: Moderate (~10–15p per mile)
- Motorways: Expensive (~15–25p per mile)
The EV cost advantage in the UK only fully appears if you can charge at home or on a smart tariff.
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