Electric Vehicles

Electric Car Running Costs UK 2026: Is an EV Really Cheaper?

Updated 20 May 2026 · 12 min read · By Sarah Okafor, Automotive Finance Writer

✓ Includes April 2025 road tax changes and 2026 Ofgem electricity rates
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Sarah Okafor
Automotive Finance Writer · 8 years covering EV ownership costs and UK motoring finance

Sarah specialises in the financial side of car ownership for UK drivers. She has tested and reviewed EV ownership costs across multiple manufacturers and regularly contributes to consumer motoring publications. Her analysis is grounded in real-world charging data and verified manufacturer specifications.

Key takeaways

  • Home charging costs 6–9p per mile in 2026 — roughly half the cost of petrol
  • Public rapid charging can cost 35–85p per kWh, making it more expensive than petrol in some cases
  • EVs cost significantly less to service — typically £130–£200/year versus £300–£500 for petrol
  • From April 2025, EVs pay £195/year road tax — the zero-rate exemption has ended
  • EV insurance is currently 10–25% more expensive than equivalent petrol models
  • For high-mileage home chargers, total annual savings can reach £1,500–£2,500 over petrol

The electric car question has never been more relevant — or more complicated. With fuel prices volatile, electricity rates rising, and road tax for EVs now in effect, the honest answer to "is an EV cheaper to run?" is: it depends entirely on how and where you charge.

This guide breaks down every running cost for electric cars in 2026, compares them directly to petrol and diesel, and gives you the real numbers — not the optimistic ones used in manufacturer marketing.

The true cost of charging an electric car

Charging cost is the biggest variable in EV ownership, because the price per kWh varies enormously depending on where you charge.

Home charging (cheapest option)

The Ofgem unit rate for electricity in 2026 sits at approximately 24–27p per kWh for most standard tariffs. EV-specific tariffs (such as Octopus Go or OVO EV Everywhere) offer overnight rates as low as 7–15p per kWh, which dramatically cuts the cost of charging.

Charging typeCost per kWhCost per mile (4mi/kWh)Full charge (60kWh)
Home — standard tariff24–27p6–7p£14–£16
Home — EV overnight tariff7–15p2–4p£4–£9
Workplace charger (AC)Free–30p0–8pFree–£18
Public destination charger (AC)30–45p8–11p£18–£27
Public rapid charger (DC)45–65p11–16p£27–£39
Motorway ultra-rapid charger65–85p16–21p£39–£51
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The public charging trap: Drivers who rely on motorway rapid chargers regularly are often paying more per mile than they would in a petrol car. The EV cost advantage almost entirely depends on charging at home overnight. If you cannot charge at home (e.g. you park on the street), the savings are significantly reduced.

Fuel cost comparison: EV vs petrol vs diesel

Using May 2026 average UK fuel prices (petrol 157p/litre, diesel 170p/litre) and a typical efficiency of 40 MPG for petrol and 48 MPG for diesel:

6–9p EV cost per mile (home charging)
17–19p Petrol cost per mile (40 MPG)
15–17p Diesel cost per mile (48 MPG)

At 10,000 miles per year, a home-charging EV driver spends approximately £700–£900 on energy compared to £1,700–£1,900 for a petrol driver — a saving of around £1,000 per year on fuel alone.

Servicing and maintenance costs

This is where EVs offer their most consistent advantage. Electric motors have far fewer moving parts than internal combustion engines — no oil changes, no cambelt, no exhaust system, no spark plugs. The main wear items are tyres and brake pads (though regenerative braking extends brake pad life significantly).

Service itemPetrol/dieselElectric
Annual service£150–£300£100–£150
Oil change£50–£100 (every 1–2 years)Not required
Brake padsEvery 25,000–40,000 milesEvery 50,000–80,000 miles (regen braking)
Cambelt/chain£300–£800 (every 60,000–100,000 miles)Not applicable
Exhaust system£100–£500 (as needed)Not applicable
Annual servicing cost (typical)£300–£500/year£130–£200/year

Over a 5-year ownership period, the servicing saving alone can amount to £800–£1,500 in favour of the EV.

ℹ️

Battery replacement concern: The most commonly cited EV worry is battery degradation and replacement cost. In practice, most modern EV batteries retain 80%+ capacity after 100,000 miles and are warrantied for 8 years / 100,000 miles by most manufacturers. Battery replacement is a real cost, but for most drivers within normal ownership periods it is not a practical concern.

Road tax (VED) for electric cars in 2026

This is the biggest change to EV running costs in recent years. From 1 April 2025, electric cars lost their VED exemption and now pay road tax like any other vehicle.

Registration dateVED in 2026
Registered on/after 1 April 2025 (new EV, first year)£10 (first year rate)
Registered on/after 1 April 2017 (standard rate)£195/year
Registered before 1 April 2017 (pre-2017 EV)Based on CO2 (typically £0 for zero-emission)
EVs with list price over £40,000 (years 2–6)£195 + £620 luxury supplement = £815/year
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Expensive EV surcharge: If your EV had a list price above £40,000 when new, you will pay the £620 luxury car supplement on top of the standard £195 rate for years 2–6 of registration — a total of £815 per year. This applies to many popular premium EVs including the Tesla Model 3, BMW i4, and Audi Q4 e-tron.

Insurance costs for electric cars

EV insurance remains a significant cost consideration in 2026. Premiums for electric cars are typically 10–25% higher than equivalent petrol models, for several reasons:

  • Higher vehicle purchase prices mean higher potential repair costs
  • Specialist parts and trained technicians are more expensive to source
  • Battery damage assessment after accidents adds complexity and cost
  • Limited historical claims data means insurers apply a risk premium

That said, the gap is narrowing. More insurers are developing specialist EV products, and as EVs become more common the repair infrastructure is maturing. Expect premiums to become more competitive by 2027–2028.

Total annual running cost comparison

Based on a driver covering 10,000 miles per year, primarily home charging (EV) versus a mid-range petrol hatchback:

Cost categoryPetrol hatchbackEV (home charging)
Fuel / energy£1,800£800
Road tax (VED)£195£195
Insurance£650£780
Annual service£350£150
Tyres (annual portion)£150£180
MOT£55£55
Total annual cost£3,200£2,160

For a typical home-charging EV driver, the annual running cost saving is approximately £1,000–£1,500 compared to a similar petrol car. Whether this justifies the typically higher purchase price of an EV depends on how long you keep the vehicle.

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When an EV does NOT make financial sense

Despite the savings above, an EV is not the right financial choice for every driver in 2026:

  • No home charging: If you rely entirely on public charging, your cost per mile can exceed petrol — especially using rapid chargers regularly
  • Low annual mileage: Under 6,000 miles per year, the fuel savings rarely justify the higher purchase price within a typical ownership period
  • Frequent long motorway journeys: Rapid charging stops add time cost and significantly increase energy costs
  • High list price EV: The £620 luxury supplement means some popular EVs now cost £815/year in road tax — wiping out much of the fuel saving

Frequently asked questions

For most drivers who charge primarily at home, yes — by around £1,000–£1,500 per year. However, drivers who rely heavily on public rapid chargers can find costs comparable to or higher than petrol, particularly on motorway chargers. Servicing costs are significantly lower for EVs, which helps offset the typically higher purchase price over time.
Yes. From April 2025, all electric cars registered on or after 1 April 2017 pay the standard flat-rate VED of £195 per year. Newly registered EVs (first year) pay £10. EVs with an original list price over £40,000 also pay the £620 luxury supplement in years 2–6 of registration. The previous zero-rate exemption for EVs ended in April 2025.
At the current Ofgem electricity unit rate of approximately 24–27p per kWh in 2026, charging a typical EV with a 60 kWh battery from empty to full costs around £14–£16 at home. With an average EV efficiency of 3–4 miles per kWh, this works out at roughly 6–9p per mile. On an overnight EV tariff (7–15p/kWh), costs fall to just 2–4p per mile.
Not currently. EV insurance premiums in 2026 are often 10–25% higher than equivalent petrol models due to higher repair costs, specialist parts, and battery assessment complexity. However, the gap is narrowing as more insurers gain experience with EVs and specialist EV insurance products emerge.
Most EVs are serviced annually, similar to petrol cars, but the scope is significantly less. There are no oil changes, no cambelt replacements, and brake pads last much longer due to regenerative braking. A typical annual EV service costs £100–£150 versus £300–£500 for a petrol equivalent, saving £150–£350 per year.