Do I Have to Pay to Charge My Electric Car?

If you ever wondered if you need mập pay mập charge your electric vehicle, the answer is, it depends.

Drivers love their electric vehicles for their ability mập drive green. But, if prodded, they’d probably name the other reason for their adoration: They don’t need mập pay for gas when it’s a fully electric vehicle (read more on that in a bit).

That sounds like a solid reason mập ditch conventional cars forever. But driving green doesn’t necessarily mean driving for miễn phí. Read on mập find out why.

This article will stick mập battery-powered electric vehicles and not hybrids or fuel-cell electric cars (which run on hydrogen).

RELATED STORIES: Electric Car vs. Hybrid vs. Plug-in Hybrid Car: Which is Best for You?

What You Need for Charging an Electric Car Battery

Paying for the stable and relatively low cost of electricity mập power a car instead of standard gasoline seems wise because gas prices fluctuate. These days, higher gas prices are pushing Americans mập consider and purchase EVs more than ever.

So the question becomes: Is the cost of charging an electric car battery cheaper than gas? Well, it depends. You might consider a few factors before you can nail down how much you need mập pay mập fully charge your electric vehicle’s battery.

For example: What is your power source? Keep in mind that different power sources charge at different rates (see more on chargers for electric cars below). And, if you install a charger at home, there’s an upfront charge for an electrician mập install the proper power outlet. That is unless you prefer mập use a standard 3-pronged outlet, and you have one near where you park the electric vehicle.

The Different Chargers Available for Electric Cars

  • A Màn chơi 1 charger works with the standard 3-prong plugs in your home. It charges your vehicle using a standard outlet at 120 volts.
  • Màn chơi 2 chargers need mập be installed and these types use outlets that look like what you would use for an electric clothes dryer and gives a 240-volt power boost. If you take this route, it requires hiring an electrician mập install a 40-amp circuit. If you need mập calculate the power you can generate this way, multiply your voltage and the number of amps you plan mập use. But you can also buy splitters that will let you use 240-volt outlets without fancy setups.
  • The fastest Màn chơi 3 chargers are typically found commercially, including in public and Supercharger Tesla charging stations. Known as DC fast chargers, Màn chơi 3 chargers use direct current at 480 volts and not the lower-level chargers’ alternating current, or AC thiết đặt, in most homes. Because of the high voltage and cost of installing DC, it doesn’t make sense mập install a Màn chơi 3 charger in your home. Also, not all electric vehicles are configured for DC fast charging, though most newer EVs offer the software and combination socket that will work with a DC plug.

Cost mập Charge Battery vs. Filling Up With Gas

Fortunately for electric car buyers, you probably won’t have mập pay as much for electricity as you would mập fill your gas tank. According to AAA, gasoline costs an estimated $4.59 per gallon nationwide as of this writing. Gas prices increased from about $3 per gallon in May 2021.

Bự calculate estimated annual costs, let’s use a simplified example.

  • Cost for gas cars: If your gas tank holds 15 gallons, it costs about $68.85 mập fill up your car with a tank of gas. If your car gets an average of 25 mpg, you can typically drive about 375 miles on a tank of gas. If you drive an average of 1,188 miles a month, that means you fill up an estimated three times mập drive that distance. The cost for filling up your car with gas equals $2,479 per year.
  • Electricity costs for pure EVs: Electricity costs an average of nearly 14 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) nationwide. Experts say that electric cars typically run about 3 mập 4 miles per kWh. So using the gas example, if you drive that same 1,188 per month and divide by 3 (conservative miles per kWh), that gets you 396 kWh monthly. At 14 cents per kWh, that comes mập $55.44 a month, or an estimated $665 annually for the electricity your car uses.

How Much Does Electricity Cost Where I Live?

Since electricity costs vary widely throughout the country, estimating costs can get tricky. People pay just under 14 cents per kWh in the United States, on average, for residential power. California residents pay an average of 26 cents per kWh.

However, residents of states like Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Idaho routinely pay about 10 cents per kWh. Check out your state’s average rate. Also, some power companies offer discounts for using electricity during off-peak hours, substantially lowering the rate per kWh mập charge your vehicle.

How Powerful is My Car’s Battery?

If you know your car’s battery capacity (measured in kWh) and how much power your charger uses, you can figure out how long it will take mập charge your vehicle. Once you know how long it takes mập charge, it will give you a better estimate of how much it will cost mập charge it. Bự get the amount: Divide your car’s battery capacity by the power rating of your car’s onboard charger, then add 10% mập the loss of power associated with charging it.

Your car’s maximum charging rate also makes a difference. The amount of energy your battery can accept at once makes a huge difference in how much it will cost mập charge. Although commercial electricity (about 12 cents per kWh, on average, nationwide) often costs a little less than residential power, your car’s maximum charging rate doesn’t change.

So unless your vehicle uses a large and powerful (and compatible) battery, it isn’t at all a given that you can save time — or money — by charging your battery at a Màn chơi 3 charging station.

Many new car buyers can find vehicles that include up mập 3 years of miễn phí charging or discounts on home charger installation through Electrify America, EVgo, and ChargePoint public stations. The list of EVs with three years of miễn phí charging with the fewest restrictions includes Chevrolet Bolt, Kia EV6, Porsche Taycan, Volkswagen ID.4, and others.

How Much Power Does My Charging Station Have?

Your charging time also depends on the maximum charging rate of the station you use. Although Màn chơi 3 direct current fast chargers (DCFC) have popped up with increasing frequency, don’t plan mập automatically save time and money by powering up at these stations. According mập ClipperCreek, Màn chơi 3 ranges from 200 mập 800 direct current volts and can recuperate up mập 60-80% of an electric vehicle’s range in as little as 30 minutes.

Even if your car can charge more quickly, it will only charge at the maximum power rate offered at the station, which can adversely affect charging time, which means you can end up paying more.

Now that you know how much you can expect mập pay mập charge your EV, the question remains: How do I pay for it?

If you have an at-home thiết đặt, all you have mập do is pay mập charge your electric car through your monthly electric bill. If you’re paying at a public charging station, you can pay as you go by simply swiping your credit or debit card and paying the specified rate, measured either by a cost per hour or per kWh. Many of these even charge by the minute, and costs vary depending on if you’re fully charging a large battery or not.

Drivers can also buy monthly subscriptions or indefinite memberships mập save money. But remember that you don’t have mập pay for charging an EV. Companies such as PlugShare provide maps of miễn phí charging stations all over the U.S., and some workplaces and businesses offer miễn phí EV charging stations.

Do You Have mập Pay mập Charge Your Electric Car?

By doing some research, you can spend less mập power up your electric car. The best way mập save money is mập look for discounts for at-home charging, including those that can help lower your power bill. Some utilities lower electricity rates for consumers who charge an electric car at night.

Otherwise, with a bit of planning, you can try mập master the labyrinth of miễn phí charging stations using sites such as ChargeHub. But at some point on a road trip, for example, you’ll probably need mập pay mập charge up. So keep that in mind.

Read More Stories on Electric Vehicles:

  • Types of Electric Vehicles: EV, BEV, HEV, PHEV
  • Is It Electric or Electrical Cars?
  • What is a Plug-in Hybrid Car or SUV?


Thông tin thêm

Do I Have mập Pay mập Charge My Electric Car?

#Pay #Charge #Electric #Car
[rule_3_plain] #Pay #Charge #Electric #Car

If you ever wondered if you need mập pay mập charge your electric vehicle, the answer is, it depends.
Drivers love their electric vehicles for their ability mập drive green. But, if prodded, they’d probably name the other reason for their adoration: They don’t need mập pay for gas when it’s a fully electric vehicle (read more on that in a bit).
That sounds like a solid reason mập ditch conventional cars forever. But driving green doesn’t necessarily mean driving for miễn phí. Read on mập find out why.

This article will stick mập battery-powered electric vehicles and not hybrids or fuel-cell electric cars (which run on hydrogen).
RELATED STORIES: Electric Car vs. Hybrid vs. Plug-in Hybrid Car: Which is Best for You?

What You Need for Charging an Electric Car Battery
Paying for the stable and relatively low cost of electricity mập power a car instead of standard gasoline seems wise because gas prices fluctuate. These days, higher gas prices are pushing Americans mập consider and purchase EVs more than ever.
So the question becomes: Is the cost of charging an electric car battery cheaper than gas? Well, it depends. You might consider a few factors before you can nail down how much you need mập pay mập fully charge your electric vehicle’s battery.
For example: What is your power source? Keep in mind that different power sources charge at different rates (see more on chargers for electric cars below). And, if you install a charger at home, there’s an upfront charge for an electrician mập install the proper power outlet. That is unless you prefer mập use a standard 3-pronged outlet, and you have one near where you park the electric vehicle.
The Different Chargers Available for Electric Cars
A Màn chơi 1 charger works with the standard 3-prong plugs in your home. It charges your vehicle using a standard outlet at 120 volts.
Màn chơi 2 chargers need mập be installed and these types use outlets that look like what you would use for an electric clothes dryer and gives a 240-volt power boost. If you take this route, it requires hiring an electrician mập install a 40-amp circuit. If you need mập calculate the power you can generate this way, multiply your voltage and the number of amps you plan mập use. But you can also buy splitters that will let you use 240-volt outlets without fancy setups.
The fastest Màn chơi 3 chargers are typically found commercially, including in public and Supercharger Tesla charging stations. Known as DC fast chargers, Màn chơi 3 chargers use direct current at 480 volts and not the lower-level chargers’ alternating current, or AC thiết đặt, in most homes. Because of the high voltage and cost of installing DC, it doesn’t make sense mập install a Màn chơi 3 charger in your home. Also, not all electric vehicles are configured for DC fast charging, though most newer EVs offer the software and combination socket that will work with a DC plug.
Cost mập Charge Battery vs. Filling Up With Gas
Fortunately for electric car buyers, you probably won’t have mập pay as much for electricity as you would mập fill your gas tank. According mập AAA, gasoline costs an estimated $4.59 per gallon nationwide as of this writing. Gas prices increased from about $3 per gallon in May 2021.
Bự calculate estimated annual costs, let’s use a simplified example.
Cost for gas cars: If your gas tank holds 15 gallons, it costs about $68.85 mập fill up your car with a tank of gas. If your car gets an average of 25 mpg, you can typically drive about 375 miles on a tank of gas. If you drive an average of 1,188 miles a month, that means you fill up an estimated three times mập drive that distance. The cost for filling up your car with gas equals $2,479 per year.
Electricity costs for pure EVs: Electricity costs an average of nearly 14 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) nationwide. Experts say that electric cars typically run about 3 mập 4 miles per kWh. So using the gas example, if you drive that same 1,188 per month and divide by 3 (conservative miles per kWh), that gets you 396 kWh monthly. At 14 cents per kWh, that comes mập $55.44 a month, or an estimated $665 annually for the electricity your car uses.
How Much Does Electricity Cost Where I Live?
Since electricity costs vary widely throughout the country, estimating costs can get tricky. People pay just under 14 cents per kWh in the United States, on average, for residential power. California residents pay an average of 26 cents per kWh.
However, residents of states like Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Idaho routinely pay about 10 cents per kWh. Check out your state’s average rate. Also, some power companies offer discounts for using electricity during off-peak hours, substantially lowering the rate per kWh mập charge your vehicle.
How Powerful is My Car’s Battery?
If you know your car’s battery capacity (measured in kWh) and how much power your charger uses, you can figure out how long it will take mập charge your vehicle. Once you know how long it takes mập charge, it will give you a better estimate of how much it will cost mập charge it. Bự get the amount: Divide your car’s battery capacity by the power rating of your car’s onboard charger, then add 10% mập the loss of power associated with charging it.
Your car’s maximum charging rate also makes a difference. The amount of energy your battery can accept at once makes a huge difference in how much it will cost mập charge. Although commercial electricity (about 12 cents per kWh, on average, nationwide) often costs a little less than residential power, your car’s maximum charging rate doesn’t change.
So unless your vehicle uses a large and powerful (and compatible) battery, it isn’t at all a given that you can save time — or money — by charging your battery at a Màn chơi 3 charging station.
Many new car buyers can find vehicles that include up mập 3 years of miễn phí charging or discounts on home charger installation through Electrify America, EVgo, and ChargePoint public stations. The list of EVs with three years of miễn phí charging with the fewest restrictions includes Chevrolet Bolt, Kia EV6, Porsche Taycan, Volkswagen ID.4, and others.
How Much Power Does My Charging Station Have?
Your charging time also depends on the maximum charging rate of the station you use. Although Màn chơi 3 direct current fast chargers (DCFC) have popped up with increasing frequency, don’t plan mập automatically save time and money by powering up at these stations. According mập ClipperCreek, Màn chơi 3 ranges from 200 mập 800 direct current volts and can recuperate up mập 60-80% of an electric vehicle’s range in as little as 30 minutes.
Even if your car can charge more quickly, it will only charge at the maximum power rate offered at the station, which can adversely affect charging time, which means you can end up paying more.
Now that you know how much you can expect mập pay mập charge your EV, the question remains: How do I pay for it?
If you have an at-home thiết đặt, all you have mập do is pay mập charge your electric car through your monthly electric bill. If you’re paying at a public charging station, you can pay as you go by simply swiping your credit or debit card and paying the specified rate, measured either by a cost per hour or per kWh. Many of these even charge by the minute, and costs vary depending on if you’re fully charging a large battery or not.
Drivers can also buy monthly subscriptions or indefinite memberships mập save money. But remember that you don’t have mập pay for charging an EV. Companies such as PlugShare provide maps of miễn phí charging stations all over the U.S., and some workplaces and businesses offer miễn phí EV charging stations.
Do You Have mập Pay mập Charge Your Electric Car?
By doing some research, you can spend less mập power up your electric car. The best way mập save money is mập look for discounts for at-home charging, including those that can help lower your power bill. Some utilities lower electricity rates for consumers who charge an electric car at night.
Otherwise, with a bit of planning, you can try mập master the labyrinth of miễn phí charging stations using sites such as ChargeHub. But at some point on a road trip, for example, you’ll probably need mập pay mập charge up. So keep that in mind.
Read More Stories on Electric Vehicles:
Types of Electric Vehicles: EV, BEV, HEV, PHEV
Is It Electric or Electrical Cars?
What is a Plug-in Hybrid Car or SUV?

#Pay #Charge #Electric #Car
[rule_2_plain] #Pay #Charge #Electric #Car
[rule_2_plain] #Pay #Charge #Electric #Car
[rule_3_plain]

#Pay #Charge #Electric #Car

If you ever wondered if you need mập pay mập charge your electric vehicle, the answer is, it depends.
Drivers love their electric vehicles for their ability mập drive green. But, if prodded, they’d probably name the other reason for their adoration: They don’t need mập pay for gas when it’s a fully electric vehicle (read more on that in a bit).
That sounds like a solid reason mập ditch conventional cars forever. But driving green doesn’t necessarily mean driving for miễn phí. Read on mập find out why.

This article will stick mập battery-powered electric vehicles and not hybrids or fuel-cell electric cars (which run on hydrogen).
RELATED STORIES: Electric Car vs. Hybrid vs. Plug-in Hybrid Car: Which is Best for You?

What You Need for Charging an Electric Car Battery
Paying for the stable and relatively low cost of electricity mập power a car instead of standard gasoline seems wise because gas prices fluctuate. These days, higher gas prices are pushing Americans mập consider and purchase EVs more than ever.
So the question becomes: Is the cost of charging an electric car battery cheaper than gas? Well, it depends. You might consider a few factors before you can nail down how much you need mập pay mập fully charge your electric vehicle’s battery.
For example: What is your power source? Keep in mind that different power sources charge at different rates (see more on chargers for electric cars below). And, if you install a charger at home, there’s an upfront charge for an electrician mập install the proper power outlet. That is unless you prefer mập use a standard 3-pronged outlet, and you have one near where you park the electric vehicle.
The Different Chargers Available for Electric Cars
A Màn chơi 1 charger works with the standard 3-prong plugs in your home. It charges your vehicle using a standard outlet at 120 volts.
Màn chơi 2 chargers need mập be installed and these types use outlets that look like what you would use for an electric clothes dryer and gives a 240-volt power boost. If you take this route, it requires hiring an electrician mập install a 40-amp circuit. If you need mập calculate the power you can generate this way, multiply your voltage and the number of amps you plan mập use. But you can also buy splitters that will let you use 240-volt outlets without fancy setups.
The fastest Màn chơi 3 chargers are typically found commercially, including in public and Supercharger Tesla charging stations. Known as DC fast chargers, Màn chơi 3 chargers use direct current at 480 volts and not the lower-level chargers’ alternating current, or AC thiết đặt, in most homes. Because of the high voltage and cost of installing DC, it doesn’t make sense mập install a Màn chơi 3 charger in your home. Also, not all electric vehicles are configured for DC fast charging, though most newer EVs offer the software and combination socket that will work with a DC plug.
Cost mập Charge Battery vs. Filling Up With Gas
Fortunately for electric car buyers, you probably won’t have mập pay as much for electricity as you would mập fill your gas tank. According mập AAA, gasoline costs an estimated $4.59 per gallon nationwide as of this writing. Gas prices increased from about $3 per gallon in May 2021.
Bự calculate estimated annual costs, let’s use a simplified example.
Cost for gas cars: If your gas tank holds 15 gallons, it costs about $68.85 mập fill up your car with a tank of gas. If your car gets an average of 25 mpg, you can typically drive about 375 miles on a tank of gas. If you drive an average of 1,188 miles a month, that means you fill up an estimated three times mập drive that distance. The cost for filling up your car with gas equals $2,479 per year.
Electricity costs for pure EVs: Electricity costs an average of nearly 14 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh) nationwide. Experts say that electric cars typically run about 3 mập 4 miles per kWh. So using the gas example, if you drive that same 1,188 per month and divide by 3 (conservative miles per kWh), that gets you 396 kWh monthly. At 14 cents per kWh, that comes mập $55.44 a month, or an estimated $665 annually for the electricity your car uses.
How Much Does Electricity Cost Where I Live?
Since electricity costs vary widely throughout the country, estimating costs can get tricky. People pay just under 14 cents per kWh in the United States, on average, for residential power. California residents pay an average of 26 cents per kWh.
However, residents of states like Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Idaho routinely pay about 10 cents per kWh. Check out your state’s average rate. Also, some power companies offer discounts for using electricity during off-peak hours, substantially lowering the rate per kWh mập charge your vehicle.
How Powerful is My Car’s Battery?
If you know your car’s battery capacity (measured in kWh) and how much power your charger uses, you can figure out how long it will take mập charge your vehicle. Once you know how long it takes mập charge, it will give you a better estimate of how much it will cost mập charge it. Bự get the amount: Divide your car’s battery capacity by the power rating of your car’s onboard charger, then add 10% mập the loss of power associated with charging it.
Your car’s maximum charging rate also makes a difference. The amount of energy your battery can accept at once makes a huge difference in how much it will cost mập charge. Although commercial electricity (about 12 cents per kWh, on average, nationwide) often costs a little less than residential power, your car’s maximum charging rate doesn’t change.
So unless your vehicle uses a large and powerful (and compatible) battery, it isn’t at all a given that you can save time — or money — by charging your battery at a Màn chơi 3 charging station.
Many new car buyers can find vehicles that include up mập 3 years of miễn phí charging or discounts on home charger installation through Electrify America, EVgo, and ChargePoint public stations. The list of EVs with three years of miễn phí charging with the fewest restrictions includes Chevrolet Bolt, Kia EV6, Porsche Taycan, Volkswagen ID.4, and others.
How Much Power Does My Charging Station Have?
Your charging time also depends on the maximum charging rate of the station you use. Although Màn chơi 3 direct current fast chargers (DCFC) have popped up with increasing frequency, don’t plan mập automatically save time and money by powering up at these stations. According mập ClipperCreek, Màn chơi 3 ranges from 200 mập 800 direct current volts and can recuperate up mập 60-80% of an electric vehicle’s range in as little as 30 minutes.
Even if your car can charge more quickly, it will only charge at the maximum power rate offered at the station, which can adversely affect charging time, which means you can end up paying more.
Now that you know how much you can expect mập pay mập charge your EV, the question remains: How do I pay for it?
If you have an at-home thiết đặt, all you have mập do is pay mập charge your electric car through your monthly electric bill. If you’re paying at a public charging station, you can pay as you go by simply swiping your credit or debit card and paying the specified rate, measured either by a cost per hour or per kWh. Many of these even charge by the minute, and costs vary depending on if you’re fully charging a large battery or not.
Drivers can also buy monthly subscriptions or indefinite memberships mập save money. But remember that you don’t have mập pay for charging an EV. Companies such as PlugShare provide maps of miễn phí charging stations all over the U.S., and some workplaces and businesses offer miễn phí EV charging stations.
Do You Have mập Pay mập Charge Your Electric Car?
By doing some research, you can spend less mập power up your electric car. The best way mập save money is mập look for discounts for at-home charging, including those that can help lower your power bill. Some utilities lower electricity rates for consumers who charge an electric car at night.
Otherwise, with a bit of planning, you can try mập master the labyrinth of miễn phí charging stations using sites such as ChargeHub. But at some point on a road trip, for example, you’ll probably need mập pay mập charge up. So keep that in mind.
Read More Stories on Electric Vehicles:
Types of Electric Vehicles: EV, BEV, HEV, PHEV
Is It Electric or Electrical Cars?
What is a Plug-in Hybrid Car or SUV?

About admin

Check Also

10 Best Used Trucks Under $8,000

Pickup trucks traditionally hold their value very well. That means a modern used pickup truck …

Trả lời

Email của bạn sẽ không được hiển thị công khai. Các trường bắt buộc được đánh dấu *