ev-vs-gas-cost-calculator

Live Calculator • Operating Cost Comparison

EV vs. ICE: Operating Costs Calculator

Compare $/Year and $/km including energy/fuel, maintenance, insurance, tax, depreciation (optional), and additional costs. Includes savings highlight & break-even estimation.

The Advantage (per Year)
Inputs
Tip: 12,000–20,000 km is typical for many commuters.
Electric (EV)
Combustion (ICE)
The rest is calculated at the "Public" price.
Distributed over "Amortization (Years)".
Optional: Parking, tolls, tire storage, etc.
Depreciation / Purchase Price (optional, but recommended) Pro Mode
Depreciation = (Purchase Price − Residual Value) / Years. Set values to 0 if you don't want to calculate this.
Results
updated: —
Electric (EV)
Combustion (ICE)
Cost Comparison (Visual)
The longer the bar, the higher the cost.
EV
ICE

How to use the EV vs. Combustion Operating Costs Calculator

This calculator helps you realistically compare the running costs of an electric car with an internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicle – without sales hype. First, enter your annual mileage, as this is the biggest factor: the more kilometers you drive, the greater the impact of energy or fuel costs.

For the electric car, the calculator uses your consumption in kWh/100 km and a mixed electricity price. Why mixed? Because charging at home is usually cheaper than charging on the road. You can set the home charging share and enter prices for both "Home" and "Public." This gives you a result that is closer to reality than a single average value.

Then come the "hidden" costs: maintenance & wear, insurance, and vehicle tax. For combustion vehicles, you can also enter oil/fluids/misc. There is an optional "Other Costs" field if you want to include parking, tolls, or seasonal extras.

The most important professional lever is depreciation. Many comparisons seem unfair because only electricity vs. fuel is considered. In Pro Mode, you enter the purchase price, residual value percentage, and duration of use. The calculator distributes the depreciation as an annual amount. This allows for a much better comparison of "Total Cost of Ownership." You can leave Pro Mode deactivated or set individual fields to 0.

In the results, you will see $/Year and $/km for both drives, a clear breakdown, and a visual bar comparison. Additionally, the calculator computes a break-even estimate: if the EV is cheaper per year in your configuration, it shows roughly how many years it takes to "repay" a potential higher purchase price. This is not a guarantee, but a helpful decision anchor.

Note: Results are based on model calculations. Regional tariffs, driving profile, tires, charging losses, electricity rates, subsidies, tax rules, and workshop prices may vary. Use this calculator as a decision aid, not as tax or legal advice.

FAQ

Why is the home charging share so important?
Because the price difference between home charging and public charging can be significant. If you charge predominantly at home, energy costs per km often drop drastically. If you use fast chargers on the road frequently, the advantage may decrease – the calculator models this through the percentage mix.
Does the calculator include charging losses (AC/DC)?
Not automatically. If you want to calculate conservatively, increase the consumption by a few percentage points (e.g., 17.5 → 18.5 kWh/100 km). This allows you to account for losses and winter effects as a flat rate.
How do I enter maintenance realistically?
Use your previous averages (inspection, brakes, tires) or set a higher value for combustion vehicles if you regularly have oil services, exhaust/engine parts, or clutch issues. Brakes are often cheaper on EVs, but tires can be similar depending on the vehicle.
What does "Depreciation" mean in Pro Mode?
Depreciation is usually the largest cost block. The calculator uses: (Purchase Price − Residual Value) / Years. You enter the residual value as a percentage. Example: $40,000 purchase price, 45% residual value after 6 years → $18,000 residual value, $22,000 loss / 6 ≈ $3,667 per year.
Is the break-even reliable?
Break-even is an approximation: price difference divided by annual savings. It is useful for understanding the order of magnitude. It does not replace individual advice but quickly shows whether your assumptions "pay off" or "don't."
Can I save or share my settings?
Yes. "Save Inputs" stores your values in the browser (localStorage). "Share Settings" creates a link with parameters that you can copy – ideal for comparing scenarios or sending them to someone.

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