What does it cost to charge an EV in Kansas?
At Kansas’s average electricity rate of 15¢/kWh, a typical driver (13,500 mi/yr, mostly home charging) spends about $816 a year — roughly 6.0¢ per mile, and around $834 less than the same miles in a 27 MPG gas car. Run your own numbers below.
Independent estimate for guidance only. Time-of-use rates, your specific EV and public-charging habits will change the real figure.
Why Kansas charging costs what it does
Kansas homes pay about 15¢/kWh, which is 3.4¢ below the US average. Because home electricity is the main driver of EV running cost, that puts Kansas drivers toward the cheaper end for charging. Charging more at home (versus public fast-charging at $0.40–0.50/kWh) lowers it further.
Kansas electricity price trend
Average residential rate, monthly, May 2023 – Apr 2026. Up 14% over the period.
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), Electric Power Monthly · range 12.72–15.78¢/kWh
A worked example for Kansas
Average driver: 13,500 miles a year, 3.3 mi/kWh, 85% charged at home.
Gas comparison: 27 MPG at $3.30/gal. Adjust everything in the calculator above.
Cut it further with solar
If you charge at home, your EV runs on whatever your roof or the grid supplies. Pairing an EV with rooftop solar can drop your effective charging cost well below the grid rate — see whether that maths works where you live with our Kansas solar payback calculator.