EVGasCompare

About EVGasCompare

The sticker price gap between EVs and gas cars has narrowed to a few thousand dollars on comparable vehicles. The real question is 5-year total cost. EVGasCompare works through fuel savings, tax credits, depreciation, and insurance to show what you actually spend — not just what you pay at purchase.

How the Calculator Works

Every estimate on this site is built from publicly available sources: government surveys, industry reports, and trade association data. We don't use made-up "average" figures. When we say median cost is $X, there's a source behind that number.

The calculator takes your inputs and applies regional cost factors where we have them. Costs vary a lot by location. A home renovation in San Francisco costs twice what it does in rural Ohio. We account for that when the data supports it.

Outputs are estimates, not quotes. The number you see is a reasonable starting point for budgeting and comparison. The actual number you'll pay depends on specifics we can't know from a calculator: your contractor, your timeline, what you find inside the walls when demo starts.

Our Data Sources

DOE Alternative Fuels Data Center, EIA state-level residential electricity prices, EPA fuel economy ratings database, IRS EV tax credit schedules (Inflation Reduction Act, updated 2025), and J.D. Power depreciation data by make and model.

We do not accept payment from service providers to influence estimates. The numbers on this site are not adjusted to favor any vendor, brand, or category.

Who Made This

EVGasCompare is part of a small collection of cost calculator sites built and maintained in Sacramento, CA. We're a tiny operation. No VC funding, no content farm, no sponsored results. Just a site trying to be useful.

If you find a number that seems wrong, we want to know. Outdated or inaccurate data is the thing we care most about fixing. The goal is accuracy, and we'd rather be corrected than confidently wrong.

A Note on Estimates

Cost calculators have a real limitation: they can't see your project. They work from statistical distributions, not your specific situation. Use the numbers here to get oriented, understand the range of what you might pay, and know what questions to ask when you talk to an actual professional.

The estimate you see here is not a contract, not a guarantee, and not financial advice. It's a reasonable ballpark based on publicly available data.

Built in Sacramento, CA. Last updated March 2026.