EVGasCompare

EV Charging Cost: Texas vs Colorado (2026)

Texas electricity runs 14.1¢/kWh vs 14.2¢/kWh in Colorado. At 12,000 miles/year, that's $3/year less to charge at home.

Texas

14.1¢

per kWh

$445/year

-2.0¢ vs national avg

Colorado

14.2¢

per kWh

$448/year

-1.9¢ vs national avg

Texas vs Colorado — EV Charging Breakdown

Home charging at 12,000 miles/year (3.8 mi/kWh efficiency). Green = lower cost.

Metric Texas Colorado
Electricity rate 14.1¢/kWh 14.2¢/kWh
Cost per mile (EV) 3.7¢/mi 3.7¢/mi
Annual home charging $445/yr $448/yr
Gas savings vs EV $789/yr $958/yr

EIA 2025 residential rates. 12,000 mi/year at 3.8 mi/kWh. Gas savings vs. 28 MPG car at state avg pump price. Home charging only — public L2 runs ~2–3× more, DCFC ~3–4×.

Annual Cost Impact

At 12,000 miles/year, home EV charging costs $445/year in Texas vs $448/year in Colorado. Texas comes out $3/year ahead.

Monthly savings

$0

Annual savings

$3

5-year savings

$15

Rate difference

0.1¢

Savings = Colorado minus Texas home charging cost at 12,000 miles/year.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is EV charging cheaper in Texas or Colorado?

Texas at 14.1¢/kWh vs. 14.2¢/kWh in Colorado. At 12,000 miles/year, that gap is $3/year — real money over a 5-year lease or ownership period.

How much does an EV cost to charge annually in each state?

At home (100% home charging): Texas runs $445/year, Colorado runs $448/year. Switching from public L2 charging adds roughly 2.5× on top of the home rate.

How much does an EV save on fuel vs. a gas car in Texas?

In Texas, a 28-MPG gas car costs about $1234/year in fuel. An EV at 14.1¢/kWh costs $445/year — roughly $789/year less.

Do electricity rates vary within a state?

Yes. Statewide averages hide real spread between utilities. California's PG&E customers pay well above the state average, while LADWP customers pay less. If you're buying an EV, check your specific utility's EV rate — many offer off-peak discounts that cut the effective rate by 30–50%.