EVGasCompare

EV Charging Costs in Kansas 2026

Home rate: 12.7¢/kWh (3.4¢ below the national average). Charging 12,000 mi/yr at home costs $435. EV drivers save $769/year vs a gas car in Kansas.

Home rate: 12.7¢/kWh
Gas price: $3.01/gal
Annual fuel savings: $769/yr
12.7¢
Home Rate (kWh)
$435
Annual (Home)
27.5¢
Supercharger (kWh)
$769
Annual Savings

Charging Cost Comparison in Kansas

Charging Method Rate (¢/kWh) Cost/Mile Annual (12K mi)
Home Charging 12.7¢ 3.6¢ $435
Public Level 2 31.8¢ 9.1¢ $1090
DC Fast Charging 34.3¢ 9.8¢ $1176
Tesla Supercharger (member) 27.5¢ 7.9¢ $943
Gas Car (30 MPG) $3.01/gal 10.0¢ $1204

Based on 12,000 miles/year at 3.5 mi/kWh efficiency. Gas car: 30 MPG at $3.01/gal. Supercharger rates estimated — check Tesla app for exact station pricing.

EV vs Gas Cost in Kansas

$769
Annual fuel savings
$3,845
5-year savings
3.6¢ vs 10.0¢
EV vs gas per mile

Kansas's electricity rate of 12.7¢/kWh is 3.4¢ below the national average of 16.1¢/kWh. Gas at $3.01/gal is $0.19 below the $3.2/gal national average.

EV Incentives in Kansas

No State EV Rebate
No state EV rebate program.

Tesla Supercharger Pricing in Kansas

27.5¢/kWh
Tesla members
34.2¢/kWh
Non-members (pay-as-you-go)

Supercharger rates in Kansas are estimated at 27.5¢/kWh for members — that's 117% more than the home rate of 12.7¢/kWh. Annual cost for 12,000 miles at Supercharger rates: ~$943 vs $435 at home. Always check the Tesla app for exact current station pricing.

See full Kansas Supercharger station breakdown →

EV Charging in Kansas: What the Numbers Mean

Kansas's residential electricity rate is 12.7¢/kWh — 3.4¢ below the national average of 16.1¢/kWh, which works in EV owners' favor. At that rate, a typical EV (3.5 mi/kWh) costs $435/year to charge at home for 12,000 miles.

Compared to a 30 MPG gas car at $3.01/gal ($1204/year for the same miles), EV home charging saves $769/year — $3,845 over 5 years, before incentives.

Home Charging vs Public Charging in Kansas

The biggest driver of EV cost is where you charge. Home charging at 12.7¢/kWh is always the cheapest option. Public Level 2 stations average around 31.8¢/kWh — 2.5x more expensive. DC fast chargers run about 34.3¢/kWh. Tesla Superchargers in Kansas are estimated at 27.5¢–34.2¢/kWh depending on membership.

Most EV owners do 80%+ of their charging at home overnight. If you don't have home charging access, the economics shift significantly — charging entirely at public DC fast chargers would cost $1176/year in Kansas, narrowing the gap with gas considerably.