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Tesla Supercharger Pricing in Kansas (2026)

Member rate: 27.5¢/kWh — non-member: 34.2¢/kWh. Approximately 22 Supercharger stations in Kansas. Home charging in Kansas costs 12.7¢/kWh — Superchargers run 117–169% more.

27.5¢
Member Rate (kWh)
34.2¢
Non-Member Rate
22
Stations in Kansas
7.2¢
Cost Per Mile (member)

Charging Cost Comparison in Kansas

Charging Option Rate (¢/kWh) Cost Per Mile 12,000 mi/yr
Home Charging (cheapest) 12.7¢ 3.3¢ $401
Tesla Supercharger (member) 27.5¢ 7.2¢ $868
Tesla Supercharger (non-member) 34.2¢ 9.0¢ $1080
Gas Car (28 MPG) $3.01/gal 10.8¢ $1290

Assumes 3.8 mi/kWh EV efficiency, 12,000 miles/year. Tesla Supercharger rates estimated from state electricity pricing (Tesla correlates network rates with local grid costs). Home rate: EIA 2025 residential average for Kansas. Gas: AAA state average.

Member vs Non-Member: Is It Worth It in Kansas?

Tesla Member
27.5¢/kWh
Free Tesla account
$868/yr at Superchargers
Non-Member
34.2¢/kWh
Pay-as-you-go, no account
$1080/yr at Superchargers
Member pricing saves $212/year ($2.01 per 30 kWh session). Creating a free Tesla account takes minutes.

Tesla Supercharger Pricing in Kansas: What to Know

Tesla sets Supercharger rates based on local electricity market conditions. In Kansas, where residential electricity averages 12.7¢/kWh, Supercharger member pricing runs around 27.5¢/kWh — roughly 117% above home rates. That premium reflects the cost of Tesla's high-speed charging infrastructure, land, and maintenance.

There are approximately 22 Tesla Supercharger stations in Kansas. Most stations offer 150–250 kW V3 chargers capable of adding 200+ miles in 15 minutes. V2 stations (typically 72–150 kW) are still active in some locations and charge at the same per-kWh rate but deliver power more slowly.

For everyday charging in Kansas, home charging at 12.7¢/kWh is the most cost-effective option at $401/year for 12,000 miles. Use Superchargers for road trips and situations where home charging isn't available — not as a primary charging strategy.

Cost Scenarios at Kansas Supercharger Rates

Top off 20 kWh (50 → 100 miles of range)
$5.5 member
$6.84 non-member
Long trip charge 50 kWh (10% → 80%, ~190 miles)
$13.75 member
$17.1 non-member
Full session 75 kWh (empty → full, ~285 miles)
$20.63 member
$25.65 non-member

Estimates based on 27.5¢/kWh (member) and 34.2¢/kWh (non-member). Actual kWh varies by battery size and efficiency.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Tesla Supercharger cost per kWh in Kansas?

Tesla Supercharger rates in Kansas are approximately 27.5¢/kWh for members and 34.2¢/kWh for non-members. Rates vary by specific station location and can fluctuate with peak-demand pricing at busy stations. Creating a free Tesla account ensures you always pay the lower member rate.

How many Tesla Supercharger stations are in Kansas?

There are approximately 22 Tesla Supercharger stations in Kansas. Tesla continuously expands its network, so current counts may be higher. Use the Tesla app or tesla.com/findus for exact locations, availability, and stall counts at each station.

How does Supercharger pricing compare to home charging in Kansas?

Home charging in Kansas costs 12.7¢/kWh — the residential electricity average. Tesla Supercharger member rates run 27.5¢/kWh, which is 117% more than home. For 12,000 miles per year, home charging costs $401 vs $868 at Superchargers. Most Tesla owners charge ~85% at home and use Superchargers mainly for long trips.

Can non-Tesla EVs use Superchargers in Kansas?

Yes. Tesla has opened many Supercharger stations to non-Tesla EVs via the Tesla app. Non-Tesla vehicles using the Magic Dock adapter (available at select stations) pay the non-member rate of 34.2¢/kWh. Not all Kansas stations have been opened to non-Tesla vehicles yet — check the Tesla app for which stations allow non-Tesla charging.

Data Sources & Methodology

Home electricity rate for Kansas: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Electric Power Monthly, 2025 residential averages. Tesla Supercharger rates estimated based on state electricity pricing — Tesla correlates network rates with local grid costs. Station count: approximate as of Q1 2026 (verify current count at tesla.com/findus). Gas price: AAA 2024 state average. Last updated: March 2026.