EV vs. Gas Cost in Texas (2026)
In Texas, gas averages about $3.67/gallon and home electricity about $0.15/kWh. Driving 13,000 miles a year, that's roughly $1,908 in gas versus about $574 to charge an EV at home — about $1,334/year before purchase price, maintenance, and resale.
The federal EV tax credit is now $0 (it ended for vehicles acquired after September 30, 2025), so these numbers don't assume a $7,500 discount that no longer exists.
Calculate my Texas EV savings →Frequently asked
- Is an EV worth it in Texas?
- Fuel-only savings are roughly $1,334/yr at home vs gas at $3.67/gal; total depends on price, miles, years — run your numbers above.
- How much does it cost to charge an EV in Texas?
- About $574/year for 13,000 mi at $0.15/kWh and ~3.4 mi/kWh; time-of-use/overnight rates can be much lower.
- Are there EV tax credits in Texas in 2026?
- Federal $7,500/$4,000 credits ended Sept 30, 2025; some state/utility rebates may still apply — check your utility and state energy office.
Heads up — Texas charges EVs an annual fee. Texas assesses a $200/year registration fee on fully electric vehicles (10,000 lbs or less), plus $400 at initial registration covering the first two years — effective September 1, 2023. Over 7 years that's roughly $1,400 in added ownership cost, so factor it into your savings. Source: Texas DMV; Transportation Code §502.360.
State & local incentives
EV rebates, credits, and fees change often — many states and local utilities offer their own, and some states charge an EV-specific annual registration fee. Before you buy, check the current rules for Texas in the U.S. Department of Energy's official database.