Showing New Zealand · real 2026 prices

What does it cost to charge your EV at home?

Enter your battery, charge level and tariff. We'll show the cost, the charging time and what it works out to per 100km.

Your car & setup

Adjust to match your EV and electricity plan.

kWh
Small (40) Mid (60) Large (77) XL (100)
%
c/kWh
Solar (5) Off-peak (15) Mixed (25) Flat rate (33)
kW
Powerpoint (2.4) Home AC (7.4) 3-phase (11) Fast AC (22)

Your charge

This charge costs
$5.40
to add 36 kWh
Charging time
~4h 52m
Cost per 100km
$2.67
Full charge (0–100%)
$10.00
Range added
~225 km

Estimate only. Assumes ~10% charging losses. Real charging slows near 100%, so time is approximate. Range and per-100 figures assume a typical EV efficiency.

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How we work it out

Transparent maths you can trust — every figure is yours to change.

Your charge cost is the energy added to the battery (its usable size times the percentage you top up), divided by charging efficiency (~90%), times your electricity price; time is that energy divided by your charger's power. Defaults reflect current NZ figures — an EV night plan is far cheaper, so set yours. Estimates only, not financial advice.

How much does it cost to charge an EV at home in New Zealand?

Home charging is the cheapest way to run an EV in NZ — cheapest of all on a dedicated EV night plan.

On an EV night rate (around 13–20c/kWh) charging is a fraction of the ~30c standard rate; topping a typical 60 kWh battery from 20% to 80% costs only a few dollars. Public DC fast charging is far dearer at roughly 60–85c/kWh, so most owners charge overnight and fast-charge mainly on trips.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers about home EV charging costs.

How much does it cost to fully charge an EV at home?

Divide the battery size by 0.9 (to cover charging losses) and multiply by your per-kWh rate. A 60 kWh battery at a 25c/kWh mixed tariff costs about $16–17 from empty to full; on an off-peak overnight rate it can be under $10. The calculator above does this for any battery and rate.

Why does charging use more energy than the battery holds?

Around 10% of the electricity is lost as heat in the on-board charger and cabling during AC charging. That’s why the calculator divides the energy added by 0.9 — you pay for what comes out of the wall, not what ends up in the battery.

How long will a charge take?

Energy added divided by charger power. Adding 36 kWh (a 20–80% top-up on a 60 kWh battery) takes about 5 hours on a 7 kW wall box, or roughly 18 hours on a portable 2 kW charger from a normal socket. Most owners simply plug in overnight.

What’s the cheapest way to charge?

Off-peak overnight tariffs and rooftop solar are by far the cheapest — often a third of the standard rate or less. Public DC fast charging is the most expensive option, typically several times the home rate, so it’s best kept for road trips.

Should I charge to 100% every day?

Many manufacturers recommend a day-to-day limit of about 80% for battery longevity on standard lithium-ion packs, saving 100% charges for longer trips — while many LFP-battery models are happy being charged to full. Check your car’s manual; the cost maths here works the same either way.