Free · BC Hydro verified rates

What does charging an EV really cost in BC?

Most cost calculators guess. This one uses real BC Hydro Time-of-Day math to show your true charging cost — and exactly how much you save versus your old gas car.

Runs in your browser — nothing leaves your device 🍁 Built for BC drivers 🔄 Rates re-verified quarterly

Your real charging cost, in 30 seconds

Pick your EV, set how you drive, and see cost per 100 km, monthly cost, and your savings vs gas.

Answers buyers actually agonize over

Every other tool is a logbook for cars you already own. This answers the expensive questions before you spend.

🔌

True cost to charge

Blended home + public rates on BC Hydro's overnight discount — not a flat national average.

EV vs your gas car

Side-by-side cost per 100 km and 1/3/5-year savings against the car you drive today.

❄️

Honest winter math

Toggle real-world consumption — factory WLTP numbers are optimistic for BC winters.

Get the free BC EV cost cheat-sheet

Drop your email and we'll send the one-page BC charging & rebate cheat-sheet — plus a heads-up when rates change. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Self-hosted email, stored on our own server. We never sell your data.

BC EV cost guides

Plain-English answers to the questions BC drivers ask before going electric.

BC EV charging — common questions

How much does it cost to charge an EV in BC?

On BC Hydro's residential rate (~13.1¢/kWh in 2026), charging overnight on the off-peak discount works out to roughly 8¢/kWh. For a typical EV using ~17 kWh/100km, that's about $1.40–$2.10 per 100 km — a fraction of gas. Full breakdown →

Is an EV actually cheaper than gas in BC?

Almost always, yes. At ~$1.95/L, a gas car burning 9.5 L/100 km costs about $18.50 per 100 km. The same distance in an EV on home off-peak power is often under $2. For 15,000 km/year that's typically $2,000–$2,500 in annual fuel savings. See the comparison →

Do I need a Level 2 charger?

Often not. If your daily driving fits within an overnight Level 1 (standard plug) charge, a Level 2 charger is convenience, not savings. How to decide →

What EV charger rebates can I get in BC in 2026?

BC drivers can typically stack the CleanBC home charger rebate (50% of cost up to $350), a BC Hydro EV power-management device top-up ($200), and BC Hydro Peak Saver credits. The full rebate stack →

Does this tool send my data anywhere?

No. The calculator runs entirely in your browser — every number stays on your device, with no tracking that phones home. If you join the email list, that's stored on our own self-hosted server, never sold or handed to a third party.