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    EV vs Gas: Actual Cost for a 50‑Mile Daily Commute in 2026
    Ownership & Costs·9 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    EV vs Gas: Actual Cost for a 50‑Mile Daily Commute in 2026

    ev-vs-gascommuting-costscost-per-mileev-savingstotal-cost-of-ownershipused-evshome-chargingpublic-chargingfuel-prices-2026

    Table of Contents

    • How much does a 50‑mile commute cost: EV vs gas?
    • Baseline assumptions for 2026 numbers
    • Step‑by‑step cost for a 50‑mile commute
    • Monthly and annual commuting costs
    • Simple calculator: use your own numbers
    • When gas can be competitive – or even cheaper
    • Other costs beyond fuel or electricity
    • How a used EV changes your commute math
    • Tips to cut your EV commute costs even more
    • EV vs gas cost for 50‑mile commute: FAQ
    • Bottom line: should you commute 50 miles in an EV?

    If you drive about 50 miles a day, the question isn’t “Are EVs cheaper than gas?”, it’s **“How much cheaper for my commute, right now?”** In 2026, energy prices have shifted again, so let’s put hard numbers on the **EV vs gas cost for a 50‑mile commute**, using realistic U.S. averages and easy formulas you can reuse.

    Quick answer

    For a typical U.S. commuter in 2026 driving 50 miles per workday and charging at home, an efficient EV often costs around **$3–$4 per day**, while a comparable gas car is closer to **$6–$9 per day**, depending on fuel economy and local prices.

    How much does a 50‑mile commute cost: EV vs gas?

    Typical 2026 daily cost for a 50‑mile commute

    $3–$4
    EV (home charging)
    Efficient EV, average U.S. residential electricity
    $6–$9
    Gas car
    Typical 27–30 mpg compact/crossover at ~$3.10–$4.00/gal
    ~50–65%
    Typical savings
    Energy cost reduction when you switch from gas to EV for commuting

    Those are broad ranges. To make this useful for you, we’ll walk through: - The **assumptions** behind the numbers (electricity price, gas price, efficiency) - **Exact per‑day, per‑month, and per‑year** costs for a 50‑mile round‑trip commute - A **plug‑and‑play formula** so you can drop in your own local rates - Situations where **gas can still be competitive**, especially with very efficient hybrids or expensive electricity Let’s start with the ground rules.

    Baseline assumptions for 2026 numbers

    Energy prices move around, but to make a fair comparison we’ll use **recent U.S. averages** and round slightly so the math is easy to follow. You can fine‑tune later for your ZIP code.

    Baseline assumptions for this comparison

    You can swap in your actual numbers later, but these 2026 averages keep the examples realistic.

    ItemEV baselineGas car baseline
    Energy price$0.18 per kWh (home)$3.10 per gallon (2025 avg) to about $4.00 in early 2026
    Efficiency (typical commuter car)28 kWh/100 miles (≈3.6 mi/kWh)30 mpg for a compact / small crossover
    Commute distance50 miles round trip, 5 days/weekSame
    Workdays per year240–250 (we’ll use 250 to be conservative)Same

    All costs in U.S. dollars; miles are real‑world combined driving, not EPA lab figures.

    Reality check: your local prices matter

    If you live somewhere with **$0.30+ electricity** and cheap gas, your EV advantage will shrink. If you live in a state with **low power prices and $4+ gas**, the gap swings even harder toward EVs. That’s why I’ll give you a simple calculator you can adjust in a minute or two.

    Step‑by‑step cost for a 50‑mile commute

    1. Cost per mile: the key starting point

    EV cost per mile (home charging)

    General formula:

    EV cost per mile = (Electricity price × kWh per 100 miles) ÷ 100

    Using our baseline:

    • Electricity price: $0.18/kWh
    • EV efficiency: 28 kWh/100 miles

    So:

    ($0.18 × 28) ÷ 100 = $0.0504 per mile

    That’s just about 5 cents per mile.

    Gas car cost per mile

    General formula:

    Gas cost per mile = Gas price ÷ MPG

    Using our baseline:

    • Gas price: $3.10/gal (recent U.S. average)
    • Fuel economy: 30 mpg

    So:

    $3.10 ÷ 30 ≈ $0.103 per mile

    That’s a little over 10 cents per mile, about double the EV’s energy cost at home.

    2. Daily cost for a 50‑mile commute

    Now we just multiply **cost per mile × 50 miles**.

    Daily energy cost for a 50‑mile round‑trip commute

    Using the baseline EV and gas assumptions above.

    Vehicle typeCost per mileDaily commute cost (50 mi)
    Efficient EV (home charging)$0.05/mi≈ $2.50 per day
    Typical gas car (30 mpg, $3.10/gal)$0.10–$0.11/mi≈ $5.15 per day
    Same gas car at $4.00/gal≈$0.13/mi≈ $6.67 per day

    Round numbers make this easy to sanity‑check against your own experience.

    Think in “price per gallon equivalent”

    At 3.6 miles per kWh, paying $0.18/kWh feels like driving a gas car that gets 30 mpg on roughly **$1.80/gallon** fuel. That’s why EVs look cheap even when electricity isn’t “low” by historic standards.
    Simple side‑by‑side comparison graphic showing daily cost of a 50 mile commute in an electric car versus a gasoline car
    For many commuters, home‑charged EVs cut daily energy cost in half versus a similar gas car.

    Monthly and annual commuting costs

    Most people budget by the month, not by the mile. So let’s take that 50‑mile daily commute and stretch it over a typical work year. We’ll assume **250 commuting days** (roughly 5 days a week with vacations and holidays).

    What a 50‑mile commute costs over a full year

    250 commuting days per year, 50 miles per day.

    Vehicle typeDaily costAnnual milesAnnual energy cost
    Efficient EV (home charging)≈$2.5012,500≈ $625 per year
    Gas car (30 mpg, $3.10/gal)≈$5.1512,500≈ $1,290 per year
    Gas car (30 mpg, $4.00/gal)≈$6.6712,500≈ $1,670 per year

    If your work schedule is lighter, you can scale these numbers down proportionally.

    Typical annual savings

    In this 50‑mile‑a‑day scenario, a home‑charged EV often saves around **$600–$1,000 per year** on energy alone compared with a run‑of‑the‑mill gas car. Stretch that over five years and you’re talking **$3,000–$5,000** that doesn’t go into the pump.

    Simple calculator: use your own numbers

    You don’t need a fancy app to work this out. A couple of quick formulas will tell you exactly what **your** EV vs gas cost for a 50‑mile commute looks like, using your local rates and your actual car or candidate EV.

    DIY commute cost calculator (5‑minute exercise)

    1. Gather four key numbers for your EV

    You’ll need: (a) your electricity price in $/kWh (from your utility bill), (b) your EV’s efficiency in kWh/100 miles or miles/kWh (from the window sticker or trip computer), (c) your one‑way commute distance, and (d) your commuting days per week.

    2. Calculate EV cost per mile

    If you have kWh/100 miles, use:<br><code>EV $/mi = (Electricity price × kWh per 100 mi) ÷ 100</code><br>If you have miles per kWh, use:<br><code>EV $/mi = Electricity price ÷ mi per kWh</code>.

    3. Do the same for your gas car

    You’ll need: (a) your average gas price, and (b) your car’s real‑world mpg. Then:<br><code>Gas $/mi = Gas price ÷ MPG</code>.

    4. Turn per‑mile into daily and monthly cost

    Daily cost is:<br><code>Daily cost = Cost per mile × round‑trip miles</code><br>Monthly cost is just that daily number × your commuting days per month.

    5. Compare annual totals, not just monthly

    Multiply your monthly estimate by 12. That gives you a clear, apples‑to‑apples **annual commute cost** that’s easier to compare with things like insurance, maintenance, or a slightly higher car payment on an EV.

    Shortcut for rule‑of‑thumb shoppers

    If you don’t feel like doing the math, a reasonable 2026 rule of thumb is: **a typical EV costs about half as much per mile in energy as a similarly‑sized gas car**, as long as you’re charging mostly at home.

    When gas can be competitive – or even cheaper

    There are real‑world situations where a gas car, usually a very efficient hybrid, can match or even beat an EV on **energy cost alone** for a 50‑mile commute. Understanding these edge cases keeps you from being surprised later.

    Scenarios where gas narrows the gap

    It’s all about efficiency and local energy prices.

    Ultra‑efficient hybrid (45–55 mpg)

    At 50 mpg and $3.10/gal, your fuel cost is about **6.2¢/mi**, similar to an EV charged at home in a high‑cost electricity market.

    Very expensive electricity

    If you’re paying **$0.30–$0.35/kWh** at home and your EV averages 30 kWh/100 mi, your energy cost can creep above **9¢/mi**, which narrows or erases the savings versus a good hybrid.

    Heavy reliance on fast charging

    DC fast charging can cost **2–3× home rates**. If a big chunk of your commuting is done on public fast chargers, the EV advantage shrinks quickly.

    Beware of headline claims

    You’ll sometimes see claims like “EVs are always 4× cheaper than gas.” That was closer to the truth when gas was $4.50+/gal and electricity was $0.12/kWh. In 2026, the edge is still very real, but **it depends on what you drive and where you live**.

    Other costs beyond fuel or electricity

    Focusing only on “fuel” (gas or electricity) understates the long‑term advantage EVs can offer, especially for a high‑mileage commuter. Over 5–10 years, **maintenance, repairs, and depreciation** often matter as much as the pump or plug.

    EV ownership costs that help you

    • Less routine maintenance: No oil changes, fewer moving parts, and regenerative braking can stretch brake pad life.
    • Predictable “fuel” costs: You’re largely insulated from gas price spikes when conflict or supply shocks hit.
    • Home charging convenience: You’re effectively “filling up” while you sleep, which has real time value even if it doesn’t show up on a spreadsheet.

    Costs that work against you

    • Higher purchase price: New EVs can still carry a price premium versus similar gas models, though used EV pricing has become very competitive.
    • Public charging markups: Relying heavily on DC fast charging can push your per‑mile cost close to, or above, efficient gas cars.
    • Battery health anxiety: On older EVs, you’ll want solid data on battery condition, not just a guess from the dash.

    Where Recharged fits in

    If you’re comparing a used EV to a used gas car for a long commute, the **battery is your engine**. Every EV Recharged sells includes a Recharged Score Report with verified battery health and pricing that reflects real‑world range, so you’re not guessing how that 50‑mile commute will feel five winters from now.

    How a used EV changes your commute math

    The energy‑cost math we’ve walked through doesn’t care whether your EV is brand‑new or five years old. But your **up‑front price and long‑term value** absolutely do. That’s where used EVs can shine for commuters willing to do a bit of homework.

    Why commuters often love used EVs

    Especially if you’re stacking 12,000+ miles a year in mostly predictable driving.

    Depreciation already happened

    Many EVs take their biggest depreciation hit in the first 3–4 years. Buying used means you get that low per‑mile energy cost **without paying the original sticker price**.

    Range needs are modest

    A 50‑mile round‑trip commute is well within the capabilities of older EVs, even accounting for some battery degradation. You don’t need 350 miles of range to drive 50 miles a day comfortably.

    Look beyond odometer miles

    When you’re shopping used, ask (or look) for **battery health data**, not just mileage. Recharged’s Experience Center in Richmond, VA and our digital retail experience nationwide use battery diagnostics to give you a clear picture, so you’re not buying blind.

    Tips to cut your EV commute costs even more

    If you’re already leaning toward an EV, the good news is that you have a lot of control over your actual **cents‑per‑mile** number. Small changes in how and when you charge can make that 50‑mile commute even cheaper.

    Practical ways to lower EV commuting costs

    1. Charge off‑peak when possible

    Many utilities offer cheaper rates overnight. If your plan has time‑of‑use pricing, schedule charging after the off‑peak window starts, your cost per mile can drop dramatically.

    2. Keep tires properly inflated

    Low tire pressure hurts efficiency on both EVs and gas cars. Check pressures monthly; it’s cheap, easy, and can save you real money over 12,500+ miles a year.

    3. Use eco modes and gentle acceleration

    Most modern EVs have drive modes that soften throttle response and tweak climate settings. Over the course of a year, those small efficiency gains add up.

    4. Limit DC fast charging for daily use

    Reserve DC fast charging for trips and occasional top‑offs. Relying on it for daily commuting not only costs more per kWh; it can also add unnecessary stress to the battery over time.

    5. Precondition while plugged in

    On cold or very hot days, pre‑heat or pre‑cool the cabin while the car is still plugged in. That way you’re using grid power, not battery power, to get comfortable, and preserving range for the actual drive.

    6. Right‑size your EV

    You don’t need a three‑row 6,000‑lb SUV to commute solo. Smaller, lighter EVs are typically far more efficient, which lowers your cost per mile automatically.

    EV vs gas cost for 50‑mile commute: FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about a 50‑mile EV commute

    Bottom line: should you commute 50 miles in an EV?

    If your situation looks anything like the national averages, an EV turns a 50‑mile daily commute from a budget headache into something much more manageable. Charging mostly at home, you’re often paying **around half what a comparable gas car would cost per mile**, and over a full work year that adds up to hundreds, sometimes thousands, of dollars saved.

    The flip side is that **your local energy prices and your specific vehicles matter**. A cheap‑to‑run hybrid on $3.00 gas in a high‑electricity‑cost state may narrow the gap. Heavy reliance on expensive fast charging can erase much of the advantage. That’s why it pays to run the simple per‑mile math with your own numbers rather than relying on slogans.

    If you’re ready to turn those savings into a real car, a well‑chosen **used EV with a healthy battery** is often the sweet spot for commuters. Recharged was built around exactly that idea: transparent battery health, fair pricing, expert EV guidance, and nationwide delivery so you can match the right car to your 50‑mile commute with confidence.

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