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    Switching from a Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9: Real-World Cost Savings
    Ownership & Costs·10 min read·By Editorial Team

    Switching from a Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9: Real-World Cost Savings

    kia-telluridekia-ev9ev-ownership-costsfuel-vs-electricityfamily-ev-suvused-evsrecharged-scoretotal-cost-of-ownership

    Table of Contents

    • Why consider switching from a Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9?
    • Key specs that drive cost: Telluride vs EV9
    • Fuel vs electricity: cost per mile explained
    • 5‑year total cost of ownership: Telluride vs EV9
    • Maintenance and repairs: where EV9 pulls ahead
    • Insurance, taxes, and incentives to factor in
    • Real-world examples for different driving profiles
    • How charging habits change your savings
    • How to switch using a used Kia EV9
    • FAQ: Switching from Kia Telluride to Kia EV9
    • Is switching from a Telluride to an EV9 worth it?

    If you’re driving a Kia Telluride and eyeing the all‑electric Kia EV9, you’re probably wondering one thing: how much will you actually save by switching? This guide walks through real‑world numbers so you can see the cost savings of switching from a Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9, from fuel and electricity all the way to maintenance and 5‑year ownership costs.

    Quick takeaway

    For a typical American driver putting about 12,000 miles a year on a midsize SUV, moving from a gasoline Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9 can reasonably cut your energy and maintenance costs by around $1,400–$2,000 per year, depending on gas and electricity prices in your area.

    Why consider switching from a Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9?

    The Telluride has earned its reputation: comfortable, roomy, and one of the better values in three‑row SUVs. The EV9 aims at the same buyer, but replaces the 3.8‑liter V6 and fuel tank with a large battery, dual‑ or single‑motor setup, and the ability to charge at home. That combination changes how you pay to drive in three big ways:

    • You swap gasoline fill‑ups at $3–$4+ per gallon for electricity bought in kWh.
    • Routine maintenance (oil changes, transmission service, exhaust, etc.) largely disappears with the EV9.
    • Some states and utilities layer on rebates, tax credits, and cheaper overnight electricity for EVs.

    EVs shine with higher mileage

    The more you drive each year, the more attractive an EV9 becomes versus a Telluride. If you’re over about 12,000–15,000 miles annually, the savings start to get hard to ignore.

    Key specs that drive cost: Telluride vs EV9

    Telluride vs EV9: the cost drivers

    21–23 mpg
    Kia Telluride
    Typical combined real‑world fuel economy for AWD models
    38–41 kWh
    Kia EV9
    Electricity used per 100 miles for most trims
    rows
    Both models
    Similar family‑friendly space and seating
    oil changes
    EV9
    No engine, transmission, or exhaust system to service

    To get a fair cost comparison, you need a few anchor numbers. We’ll use reasonable, real‑world figures that line up with EPA data and owner reports:

    Baseline assumptions for this cost comparison

    You can adjust these later to match your own driving and local prices.

    Kia Telluride fuel economy

    Most AWD Telluride trims return about 21–23 mpg combined in real‑world driving. We’ll use 22 mpg as a reasonable average.

    Kia EV9 efficiency

    EPA efficiency for the EV9 generally sits around 38–41 kWh/100 miles depending on battery and drivetrain. We’ll use 40 kWh/100 miles (0.40 kWh per mile).

    Energy prices (national averages)

    • Gasoline: We’ll use $3.30 per gallon as a conservative long‑term average, slightly above the 2024–2025 U.S. norm and below current $4+ spikes.
    • Electricity: Recent EIA data puts average U.S. residential rates in the $0.17–$0.18 per kWh range. We’ll use $0.18/kWh for at‑home charging.

    Annual mileage

    The typical American driver logs about 12,000 miles per year. We’ll use that as our base case, then look at heavier‑use scenarios like 15,000 and 20,000 miles.

    If you drive significantly more or less, you can scale the numbers linearly.

    Your numbers may differ

    If you live in a high‑cost electricity state or a high‑gas‑price region, your personal cost curve will bend a little differently. The methods here still apply, you’ll just plug in your own local rates.

    Fuel vs electricity: cost per mile explained

    Once you know the Telluride’s mpg and the EV9’s kWh/100 miles, the rest is simple math. Let’s break down what you pay for each mile you drive.

    Energy cost per mile: Kia Telluride vs Kia EV9

    Based on 22 mpg for the Telluride, 40 kWh/100 miles for the EV9, $3.30/gallon gasoline, and $0.18/kWh home electricity.

    VehicleKey assumptionEnergy cost formulaCost per mile (approx.)
    Kia Telluride (gas)22 mpg, $3.30/gal$3.30 ÷ 22 mpg≈ $0.15 per mile
    Kia EV9 (home charging)40 kWh/100 mi, $0.18/kWh(40 × $0.18) ÷ 100≈ $0.07 per mile
    Kia EV9 (public fast charge)**40 kWh/100 mi, $0.40/kWh(40 × $0.40) ÷ 100≈ $0.16 per mile

    Your local gas and power prices will move these figures up or down, but the relative gap tends to hold.

    Public charging caveat

    Fast charging on the road is usually priced closer to gasoline cost per mile. The real savings come when most of your EV9 charging happens at home or at low‑cost workplace chargers.

    Look at that second row: at typical U.S. electricity prices, an EV9 charged mostly at home cuts your energy cost per mile by roughly half compared with a Telluride. Over thousands of miles, that adds up quickly.

    5‑year total cost of ownership: Telluride vs EV9

    Let’s turn per‑mile numbers into something more tangible: 5‑year fuel/electricity and maintenance costs. We’ll stay focused on running costs and ignore purchase price differences for the moment, because many shoppers are comparing selling or trading their Telluride for a used EV9, not paying MSRP for both.

    Five‑year ownership cost snapshot (12,000 mi/year)

    $9,000
    Telluride fuel
    About $1,800 per year in gasoline at $3.30/gal
    $5,040
    EV9 electricity
    About $1,008 per year home charging at $0.18/kWh
    ~$3,000
    Telluride maint.
    Oil changes and ICE‑specific service over 5 years
    ~$1,250
    EV9 maint.
    Tires, brake fluid, inspections, no engine service

    Estimated 5‑year operating costs: Kia Telluride vs Kia EV9

    Assumes 12,000 miles/year, gasoline $3.30/gallon, home electricity $0.18/kWh, 80% of EV9 miles charged at home and 20% on public fast chargers at $0.40/kWh.

    Cost category (5 years)Kia Telluride (gas)Kia EV9 (electric)
    Fuel / electricity≈ $9,000≈ $5,040 home + $1,920 public ≈ $6,960
    Routine maintenance & wear*≈ $3,000≈ $1,250
    Total operating costs≈ $12,000≈ $8,200
    Approx. savings vs Telluride, ≈ $3,800 over 5 years

    Numbers are approximate but directionally reliable for many U.S. drivers.

    Bigger savings with more home charging

    If you charge your EV9 almost exclusively at home, that 5‑year savings can easily move into the $4,500–$5,000 range. If you rely heavily on public fast charging, the gap shrinks.

    This table deliberately uses conservative assumptions. In years when gasoline jumps above $4 per gallon, or in households driving 15,000–20,000 miles per year, the EV9’s advantage widens substantially.

    Maintenance and repairs: where EV9 pulls ahead

    The Telluride is a well‑engineered SUV, but it’s still a traditional internal‑combustion vehicle with hundreds of moving parts in the engine and transmission. The EV9 eliminates many of those systems outright, which is where long‑term savings quietly stack up.

    Gasoline SUV vs EV maintenance: what disappears and what remains

    Both vehicles still need tires and basic inspections, everything else starts to diverge.

    Telluride: typical 5‑year items

    • Oil and filter changes every ~7,500 miles
    • Engine air filter, cabin air filter
    • Transmission fluid service (depending on schedule)
    • Spark plugs and ignition components (longer term)
    • Exhaust system components

    Conservatively, budgeting $500–$600 per year for routine service and wear items is sensible if you use a dealer or reputable shop.

    EV9: typical 5‑year items

    • Tire rotations and replacement
    • Cabin air filter changes
    • Brake fluid replacement per schedule
    • Occasional software updates (often over‑the‑air)

    No engine, transmission, or exhaust means EVs generally run 30–50% cheaper to maintain over the same period.

    Battery health and used EV9s

    Modern EVs, including the Kia EV9, are designed with battery longevity in mind, and most come with robust battery warranties. On Recharged, every used EV9 listing includes a Recharged Score battery health report so you can see how the pack is performing before you buy.

    Insurance, taxes, and incentives to factor in

    Operating costs don’t stop at fuel and maintenance. When you move from a Telluride to an EV9, a few other line items can change as well.

    • Insurance: Some carriers currently rate EVs slightly higher than comparable gas SUVs because of repair costs, while others offer green‑vehicle discounts. It’s smart to get quotes on both vehicles with the same coverage before you switch.
    • Registration and taxes: A few states charge modest annual EV fees in place of lost gas‑tax revenue. Others offer reduced registration for EVs. This usually moves the needle by low hundreds of dollars over several years, not thousands.
    • Tax credits and rebates: Depending on when and how you buy, a new or used EV9 may qualify for federal or state‑level incentives, or for utility rebates for home charger installation. These can offset part of the purchase or charging‑setup cost and effectively improve your payback period.

    Don’t assume incentives automatically apply

    Eligibility for EV incentives can depend on your income, where the vehicle was assembled, the transaction type (purchase vs lease), and whether the vehicle is new or used. Always confirm current rules before you factor a rebate into your budget.

    Real-world examples for different driving profiles

    To make the savings easier to visualize, here are three common driving profiles. In each case we’ll compare approximate annual fuel/electricity and maintenance spending for a Telluride vs an EV9, using the same assumptions as before.

    How much can you save each year?

    1. Suburban family: 10,000 miles/year

    • Telluride: ≈ $1,500 in fuel + ≈ $500 in maintenance ≈ <strong>$2,000/year</strong><br>• EV9: ≈ $1,160 in electricity (mostly home) + ≈ $250 in maintenance ≈ <strong>$1,410/year</strong><br><br><strong>Approximate savings:</strong> ~$600/year

    2. Typical driver: 12,000 miles/year

    • Telluride: ≈ $1,800 in fuel + ≈ $600 in maintenance ≈ <strong>$2,400/year</strong><br>• EV9: ≈ $1,392 in electricity + ≈ $250 in maintenance ≈ <strong>$1,640/year</strong><br><br><strong>Approximate savings:</strong> ~$750/year

    3. Road‑trip family: 20,000 miles/year

    • Telluride: ≈ $3,000 in fuel + ≈ $800 in maintenance ≈ <strong>$3,800/year</strong><br>• EV9: ≈ $2,320 in electricity (more public DC fast charging) + ≈ $300 in maintenance ≈ <strong>$2,620/year</strong><br><br><strong>Approximate savings:</strong> ~$1,200/year

    Savings scale with miles driven

    If you only drive 7,000–8,000 miles a year and gas prices stay tame, the cash savings alone might not justify a switch. But once you climb past about 15,000 miles annually, the EV9’s lower per‑mile operating cost becomes one of its biggest selling points.
    Side‑by‑side visualization of a fuel pump and an electric plug showing cost‑per‑mile differences between a Kia Telluride and a Kia EV9
    At typical U.S. energy prices, an EV9 charged mostly at home can often cut your energy cost per mile by around half compared with a Kia Telluride.

    How charging habits change your savings

    The biggest swing factor in EV operating cost is where and when you charge. A Telluride’s fuel price is set at the station marquee. An EV9 gives you more knobs to turn.

    Mostly home charging (best case)

    • 80–90% of miles charged in your driveway or garage.
    • Electricity at ~18¢/kWh or less.
    • Cost per mile: around 7–8 cents.

    This is where the EV9 really shines for families replacing a Telluride.

    Mix of home and workplace

    • Some employers or apartments offer low‑cost or free Level 2 charging.
    • Blended average kWh price drops even below your home rate.
    • Cost per mile can dip into the 5–7 cent range.

    Heavy DC fast‑charging (least savings)

    • Frequent road trips or no home charging option.
    • Fast‑charge rates often hover around 35–45¢/kWh.
    • Cost per mile looks similar to, or slightly cheaper than, gasoline.

    In this case, the EV9 still wins on maintenance, but fuel savings are modest.

    Plan your home setup

    If you’re switching from a Telluride to an EV9, budget for a proper Level 2 home charger and any electrical work you may need. Upfront costs typically run a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars, but they unlock the best long‑term savings.

    How to switch using a used Kia EV9

    You don’t have to walk into a new‑car showroom and pay top dollar to move from a Telluride to an EV9. The early wave of Kia EV9s is already entering the used market, which is where platforms like Recharged are designed to help.

    A simple path from Telluride to EV9 with Recharged

    Minimize guesswork on pricing, battery health, and logistics.

    1. Get a value for your Telluride

    Start by getting an instant offer or trade‑in estimate for your Kia Telluride. Recharged can help you compare selling, trading in, or consigning your SUV so you understand your equity before you shop.

    2. Shop used EV9s with verified battery health

    Browse used Kia EV9s on Recharged, each with a Recharged Score battery health diagnostic, fair‑market pricing analysis, and detailed history. That helps you compare options the same way you might compare mpg and equipment on different Tellurides.

    3. Line up EV‑friendly financing

    Our EV‑savvy financing partners understand how lower operating costs and strong residual values affect an electric SUV. You can pre‑qualify online with no impact to your credit to see payment options before you commit.

    4. Close the gap with delivery and support

    Once you’ve chosen an EV9, Recharged can coordinate nationwide delivery and walk you through home‑charging setup, incentives, and what to expect on day one of EV ownership.

    Ready to find your next EV?

    Browse Vehicles

    Why a used EV9 often pencils out

    Buying used lets someone else absorb the first steep drop in depreciation while you still enjoy thousands of dollars in lower operating costs over the next several years. When you add in a strong trade‑in value for a late‑model Telluride, the monthly payment gap between the two SUVs can be much smaller than you expect.

    FAQ: Switching from Kia Telluride to Kia EV9

    Frequently asked questions

    Is switching from a Telluride to an EV9 worth it?

    For many Telluride owners, the Kia EV9 is a natural next step: it keeps the three‑row practicality and comfort, adds quiet electric torque, and meaningfully reshapes your running costs. If you drive a typical or higher‑than‑average number of miles, charge mostly at home, and plan to keep the vehicle for several years, the cost savings of switching from a Kia Telluride to a Kia EV9 are real, often several thousand dollars over a 5‑year window.

    The right answer for you comes down to how you drive, what energy costs look like in your area, and how you value the other benefits of going electric, quieter rides, instant torque, and fewer stops at gas stations. If you’re ready to run the numbers on an actual vehicle, browsing used Kia EV9 listings on Recharged, comparing them to your Telluride’s trade‑in value, and reviewing each EV9’s Recharged Score is a smart way to see how the math works out in your driveway, not just on paper.

    Kia EV9 on Recharged

    See all →
    2024 Kia EV9

    2024 Kia EV9

    GT-Line•15K mi•270 mi range
    4.7/5Recharged Score
    $48,997
    2024 Kia EV9

    2024 Kia EV9

    GT-Line•9K mi•270 mi range
    4.7/5Recharged Score
    $50,597
    2024 Kia EV9

    2024 Kia EV9

    GT-Line•21K mi•270 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $46,599

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