EV Efficiency
A PLUGGED IN RIDE tutorial: Understanding MPGe, Miles per kWh & Real-World Costs
Precis:
Section 1 MPGe: a) EPA’s origin story b) Core constant (1 gallon = 33.7 kWh) c) Formula with examples d) Comparison table.
Section 2 Mi/kWh: a) kWh definition b) Driver’s formula c) Benchmark tier table (Excellent → Poor) d) 6-factor efficiency table (speed, temperature, towing, etc.) e) MPGe↔mi/kWh conversion.
Section 3 Real-World Costs: a) Cost-per-mile formula b) US electricity rate reference c) Side-by-side EV vs gas comparison d) 5-scenario charging cost table (home cheap → public DC fast) e) 6-step annual savings walkthrough.
Section 4 Quick Reference: a) Key constants & Conversions b) 2024–2025 EPA specs for 10 EVs (Tesla, Hyundai, Rivian, GMC, Ford, etc.) c) 6 practical rules of thumb.
Learning objectives:
| MPGe What it is, how it is calculated, and where you see it | Mi/kWh The practical daily metric EV drivers actually use | Costs Step-by-step math for real-world fuel saving |

Section 1: MPGe – Miles Per Gallon equivalent
1.1 Background & Purpose
When the EPA needed a way to let consumers compare electric vehicles to gasoline cars on the window sticker, it created the MPGe metric. Because EVs consume electricity rather than liquid fuel, a direct MPG comparison was impossible — so the EPA anchored the metric to a universal energy equivalence.
| EPA Definition: MPGe represents the number of miles a vehicle can travel using the same amount of energy contained in one US gallon of gasoline. |
1.2 The Core Conversion Constant
Everything in MPGe rests on a single, precisely measured equivalence:
| 1 US gallon of gasoline = 33.7 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of energy |
This figure — 33.705 kWh/gal to be exact — is based on the lower heating value of gasoline established by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The EPA rounds it to 33.7 kWh/gal for all labeling purposes.
1.3 The MPGe Formula
| MPGe = (Miles Traveled ÷ kWh Consumed) × 33.7 |
Breaking this down:
- Miles Traveled — total distance driven on electric power
- kWh Consumed — electrical energy drawn from the battery
- × 33.7 — converts the efficiency from mi/kWh to a gallon-equivalent basis
1.4 Worked Examples
| Vehicle | Mi/kWh | × 33.7 | MPGe | Rating |
| Tesla Model 3 LR | 4.1 | 4.1 × 33.7 | 138 | Excellent |
| Chevy Bolt EV | 3.5 | 3.5 × 33.7 | 118 | Very Good |
| Hyundai Ioniq 6 | 3.8 | 3.8 × 33.7 | 128 | Excellent |
| Ford F-150 Lightning | 2.0 | 2.0 × 33.7 | 67 | Below Avg |
| Rivian R1T (Max Pack) | 1.7 | 1.7 × 33.7 | 57 | Poor |
| Context: A typical 30 MPG gasoline car equals roughly 30 MPGe. Most EVs score 80–140 MPGe, meaning they are 2–4× more energy-efficient than average gas vehicles. |
1.5 Where You See MPGe
1. EPA Monroney (window) sticker on every new plug-in vehicle sold in the US
2. fueleconomy.gov — the official EPA vehicle database
3. Manufacturer marketing materials and car-review publications
4. Car-comparison tools such as Edmunds, Car and Driver, and Consumer Reports-comparison tools such as Edmunds, Car and Driver, and Consumer Reports

Section 2: Miles Per kWh — The Driver’s Metric
2.1 What Is a Kilowatt-Hour?
A kilowatt-hour (kWh) is a unit of electrical energy equal to 1,000 watts used continuously for one hour. It appears on every home electricity bill. For EVs:
- Battery capacity is rated in kWh (e.g., a 75 kWh pack stores 75 kWh when full)
- Charging sessions are billed in kWh by the utility or public charger
- Onboard displays report real-time consumption in kWh/100 mi or mi/kWh
2.2 The Mi/kWh Formula
| Miles per kWh = Miles Traveled ÷ kWh Consumed |
Higher values are always better. A car achieving 4.0 mi/kWh travels twice as far per unit of energy as one achieving 2.0 mi/kWh.
2.3 Benchmark Ranges
| Tier | Mi/kWh Range | MPGe Equivalence | Typical Vehicle Type |
| Excellent | ≥ 4.0 | ≥ 135 | Compact sedans, efficiency-focused |
| Good | 3.0 – 3.9 | 101 – 131 | Mid-size sedans, small SUVs |
| Average | 2.0 – 2.9 | 67 – 98 | Large SUVs, entry-level EVs |
| Poor | < 2.0 | < 67 | Large trucks, off-road-oriented EVs |
2.4 Factors That Affect Mi/kWh
| Factor | Impact on Efficiency |
| Speed | Aerodynamic drag rises with the square of speed. Highway driving at 75 mph uses ~30% more energy than 60 mph. |
| Temperature | Below 40°F, lithium-ion batteries lose 15–30% of usable capacity. HVAC heat demand further reduces range. |
| Climate Control | A/C or heat can draw 2–4 kW, reducing effective efficiency by 0.3–0.8 mi/kWh on typical drives. |
| Regenerative Braking | City driving with frequent stops allows regen capture — often improving mi/kWh vs. highway-only trips. |
| Payload & Towing | Every extra 1,000 lbs of payload reduces efficiency by approximately 10%. Towing can cut range in half. |
| Tire Pressure | Under-inflated tires increase rolling resistance. Maintaining recommended pressure preserves 1–3% efficiency. |
2.5 Converting Between MPGe and Mi/kWh
| Mi/kWh = MPGe ÷ 33.7 MPGe = Mi/kWh × 33.7 |
Example: A vehicle rated at 100 MPGe achieves 100 ÷ 33.7 = 2.97 mi/kWh.

Section 3: Real-World Cost Analysis
3.1 Cost Per Mile Formula
| Cost per Mile ($) = Electricity Rate ($/kWh) ÷ Efficiency (mi/kWh) |
This is the single most important equation for understanding EV operating costs. Both variables are under partial driver control: you can choose where and when to charge (affecting rate), and how you drive (affecting efficiency).
3.2 US Electricity Rate Reference
- National average (residential): $0.17 /kWh (as of early 2025)
- Low-cost states (e.g., Louisiana, Oklahoma): $0.10 – $0.12 /kWh
- High-cost states (e.g., California, Hawaii): $0.25 – $0.45 /kWh
- DC Fast Charging (public networks, e.g., Electrify America): $0.38 – $0.58 /kWh
- Workplace / destination Level 2: $0.15 – $0.30 /kWh (or free)
| Key Insight: Public DC fast chargers can cost 3–4× more per kWh than home charging. A driver who relies primarily on fast charging may see per-mile costs approach those of a gasoline vehicle. |
3.3 Side-by-Side Comparison: EV vs. Gasoline
| Metric | EV (Chevy Bolt, 3.5 mi/kWh) | Gas Car (30 MPG @ $3.50/gal) |
| Fuel/Energy rate | $0.17 /kWh | $3.50 /gallon |
| Cost per mile | $0.049 /mile | $0.117 /mile |
| Annual cost (12k mi) | $588 | $1,400 |
| Annual savings | +$812 saved | — baseline — |
3.4 Charging Scenario Cost Comparison
| Charging Scenario | Rate ($/kWh) | Cost/Mile | Annual (12k mi) |
| Home — low-rate state | $0.11 | $0.031 | $377 |
| Home — national avg. | $0.17 | $0.049 | $588 |
| Home — high-rate state | $0.35 | $0.100 | $1,200 |
| Public DC Fast Charge | $0.48 | $0.137 | $1,645 |
| Gas car (30 MPG baseline) | $3.50/gal | $0.117 | $1,400 ← baseline |
| Takeaway: Home charging in an average-rate state costs roughly $0.05/mile — about 58% less than gasoline at $3.50/gal. Only frequent public DC fast charging erases most of the savings. |
3.5 Calculating Annual Savings: Step-by-Step
- Find your electricity rate on your utility bill ($/kWh).
- Find your EV’s rated efficiency (mi/kWh) on the EPA sticker or fueleconomy.gov.
- Compute EV cost per mile: rate ÷ efficiency.
- Compute gas cost per mile: gas price ÷ vehicle MPG.
- Savings per mile = gas cost/mile − EV cost/mile.
- Multiply by annual miles to get yearly fuel savings.

Section 4: Quick-Reference Specifications
4.1 Key Constants & Conversions
| Constant / Conversion | Value |
| 1 gallon gasoline (energy) | 33.7 kWh (33.705 kWh precise) |
| MPGe → mi/kWh | Divide MPGe by 33.7 |
| mi/kWh → MPGe | Multiply mi/kWh by 33.7 |
| Cost/mile (EV) | Electricity rate ($/kWh) ÷ mi/kWh |
| Cost/mile (gas) | Gas price ($/gal) ÷ MPG |
| Annual fuel cost | Cost/mile × annual miles |
| 1 kWh | 3,412 BTU |
| EPA test cycle blend | 55% city / 45% highway |
4.2 Real Vehicle Specifications (2024–2025 Models)
| Vehicle | Battery | Mi/kWh | MPGe | EPA Range |
| Tesla Model 3 LR RWD | 82 kWh | 4.1 | 138 | 358 mi |
| Tesla Model Y LR | 82 kWh | 3.6 | 121 | 330 mi |
| Hyundai Ioniq 6 SE | 77.4 kWh | 3.8 | 140 | 361 mi |
| Chevy Bolt EV | 65 kWh | 3.5 | 118 | 259 mi |
| BMW i4 eDrive40 | 83.9 kWh | 3.2 | 109 | 301 mi |
| Kia EV6 Standard | 58 kWh | 3.4 | 114 | 232 mi |
| Rivian R1S Dual | 135 kWh | 2.6 | 88 | 321 mi |
| Ford F-150 Lightning Pro | 98 kWh | 2.0 | 66 | 240 mi |
| Rivian R1T Quad | 135 kWh | 1.7 | 57 | 314 mi |
| GMC Hummer EV | 212 kWh | 1.4 | 47 | 329 mi |
4.3 Rules of Thumb
- An EV charging at home at the US average rate costs roughly 3–5 cents per mile.
- A 30 MPG gasoline car at $3.50/gal costs about 11–12 cents per mile.
- Divide MPGe by 33.7 at any time to get the practical mi/kWh figure.
- Cold weather and highway speeds are the two biggest real-world efficiency killers.
- EVs with 100+ MPGe (≥ 3.0 mi/kWh) almost always beat gas cars on per-mile fuel cost when charged at home.
- Large trucks and SUVs — even as EVs — often score below 80 MPGe; weight matters.
| Summary Formula to Remember: EV Cost/Mile = Rate ÷ Efficiency | MPGe = mi/kWh × 33.7 | Savings = (Gas $/mi − EV $/mi) × Annual Miles |
Sources: US EPA fueleconomy.gov, NIST energy constants, manufacturer specifications (2024–2025 model year). Electricity rates based on EIA residential averages. Gas price example: $3.50/gallon USD.
