The article is written for a US audience and uses US-standard measurements throughout (miles, pounds, gallons, mpg, °F). No foreign units are present that require conversion.
A 2026 Chevrolet Equinox EV lists at $41,900 plus destination, and after Texas sales tax and fees you walk out at $46,380. Subtract the $7,500 federal credit—delivered at purchase if you finance through the captive lender—and the net drops to $38,880. Compare that to a 2026 Honda CR-V at $36,120 out the door, and the EV still costs $2,760 more. But drive 15,000 miles annually and the electric SUV saves you $1,350 per year in fuel. Over eight years, that compounds to $10,800—enough to erase the purchase premium and bank real savings. The question isn't which powertrain sounds better; it's whether your driveway, your routes, and your ownership timeline let the math work in your favor.
The Matchup at a Glance
Category | Electric Vehicle | Gasoline Vehicle |
|---|---|---|
Typical MSRP (mid-size sedan) | $42,000–$52,000 | $26,000–$32,000 |
Federal tax credit | Up to $7,500 | $0 |
Fuel cost per mile (national avg.) | $0.04 (home), $0.12 (public DC fast) | $0.10 (30 mpg, $2.81/gal) |
Annual maintenance | ~$550 | ~$1,200 |
Insurance (full coverage) | ~$4,060/year | ~$2,730/year |
5-year depreciation | 58.8% | 45.6% |
Purchase Price: The Upfront Gap Is Real—but Shrinking
Winner: Gasoline (upfront), Electric (after incentives)
A 2026 Tesla Model 3 at $42,490 MSRP plus $1,390 destination becomes $47,170 after a 7.5% California sales tax and $85 doc fee. Apply the $7,500 federal credit at purchase and the net drops to $39,670. A 2026 Toyota Camry at $28,400 MSRP plus destination and the same tax treatment lands at $32,680 out the door. The EV costs $6,990 more—a gap that has collapsed from the $12,000-plus premiums common in 2022, but still significant up front.
Used EVs flip the script. A 2022 Model 3 with 38,000 miles sells for $28,400 as of January 2026, while a comparable 2022 Accord with similar mileage holds at $24,800. Faster depreciation hurts original EV owners but opens opportunity for cost-conscious second buyers who skip the new-car premium and step into mature battery tech at a discount.
Fuel Economics: Where EVs Build Their Lead
Winner: Electric (home charging), Tie (public fast charging)
Electricity at 16.5¢/kWh—the 2024 national residential average—costs you $0.04 per mile in a Model Y averaging 3.5 miles per kilowatt-hour. Gasoline at $2.81/gallon in a 30-mpg RAV4 runs $0.10 per mile—two and a half times higher. Drive 15,000 miles annually and the EV saves you $900 per year in fuel. Over eight years of ownership, that's $7,200—enough to shrink the purchase premium and still leave savings on the table.
But public DC fast charging at Electrify America's $0.56/kWh peak rate shifts the equation. That same Model Y now costs $0.12 per mile—barely cheaper than gas. A driver relying on 60% public charging sees annual savings drop to $300, extending the break-even point from 3.1 years to 9.2 years. If you can't charge at home, the fuel advantage evaporates.
Sarah in suburban Denver installed a 240V outlet in her garage for $850. Her Ioniq 5 charges overnight at $0.11/kWh off-peak, delivering 260 miles of range for $8.36. Her husband's Highlander needs $52 to cover the same distance. They've banked $1,680 in the first 14 months, and the outlet paid for itself in six.
Maintenance: The Hidden EV Advantage
Winner: Electric
No oil changes. No spark plugs. No transmission fluid. No exhaust system. No timing belt. The only regular service on a 2026 Rivian R1T through 50,000 miles: tire rotations, cabin air filter, and brake fluid flush at 48 months. Total scheduled maintenance cost over five years: $680, per Rivian's published schedule.
The equivalent Ford F-150 with the 3.5L EcoBoost requires oil changes every 7,500 miles, transmission service at 45,000, coolant flush, spark plugs at 60,000, plus all the same consumables. Five-year total: $1,920, based on FordPass service pricing in Phoenix. That's $1,240 more—and doesn't include the surprise repairs that turbo direct-injection engines spring on owners between 80,000 and 120,000 miles.
Brake wear tilts even harder toward EVs. Regenerative braking does 70% of the stopping work in normal driving. Owners report original brake pads lasting 90,000-plus miles versus 40,000 to 50,000 on combustion vehicles. The catch: tires wear 20% faster on heavy EVs with instant torque. Budget an extra $150 to $200 per year if you're running a 6,200-pound Lucid Air versus a 3,500-pound Accord.
Battery Longevity: The Anxiety Is Overblown
Winner: Electric (with caveats)
Modern lithium-ion packs degrade at 1.8 to 2.4% capacity per year under normal use, according to Recurrent's database of 15,400 EVs tracked through November 2025. A 300-mile EPA range vehicle drops to 270 miles after five years, 255 miles after eight. That's livable for most drivers, especially those charging at home who rarely drain below 20% or charge past 80%.
Every major EV sold in 2026 carries an 8-year, 100,000-mile battery warranty covering capacity loss below 70%. Real-world full-pack replacements outside of crash damage remain rare—Recurrent logged just 0.3% of surveyed vehicles needing warranty replacement. But replacement cost is real. A 2023 Bolt EV battery runs $16,500 parts plus labor at Chevrolet dealerships. Tesla quotes $13,500 to $22,000 depending on model. You're betting on the warranty outlasting your ownership—and so far, the data backs that bet.
Gasoline engines carry their own longevity risk. Modern direct-injection turbo motors develop carbon buildup, high-pressure fuel pump failures, and turbocharger wear. A Honda K-series naturally aspirated four-cylinder will run 250,000 miles with oil changes; a Ford EcoBoost often needs $4,000 to $6,000 in repairs between 80,000 and 120,000 miles. Neither powertrain is bulletproof, but EV failure modes stay under warranty coverage longer.
Insurance and Depreciation: Where EVs Give Back Some Savings
Winner: Gasoline
Full-coverage insurance on a $46,000 Model 3 averages $4,058 per year nationally, versus $2,732 for a $32,000 Accord, per Insurify's 2025 dataset analysis. Higher repair costs—especially for aluminum body panels and integrated battery protection—drive the 49% premium. Over five years, that's an extra $6,630, enough to cancel out three years of fuel savings.
Depreciation hits harder. EVs lost an average 58.8% of MSRP after five years in 2025, compared to 45.6% for gas equivalents, according to iSeeCars' analysis of roughly 800,000 vehicles sold between March 2024 and February 2025. Technology updates, battery anxiety, and federal credit changes all accelerate the slide.
Example: A $52,000 Mustang Mach-E purchased in January 2023 sold for $21,424 by December 2025—a $30,576 loss. A $38,000 Mazda CX-5 from the same month held at $20,672—a $17,328 loss. That $13,248 difference offsets nearly 15 years of fuel savings at current gas prices.
True Cost to Own: Five-Year Snapshot
Run the full math for two mid-size SUVs over 75,000 miles:
2026 Volkswagen ID.4 Pro S ($48,000 MSRP):
- Purchase after tax credit and fees: $43,820
- Fuel (home charging at 16.5¢/kWh): $3,300
- Maintenance: $710
- Insurance: $20,290
- Resale value: –$25,784
- Total 5-year cost: $42,336
2026 Toyota Highlander ($40,000 MSRP):
- Purchase plus fees: $43,850
- Fuel (26 mpg combined at $2.81/gal): $8,115
- Maintenance: $2,100
- Insurance: $13,650
- Resale value: –$20,000
- Total 5-year cost: $47,715
The EV saves $5,379 over five years—a meaningful advantage that grows to $9,800 by year eight and 120,000 miles as fuel savings compound while depreciation flattens. But only if you can charge at home and absorb the insurance premium.
Where It Actually Works—Where It Doesn't
EVs dominate when you have:
- Dedicated home charging with a 240V Level 2 circuit minimum
- Annual mileage above 12,000
- Ownership horizon of six-plus years
- Commute under 60 miles one-way
A Denver software engineer driving 18,000 miles annually on a 55-mile round-trip commute with garage charging hits break-even in 3.4 years and saves $8,200 by year eight.
Gasoline holds the edge when you face:
- No home charging access—apartment living, street parking
- Low annual mileage under 8,000
- Frequent 300-plus-mile highway trips in cold climates
- Vehicle turnover every three to four years
A Brooklyn resident with street parking and 6,000 annual city miles pays $0.48/kWh at public Level 2 chargers, eliminating the fuel advantage. They'd save $3,100 over five years by keeping the Honda Civic and skipping the insurance premium.
Electric Vehicle: Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Fuel costs 60% lower with home charging at residential electricity rates—the single biggest long-term advantage
- Maintenance runs $650 to $1,200 less annually with no oil, transmission, or exhaust service
- Instant torque and smooth acceleration deliver better driving experience regardless of cost analysis
- Federal tax credit worth $3,750 to $7,500 shrinks the purchase gap immediately
Cons:
- Depreciation 13.2 percentage points steeper over first five years, hurting resale timing and trade-in equity
- Insurance premiums 49% higher due to repair complexity and parts availability
- Public fast charging economics barely beat gasoline, eliminating advantage for non-homeowners
- Cold-weather range loss of 30 to 40% below 20°F creates real planning friction November through March
Gasoline Vehicle: Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Lower upfront cost even after incentives—$2,000 to $6,000 advantage persists across most segments
- Better resale value retention protects equity if you trade every three to four years
- Refueling infrastructure everywhere, zero planning required for any trip distance
- Lower insurance premiums save $1,330 annually with equivalent coverage
Cons:
- Fuel costs 150% higher than home-charged electricity—$4,800-plus penalty over 75,000 miles
- Maintenance burden adds $1,200 to $1,800 annually between oil, filters, transmission, and wear items
- Engine longevity increasingly uncertain with turbocharged direct-injection designs prone to carbon buildup and component failures after 90,000 miles
- Resale market softening as EV price parity arrives—2027 models face steeper depreciation curves
The Verdict: Run Your Own Numbers
Choose electric if: you drive 12,000-plus miles annually, own a home with 240V charging capability, plan to keep the vehicle six-plus years, and rarely take 400-mile highway trips in January. The math works decisively in your favor—$5,000 to $10,000 saved over eight years, depending on your electricity rate and gas price.
Choose gasoline if: you rent without charging access, drive under 8,000 miles per year, trade vehicles every three to four years, or regularly cover 300-plus-mile routes through Montana winters. You'll preserve $3,000 to $7,000 in upfront costs, insurance premiums, and depreciation that EVs can't recover on your usage pattern.
Bottom line: In 2026, EV economics beat gasoline for high-mileage homeowners who hold vehicles long-term and charge at home, while gas retains the edge for low-mileage drivers, apartment dwellers, and those facing 49% insurance premiums—the decision depends entirely on your driveway, your routes, and how long you plan to keep the keys.

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