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EV Charging Cost

How Much Does It Cost to Charge a Hyundai Kona? (2025)

The 2025 Hyundai Kona consumes 31.0 kWh per 100 miles by EPA measure, which works out to 5.4 cents per mile at the US average electricity rate. At 12,000 miles per year that is roughly $54/month in home charging — before any TOU discount. The numbers below are computed for this specific vehicle; they are not the generic EV average.

EPA data: 2026-07-04 · Source: fueleconomy.gov · Battery: EPA-derived

2025 Hyundai Kona — EPA Specs

SpecValueSource
Battery capacity71.3 kWhEPA-derived
EPA combined efficiency31.0 kWh/100 miEPA FuelEconomy.gov
Miles per kWh3.23 mi/kWhDerived (100 ÷ kWh/100mi)
EPA combined range230 miEPA FuelEconomy.gov
Model year2025EPA dataset
Level 2 charge time (0–100%)10.8 hrs7.2 kW EVSE, 92% efficiency

Charging Economics at US Average Rate

US residential average: $0.16/kWh (EIA 2025). Home Level 2 charging at 92% wall-to-battery efficiency. 12,000 miles/year driving assumption.

$12.40
Full charge cost
71.3 kWh ÷ 0.92 × $0.16
5.4¢/mi
Cost per mile
incl. charging losses
$54/mo
Monthly cost
at 1,000 mi/month
$646/yr
Annual cost
at 12,000 mi/year

Hyundai Kona vs a 30 MPG Gas Car

At $3.50/gallon, a 30 MPG gas car costs $1400/year in fuel at 12,000 miles. The Hyundai Kona at the US average electricity rate costs $646/year$754/year cheaper than the gas car. That gap grows in high-gas-price states and shrinks in states with expensive electricity. This comparison is fuel-only; it excludes purchase price, insurance, and maintenance.

Hyundai Kona Charging Cost by State

10 largest US states by population, sorted cheapest first. Rates: EIA 2025 residential averages. Assumes Level 2 home charging at 92% efficiency and 12,000 miles/year.

StateRate ($/kWh)Full chargePer mileMonthly
Florida$0.150$11.635.0¢$50
Georgia$0.150$11.635.0¢$50
North Carolina$0.160$12.405.4¢$54
Texas$0.160$12.405.4¢$54
Illinois$0.190$14.726.4¢$64
Ohio$0.190$14.726.4¢$64
Michigan$0.210$16.277.1¢$71
Pennsylvania$0.210$16.277.1¢$71
New York$0.290$22.479.8¢$98
California$0.330$25.5811.1¢$111

Source: EIA 2025 residential electricity rates. Cheapest: Florida ($0.150/kWh). Most expensive: California ($0.330/kWh).

TOU Off-Peak Charging Savings

Southern California Edison Co (CA) offers the TOU-D-PRIME TOU plan with an off-peak rate of $0.240/kWh — versus their $0.282/kWh average rate. Charging the Hyundai Kona exclusively during off-peak hours at 12,000 miles/year saves $173/year ($14/month). Source: OpenEI Utility Rate Database (URDB).

TOU rates vary by utility and billing period. Check your utility’s current tariff before switching plans.

Customize this estimate — open the EV Charging Calculator →Select the Hyundai Kona from the vehicle picker to auto-fill EPA efficiency. Adjust your state, utility, and driving habits for a personalized result.

Frequently Asked Questions: Hyundai Kona Charging

How long does it take to charge the Hyundai Kona on Level 2?

A 7.2 kW Level 2 EVSE fully charges the Hyundai Kona's 71.3 kWh battery in 10.8 hours from empty. Most home charging sessions start at 20–80% state of charge, so a typical overnight top-up takes 6.5–7.5 hours. A standard 120V outlet (Level 1) would need 55–59 hours for the same full charge.

How much does a full charge cost for the Hyundai Kona?

At the US average residential rate of $0.16/kWh, a full charge costs about $12.40. Rates vary widely: drivers in low-cost states (around $0.12/kWh) pay as little as $9.30, while high-cost states (around $0.35/kWh) can see $27.13 per charge. The Hyundai Kona has a 71.3 kWh usable battery; wall draw is slightly higher due to 8% charging losses.

What is the monthly charging cost for the Hyundai Kona at 12,000 miles/year?

At 12,000 miles per year and the US average rate of $0.16/kWh, monthly charging costs about $54. The Hyundai Kona achieves 3.23 miles per kWh, so 1,000 miles of monthly driving draws 337 kWh from the wall. Your actual cost depends on local electricity rates, which range from $0.10 to $0.42/kWh across US states.

How does the Hyundai Kona compare to a 30 MPG gas car on fuel costs?

At $3.50/gallon, a 30 MPG gas car costs $1400/year in fuel at 12,000 miles. The Hyundai Kona at the US average electricity rate costs $646/year — saving about $754/year. The gap widens when home charging uses a TOU off-peak rate, which can cut the per-kWh cost significantly versus peak grid rates.

Can a TOU electricity plan reduce charging costs for the Hyundai Kona?

Yes. Southern California Edison Co offers the TOU-D-PRIME plan with an off-peak rate of $0.240/kWh, compared to their 0.282/kWh average rate. Charging the Hyundai Kona exclusively during off-peak hours saves about $173/year ($14/month) at 12,000 miles annually. Source: OpenEI Utility Rate Database (URDB).

Charging the Hyundai Kona with Solar

The Hyundai Kona uses 3715 kWh per year at 12,000 miles — equivalent to 2.5 kW of additional solar capacity at 1,500 kWh/kW-year. Whether solar panels cover that load depends on when the car charges relative to when the panels produce.

Methodology and Data Sources

EPA efficiency data: fueleconomy.gov vehicles.csv, filtered to pure BEVs (atvType=EV), model year ≥ 2019. Efficiency = combE (kWh/100 mi). Battery capacity is manufacturer-specified where available, otherwise derived as range × efficiency ÷ 100.

Electricity rates: EIA 2025 residential average rates from the Annual Electric Power Industry Report (Form EIA-861). State averages are used for the cost-by-state table.

TOU rates: OpenEI Utility Rate Database (URDB) via NREL API. First residential, non-closed, TOU-flagged plan per utility. Off-peak rate taken from the lowest energy rate tier.

Charging losses: 8% wall-to-battery loss (92% efficiency) is applied to all home Level 2 estimates, consistent with SAE J1772 EVSE measurement studies.

Gas comparison: EIA 2025 US average gasoline price $3.50/gallon, 12,000 miles/year, 30 MPG reference vehicle. Fuel-only comparison; excludes purchase price, insurance, and maintenance.

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