Miles per kWh: How to Measure Your EV's Real Efficiency

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators

Miles per kWh is quietly the most important number an EV owner can track, yet it rarely appears in marketing. It answers the question every driver actually has: how far does my electricity go? Because it is distance divided by energy, it lets you compare any two cars on equal footing and translate a battery's capacity into miles you can trust. Once you know your personal figure, the abstract specs on a brochure become a range you can plan around and a charging bill you can predict.

Calculating it is the easy part. Note your odometer or trip-meter distance for a stretch of driving, then read the energy used from the car's trip computer, and divide the first by the second. The trick is choosing the right energy source. Battery-side consumption reflects pure driving efficiency, while energy measured at the wall socket includes charging losses of typically 10 to 15 percent. Neither is wrong, but they answer different questions, so be consistent about which one you feed into the calculator.

Interpreting the result needs context. A number that looks disappointing in January may be perfectly normal: cold weather alone can cut efficiency by 20 to 40 percent as the battery works harder and the cabin heater draws power. Speed is the other big lever, since aerodynamic drag rises sharply above about 65 mph. Hills, heavy loads, roof boxes, under-inflated tyres and aggressive acceleration all chip away at the figure too. That is why one good trip and one bad trip can differ by more than a whole mile per kWh in the same car.

To turn the number into money, combine it with your tariff. Divide your monthly miles by your mi/kWh to find the kilowatt-hours you need, then multiply by your price per kWh. Drive 1,000 miles a month at 3.0 mi/kWh and you use about 333 kWh; at 15 cents per kWh that is roughly 50 dollars of home charging. The same method shows instantly why public rapid charging, often several times the home rate, makes your cost-per-mile jump even though your efficiency has not changed.

The most useful habit is to average several journeys rather than judge a single one. Mixed driving over a week or two smooths out the cold mornings, the one fast motorway run, and the day you sat in traffic with the air conditioning on. That rolling average is what you should plug into range and cost estimates. Treat the calculator as a logbook companion: record your figure each fill-up, watch how it shifts with the seasons, and you will understand your car far better than any sticker ever could.

Quick tips

  • Average at least three or four mixed trips before trusting your mi/kWh; a single drive is skewed by weather, speed and traffic.
  • Use battery-side energy from the trip computer for efficiency comparisons, and charger-side energy when you specifically want to include charging losses in cost.
  • In winter, pre-condition the cabin while still plugged in so heating draws from the grid rather than eating into your driving range and lowering your mi/kWh.
  • Multiply your real-world figure by usable battery capacity, not the headline capacity, for a realistic range estimate, since a few kWh are always held in reserve.

The Miles per kWh Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.