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What Are Best and Worst States for Electric Vehicles?

A recent analysis ranks the average energy cost savings for EVs compared to internal combustion engine vehicles.

November 1, 2021
What Are Best and Worst States for Electric Vehicles?

Drivers in Washington, Oregon, and Nevada save over $2 per gallon with an EV.

Graphic: Jerry

4 min to read



While many Americans dream of driving an electric vehicle and fleets are moving toward electrification, with many under mandates, buyers still may hesitate to purchase EVs because of costs, range anxiety, or charging port inaccessibility.

New research by Jerry, an automated compare-and-buy insurance shopping app, shows that purchasing and driving an EV can be a great financial and logistical decision but that highly depends on where you live. Drivers in East or West Coast states like Massachusetts, Vermont, and California have numerous financial incentives to purchase EVs, and more access to charging ports. Drivers in Louisiana, Kentucky, and Idaho are not so lucky.

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Top 10 States to Own an EV: Massachusetts, Vermont, California, Hawaii, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New YOrk, Maine, Colorado and Maryland.

Worst 10 States to Own an EV:Louisiana, Kentucky, Idaho, Arkansas, North Dakota, Mississippi, Nebraska, West Virginia, Oklahoma, and Alabama.

The study ranked states based on three factors: EV charging port density, gas savings, and government incentives. East and West Coast States comprise nine of the 10 best states to own an EV; Southern and Midwest states cover nine of the 10 worst states to own an EV. 

Charging Station Availability

EV charging port distribution varies widely across states. Vermont and California top the list at 133 and 89 EV charging ports per 100,000 people. But there’s a significant drop from there. Maryland has the third-most EV charging ports at 59 ports per 100,000 people, but that is less than half the amount Vermont has. The bottom three states -- Alaska, Kentucky, and Louisiana -- have 8-9 charging ports per 100,000 people (0.009% charging station density).

Cost of Gas

EVs are good for your environment and your wallet. Drivers in Washington, Oregon, and Nevada save over $2 per gallon with an EV. That’s 47% savings for Washington, 43% savings for Oregon, and 40% savings for Nevada. Considering that the average American uses over 300 gallons of gasoline per year, drivers in Washington, Oregon, and Nevada could be saving over $600 a year if they make the switch to EVs. This is $4,800 over the average lifetime of car ownership. Even drivers in states like Hawaii and Rhode Island, which each save under a dollar per gallon of gas, can save a couple of hundred dollars a year from the switch.

Incentives

State governments encourage EV adoption with various tax and subsidization incentives. California, Massachusetts, and Maryland have more than 10 local government incentives to support EV purchase and/or leasing. This includes EV purchase rebates of up to $7,500, charging port rebates, EV purchase income tax credits, electric charging cost rebates, and more. This is over 10 times the incentives that states like West Virginia, North Dakota, Kansas, Missouri, Wyoming, and others have, ranging from 0 to 1.

Now, 46 states and Washington D.C. incentivize EV adoption. Consumer incentives include HOV lane exemptions, EV purchase rebates, vehicle inspections/emissions test exemption, parking incentives, utility rate reductions, and more. For example, utility providers often reduce EV charging prices during off-peak hours. This can save drivers hundreds of dollars per year. Tax credits and rebates often offer several thousand dollars in savings the year a driver purchases their EV. States also have business-facing incentives. For example, California, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, and nine other states require manufacturers to sell a certain amount of zero-emission vehicles per year.

EV Infrastructure Improving

EV infrastructure -- which refers to EV charging station accessibility and government incentives for EV adoption -- is getting better each year. The Biden Infrastructure Bill wants to designate $7 billion to bettering EV infrastructure, and many states are upping investment in zero-emission vehicles with or without the extra aid. Car companies including  Volkswagen, Ford, and Chevrolet are releasing better EVs with longer ranges and more features like smart parking.

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When considering the financial benefits of gas savings, rebates, and tax incentives, owning an EV is less expensive than most think. You could save $4,800 in gas costs over the length of car ownership (eight years on average). If you live in the right state, like California or Maryland, you could also save $5,000-8,000 on vehicle purchase price. Increased EV infrastructure investment means more public charging ports will be available, and cities will offer more rebates and cost-lowering incentives to make EVs even more affordable. Buyers should check if their state or locality has financial incentives and check gas prices.


Originally posted on Charged Fleet

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