Home vs Public Charging Cost in Utah
Charging at home in Utah costs about $377/year — versus $1,474/year if you exclusively used DC fast chargers. That's a 3.9× difference.
Annual fueling cost (12,000 mi/yr)
| Home L2 charging (11.0¢/kWh) | $377 |
| Public L2 (28.0¢/kWh) | $960 |
| DC fast charging (43.0¢/kWh) | $1,474 |
Assumes 3,429 kWh/year. Public L2 rate is the national average; DCFC rate averages EVgo, Electrify America, and Tesla Supercharger.
Home charger break-even
Installing a Level 2 charger averages $1,500 (charger + electrician + permit). In Utah, going from DC-fast-only to home charging saves $1,097/year.
Break-even: 1.4 years. Most owners keep an EV 6–8 years, so home charging is almost always the right call when feasible.
When public charging makes sense
- Apartment / condo with no garage access — your only realistic option.
- Road trips and travel beyond your car's range.
- Workplace charging — often free or steeply discounted.
- Occasional top-ups when home charging isn't fast enough overnight.
For network-specific pricing, see our charging network cost comparison. To pick the cheapest hours on your home plan, check the off-peak window for Utah.
Run the math for your car
Other states
- Alaska
- Alabama
- Arkansas
- Arizona
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- District of Columbia
- Delaware
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii