Hyundai Ioniq 5 (SE RWD) in Texas
Home charging at 15.27¢/kWh (EIA). 29 kWh per 100 miles (EPA combined). Public DC fast: 43¢/kWh avg.
EV vs gas car — annual fuel cost
The Hyundai Ioniq 5 (SE RWD) at home rates compared against a typical 28-mpg gas car and a 40-mpg hybrid at the Texas fuel price ($2.85/gal).
| Annual mileage | Hyundai Ioniq 5 (SE RWD) (home) | 28-mpg gas | 40-mpg hybrid | EV savings vs gas |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6,000 mi | $266 | $611 | $428 | $345 |
| 10,000 mi | $443 | $1018 | $713 | $575 |
| 12,000 mi | $531 | $1221 | $855 | $690 |
| 15,000 mi | $664 | $1527 | $1069 | $863 |
| 20,000 mi | $886 | $2036 | $1425 | $1150 |
Home vs public DC fast charging
Home charging is the default cost optimization. Public DC fast charging in Texas runs about 2.8× the home rate. For 12,000 miles/yr entirely on DC fast, annual fuel cost would be $1496 vs $531 at home — a $965 penalty. Apartment dwellers and road-trippers should price this in; daily commuters with home Level 2 can usually ignore public chargers.
DC fast rate is a network average (Electrify America + EVgo + Tesla Supercharger + ChargePoint). Real prices vary by location, time of day, and membership tier.
EV incentives in Texas
Texas does not currently run a state-level EV purchase rebate. Federal Section 30D credit of $7,500 still applies for qualifying vehicles (US-assembled with sourced battery components, MSRP cap, household income cap). Check the EV tax credit eligibility list for your vehicle. Some utilities offer charger installation rebates — check with your local utility.
Same vehicle in neighboring states
How Hyundai Ioniq 5 (SE RWD) cost compares in Texas's contiguous neighbors. Relevant for cross-border driving and relocation decisions.
| State | Electricity | Gas | EV / 100mi | Saves vs gas |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Texas (current) | 15.27¢ | $2.85 | $4.43 | $5.75 |
| Louisiana | 12.20¢ | $2.90 | $3.54 | $6.82 |
| Arkansas | 12.73¢ | $2.85 | $3.69 | $6.49 |
| Oklahoma | 12.81¢ | $2.90 | $3.71 | $6.64 |
| New Mexico | 13.92¢ | $3.10 | $4.04 | $7.03 |
Vehicle specs
- EPA combined efficiency: 29 kWh/100 miles
- EPA range: 303 miles
- Make / model: Hyundai Ioniq 5
Other EVs in Texas
Common questions
- How much does it cost to charge a Hyundai Ioniq 5 (SE RWD) at home in Texas?
- About $4.43 per 100 miles at the Texas residential electricity rate of 15.27¢/kWh (EIA). For comparison, a 28-mpg gas car at local gas prices costs $10.18 per 100 miles. Annual savings at 12,000 miles: ~$690.
- Home charging vs public DC fast charging — what's the difference in Texas?
- Public DC fast charging in Texas averages ~43¢/kWh — that's 2.8× home rates. A 100-mile session costs roughly $12.47 at public chargers vs $4.43 at home. For daily commuting, home charging pays off. Public fast charging is for road trips and apartment dwellers without home charging access.
- Are there EV incentives in Texas?
- Texas does not currently run a state-level EV purchase rebate. The federal Section 30D tax credit ($7,500) still applies for qualifying vehicles, and your utility may run separate charger-installation rebates.
- Does winter weather affect charging cost in Texas?
- Yes — cold weather can reduce EV efficiency by 15-30% (battery + heater draw). The numbers above use EPA combined ratings; budget +20% for sustained sub-freezing temps. Winter range drop is most pronounced for northern states.
Full data sources and formulas: /sources.