EV Charging Cost in South Carolina: 16.45¢ per kWh

▼ 14% below US average
Residential electricity in South Carolina costs 16.45¢/kWh (March 2026), the 24th most expensive of all 50 states and DC. A full 60 kWh EV charge costs about $9.87 — roughly 38% more than North Dakota, the cheapest state at 11.95¢/kWh.

Latest EIA data: March 2026 Published May 24, 2026 Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration

16.45¢
per kWh ▲ 1.86% MoM
$9.87
Full 60 kWh charge
4.7¢
Cost per mile
$1,116
Annual savings vs gas*

South Carolina Electricity Price Trend (24 Months)

13¢ 15¢ 16¢ 18¢ 20¢ Apr '24Oct '24Apr '25Oct '25Mar '26 16.45¢
South Carolina US average

Charging Cost by Battery Size in South Carolina

Battery Example EV Est. range Full charge (0–100%)
40 kWh Nissan Leaf 140 mi $6.58
60 kWh Typical EV 210 mi $9.87
80 kWh Tesla Model 3 LR 280 mi $13.16
100 kWh Tesla Model S 350 mi $16.45

Estimated range and charge cost assume 3.5 mi/kWh efficiency at South Carolina's 16.45¢/kWh residential rate. *Annual savings assumes 1,000 miles/month vs a 25 MPG gas car at $3.50/gallon.

Over the past year, electricity in South Carolina has increased 7.73%, from 15.27¢ to 16.45¢ per kWh.

Compare South Carolina to Neighboring States

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much does electricity cost in South Carolina?

Residential electricity in South Carolina costs 16.45¢/kWh as of March 2026, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That is 14% below the US average of 19.16¢/kWh, ranking South Carolina the 24th most expensive of all 50 states and DC.

How much does it cost to charge an EV in South Carolina?

At 16.45¢/kWh, a full 0–100% charge costs about $6.58 for a 40 kWh battery, $9.87 for a typical 60 kWh EV, and $16.45 for a 100 kWh battery. That works out to roughly 4.7¢ per mile of driving.

Is it cheaper to drive an EV than a gas car in South Carolina?

Yes. Driving 1,000 miles a month on electricity in South Carolina costs about $564 a year, versus roughly $1,680 for a 25 MPG gas car at $3.50/gallon — an annual saving of about $1,116.

Electricity price from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (Form EIA-861), March 2026.