Comprehensive breakdown of electric vehicle total cost of ownership over 5 years including purchase price, charging costs, maintenance, and depreciation
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Complete Total Cost of Ownership Analysis: Electric Vehicles Over 5 Years

πŸ“… February 21, 2026 ⏱️ 6 min read ✍️ GReverse Team

Buying an electric car isn't judged by the sticker price alone. The Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) includes every dollar you'll spend on energy, maintenance, insurance, taxes, and depreciation over the vehicle's lifetime. And that's where the equation shifts dramatically.

πŸ“– Read more: 10 Common EV Owner Mistakes & How to Avoid Them

In this article, we break down every cost factor, comparing a typical EV with an equivalent gasoline car over a 5-year horizon in Greece. The numbers speak for themselves.

~50%
Maintenance Savings
~60%
Fuel Cost Savings
$115
$/kWh Battery 2024
8 yrs
Battery Warranty

What Does TCO Include?

Total cost of ownership isn't simply β€œpurchase price + gas.” It encompasses six key cost categories that, when combined, determine whether a car is truly affordable.

Purchase Price
Upfront capital or lease/loan payments
Energy / Fuel
Electricity vs gasoline over 46,000 miles
Maintenance
Service, brakes, tires, filters
Insurance
Comprehensive annual coverage
Taxes & Fees
Road tax, registration, luxury tax
Depreciation
Resale value after 5 years

1. Purchase Price: The Big Barrier

The upfront price remains the biggest obstacle. A popular EV in Greece (e.g., MG4 Standard, BYD Atto 3, VW ID.3) costs $32,000–$41,000, while an equivalent gasoline compact (VW Golf, Toyota Corolla, Peugeot 308) ranges around $24,000–$32,000. The difference? Roughly $6,500–$11,000.

However, in Greece EVs are exempt from the luxury tax (0% registration fee) and, during certain periods, purchase subsidies are available. This can narrow the gap to $3,200–$5,400. The government also offers incentives for wallbox installation.

2. Energy Cost vs Fuel

Here's where the first major reversal appears. Based on 9,300 miles/year:

Electric (EV)
Consumption: 16 kWh/100km
Electricity cost: $0.22/kWh (home)
Annual cost: ~$520
5-year: ~$2,600
Gasoline (ICE)
Consumption: 6.5 L/100km
Gas price: $1.90/L
Annual cost: ~$1,850
5-year: ~$9,250
πŸ’‘ 5-Year Savings: Approximately $6,650 less on energy β€” and that's with home charging only. With solar panels, savings skyrocket.

3. Maintenance: Fewer Moving Parts, Lower Costs

Electric motors have hundreds fewer moving parts than internal combustion engines. No oil changes, fuel filters, timing belts, or exhaust systems. According to Consumer Reports (2024) data, Tesla was the least expensive brand to maintain over a 10-year period.

Brakes wear much less thanks to regenerative braking. Only tires may wear slightly faster due to the heavier vehicle weight.

Service / PartEV (5 yrs)ICE (5 yrs)
Oil changes$0~$815
Brake pads~$110~$435
Timing belt$0~$545
Filters (air, oil, fuel)~$55~$325
Tires (2 sets)~$980~$870
Regular service~$650~$1,630
TOTAL Maintenance~$1,795~$4,620

4. Insurance

EV insurance premiums tend to be 10-20% higher than equivalent ICE vehicles, mainly due to higher repair costs in accidents (especially if the battery is involved). However, the gap is narrowing as insurers gain more experience.

EV Insurance (annual)
~$705
Comprehensive compact EV
5-year: ~$3,530
ICE Insurance (annual)
~$600
Comprehensive compact ICE
5-year: ~$2,990

5. Taxes & Road Fees

In Greece, electric vehicles are fully exempt from road tax. A gasoline car with 1,400-1,600 cc engine pays approximately $250-$325 annually. Over 5 years, that means $1,250-$1,630 in savings on road tax alone.

Additionally, EVs are exempt from the luxury tax (registration fee) and in many municipalities enjoy free parking in controlled zones.

6. Depreciation & Resale Value

Depreciation is the biggest hidden cost of any car. EVs that were once more vulnerable to depreciation (due to battery anxiety) are now improving significantly:

  • Only 2.5% of EV batteries have been replaced globally to date
  • Battery warranty: 8 years / 100,000 miles with guaranteed 70% capacity
  • Battery pack prices dropped to $115/kWh (BloombergNEF 2024)
  • LFP batteries in China: just $56/kWh (early 2024)

It's estimated that an EV loses 40-50% of its value in 5 years, while an ICE loses 45-55%. The trend shows convergence, with EVs improving their resale value.

The Big Comparison: 5-Year TCO

Let's see the full picture. Scenario: compact-class car, 9,300 miles/year, home charging, comprehensive insurance.

Cost Category⚑ EVβ›½ ICEDifference
Purchase price$35,860$28,260+$7,600
Energy / Fuel$2,600$9,250βˆ’$6,650
Maintenance$1,795$4,620βˆ’$2,825
Insurance$3,530$2,990+$540
Road tax$0$1,410βˆ’$1,410
Depreciation (value loss)$16,140$14,130+$2,010
TOTAL TCO (5 YRS)$59,925$60,660βˆ’$735
What Does This Mean?

Even with a higher purchase price, the EV matches or beats an ICE in total economy over 5 years. If you drive more than 9,300 miles/year, savings are even greater. With solar panels or off-peak charging rates, the difference becomes $3,200-$5,400 in favor of the EV.

Hidden Costs & Watch Points

Wallbox Installation
Purchase & install cost: $540-$1,300. A one-time expense, but must be factored in.
Public Charging
If you charge mainly at public stations ($0.49-$0.71/kWh), energy costs triple.
Battery Replacement
Out of warranty: $5,000-$16,000. While rare (2.5% globally), it remains a risk.
EV Tires
EVs need reinforced tires (for added weight), approximately 15% more expensive.

How to Maximize Your Savings

β˜€οΈ
Solar Panels
Zero out electricity costs with home solar
πŸŒ™
Off-Peak Rates
Charge 2:00-8:00 AM at reduced rates
🏠
Home Wallbox
Avoid expensive public charging
πŸ”‹
Proper Charging
20-80% daily = long battery life
πŸš—
High Mileage
Over 12,400 mi/yr = faster break-even
πŸ“‹
Subsidies
Check current government incentives

When Does an EV Truly Pay Off?

The answer depends on three factors:

βœ… Definitely Worth It
If you drive 9,300+ mi/yr, charge at home, keep the car 5+ years
βš–οΈ Borderline
If you drive 5,000-7,500 mi/yr and lack home charging access
❌ Questionable
If you drive very few miles, rely only on public charging, change cars every 2-3 years

According to the European Consumer Organisation (BEUC), in the EU and US, TCO of modern EVs is already lower than equivalent gasoline cars, thanks to reduced energy and maintenance costs. The more miles you drive annually, the greater the advantage.

Conclusion

The TCO of an electric car over 5 years is now competitive or better compared to an equivalent gasoline vehicle in Greece. The higher purchase price is fully offset by lower energy costs (βˆ’60%), maintenance costs (βˆ’50%), and zero road tax. With solar panels or off-peak electricity rates, savings become dramatic.

The message is clear: don't judge by the sticker price alone. Calculate the entire ownership period β€” and the numbers will speak for themselves.

TCO Cost of Ownership Electric Vehicles Savings Greece 2026
total cost of ownership EV TCO electric vehicle costs 5 year analysis EV vs gas electric car savings EV maintenance EV depreciation