Switching from Petrol to Electric at ~25,000 km/year
At 20,000+ km/year, a handful of numbers shift. Below: what changes in figures, and the available Electric models in our database. Factual, no ranking, no buying advice.
At 20,000+ km/year, a handful of numbers shift. Below: what changes in figures, and the available Electric models in our database. Factual, no ranking, no buying advice.
Here is each axis in more detail, with ranges and source caveat:
Switching from Petrol to Electric first changes the unit you read your consumption in: from litres/100 km to kWh/100 km. A direct litres/100km to kWh comparison is not one-to-one; use the official WLTP figure per version as an indicative starting point and note that real-world numbers differ, especially in cold weather and on the motorway. At ~25,000 km/year (20,000+ km/year) that gap weighs more heavily as annual mileage rises.
Something Petrol did not have now appears: charging infrastructure. An EV needs a charging solution: home charger, workplace or public network. A 10-80% fast charge takes, depending on model and charge rate, an indicative 20-40 minutes (manufacturer figure, not measured by us). Whether that fits depends on your parking situation and route, not on a general verdict.
With Electric, watch the towing capacity: several EVs have a braked towing capacity of 0-1,000 kg, lower than a comparable Petrol. If you regularly tow a caravan or trailer, check the braked towing capacity per version on the registration document before you compare.
124 available models with Electric as a fuel, sorted by brand and model. Spec reference, no offer and no order of preference.
Explore all Electric models with full filtersCompare units yourself on each model page; every figure shows its source and reference date. Back to the switching pillar, or see the Petrol category and the Electric category.
No tax or financial advice. Every figure shows its source and reference date. Always compare with an independent adviser and the official source. Source: OEM datasheets + WLTP (see methodology); WLTP is a manufacturer figure, practice differs; check towing capacity per version on the registration document.