Kia EV9 Charging Cost in Tennessee

At Tennessee’s April 2026 residential rate of 14.94¢/kWh, driving a Kia EV9 12,000 miles per year costs about $766/year at home — or just $0.064/mile.

💡 Quick fix: Pair with a TOU plan: charge overnight at half the daytime rate. Wallbox Pulsar Plus 48A is the most-installed home L2 charger.See top L2 charger →
Cost/mile$0.064
Cost/100 mi$6.38
Full charge$16.43
Annual$766

Pulls about 5,128 kWh/year from the grid (accounting for ~10% AC→battery loss on Level 2 charging).

Customize the calculation

Formula: annual_kWh = miles ÷ mi_per_kWh ÷ charging_efficiency · cost = kWh × rate

About the Kia EV9 in Tennessee

The Kia EV9 carries a 99 kWh usable battery and achieves about 2.6 miles per kWh at the wheels under EPA-combined conditions. In Tennessee, where residential electricity averages 14.94¢/kWh, that translates to roughly $6.38 per 100 miles — for comparison, a gasoline car at 30 MPG and $3.50/gallon costs $11.67 per 100 miles, so a Kia EV9 owner in Tennessee saves about $635/year on fuel relative to that baseline.

This estimate is for home Level 2 charging only. Public DC fast charging typically costs 2-3× the home rate; if you primarily fast-charge, your annual cost will be higher.

Same Kia EV9, other states

StateRateAnnual cost
North Dakota12.35¢$633
Idaho12.70¢$651
Nebraska13.28¢$681
Utah13.29¢$682
Oklahoma13.31¢$683
Iowa13.86¢$711
Montana13.90¢$713
Missouri14.01¢$718
Arkansas14.16¢$726
Nevada14.29¢$733
Washington14.36¢$736
Tennessee14.94¢$766

EV charging gear

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