Five money-saving tips for switching to an EV
With World EV Day next week (9 Sept), drivers could make massive savings by switching to an electric car, according to Ohme, the UK’s leading smart home EV charging company.
Ohme can help you to charge your car smarter, cleaner and cheaper and to celebrate World EV Day, here are five top money-saving tips for EV drivers:
Saving tip 1 – Drive an EV
It sounds obvious, but if you’re driving an electric vehicle, then the great news is that you’re already saving money compared to running a petrol or diesel car.
With the average driver spending more than £1100* a year on fuel costs alone, just switching to an electric car and charging it at home could more than halve your costs to just £416.50** for an entire year for the same annual mileage even at the new electricity rate arriving on 1 October.
Saving tip 2 – Choose a dynamic home electricity tariff
Want to run an EV for less than £10 a month? It may sound too good to be true, but that’s the reality if you switch to a dynamic home electricity tariff from the likes of Octopus or OVO.
Thanks to its dynamic tariff integration, with an Ohme EV charger you can access all of the UK’s cheapest electricity tariffs, meaning you can reduce the running costs even more. The same typical UK driver mentioned above doing 6800mls a year could spend just £119*** for an entire year of driving.
Saving tip 3 – Cheaper overnight electricity
Some dynamic home electricity tariffs can mean that all of the electricity coming into your home is at the cheap rate at certain times – usually overnight.
That means that any household appliances you can also use during those times will be at the same reduced rate, increasing your savings on your household electricity bill as well as for your EV.
Saving tip 4 – Get an EV company car
If you have a company car, then you need to get an EV. It’s really that simple. Electric vehicles pay just 2% Benefit-in-Kind company car tax for 2024/25.
Another popular alternative is to get an EV on salary sacrifice from your employer. With salary sacrifice the leasing payments are taken from your gross income before you pay tax rather than after it as with a traditional company car scheme, leaving you with more disposable income.
Saving tip 5 – Take part in a grid flexibility trial
This summer Ohme has been involved in an Ofgem project called the CrowdFlex energy trial. This project was to incentivise EV drivers to plug in their cars more frequently to get a better understanding of the role EV drivers can play with balancing the electricity grid of the future.
By participating in the trial, drivers earned rewards by simply plugging-in whenever they were parked at home. Ohme is involved in a similar trial from this month until April 2025. Grid flexibility services such as these are estimated to save consumers £10 billion a year in energy costs by 2050.
* Based on £1.43/litre and efficiency of 40mpg
** SVT at 24.5p/kWh (rate from 1 October)
*** Intelligent Octopus Go at 7p/kWh