Kansas EV Incentive Calculator
2026Calculate electric vehicle incentives and savings in Kansas. See KS state EV rebates, tax credits, and registration surcharges. Federal EV tax credit was repealed by OBBBA (Sept 30, 2025) — only state-level incentives remain in 2026.
Written and reviewed by Konstantin Iakovlev · Methodology · Updated
Annual Fuel Savings
$1,277.14
Annual Maintenance Savings
$600.00
Total Annual Savings
$1,877.14
5-Year Savings
$9,385.71
10-Year Savings
$18,771.43
EV Savings Breakdown
| Annual Gas Fuel Cost | $1,757.14 |
| Annual EV Fuel Cost | - $480.00 |
| Annual Fuel Savings | $1,277.14 |
| Gas Maintenance/yr | $1,200.00 |
| EV Maintenance/yr | - $600.00 |
| Annual Maintenance Savings | $600.00 |
| Total Annual Savings | $1,877.14 |
| 5-Year Savings | $9,385.71 |
| 10-Year Savings | $18,771.43 |
Disclaimer: This calculator is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, financial, or legal advice. Results are estimates based on the information you provide and current rates. Always consult a qualified tax professional or financial advisor for advice specific to your situation.
What EV incentives are available in Kansas?
Federal credit status: the New Clean Vehicle Credit ($7,500 new / $4,000 used), Section 30D and 25E of the IRC, was repealed by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act for vehicles placed in service after September 30, 2025. Vehicles purchased in 2026 do not qualify for any federal point-of-sale or tax-time EV credit. EVs delivered before that cutoff may still claim the credit on a prior-year return if eligible.
State and utility programs in Kansas: Kansas does not currently offer a statewide EV purchase rebate. Some local utilities offer rebates ($300–$1,500 typical) for home Level-2 charger installation or off-peak charging plans — check with your electric provider directly.
Total cost of ownership: EV buyers in many states pay a higher annual registration surcharge ($50–$225 typical) to offset lost gas-tax revenue, partially eroding fuel savings. Use this calculator to weigh purchase price, any active state/utility rebates, the annual EV registration surcharge, and lifetime fuel/maintenance savings to see whether an EV makes financial sense in Kansas.
Kansas EV programs: state rebate, utility incentives, and HOV access
- State purchase rebate
- None — no statewide EV purchase rebate
- Utility programs
- Evergy Optional EV Time-of-Use rate; Westar/KCP&L $250 charger
- HOV lane access
- No — single-occupant EVs not exempt
- Annual EV registration surcharge
- $100 EV / $50 hybrid annual surcharge
Kansas has no state EV rebate. The state's 2019 HB 2214 imposed EV ($100) and hybrid ($50) annual surcharges. Evergy (the state's largest utility, formed from Westar and KCP&L) offers an Optional EV Time-of-Use rate plus a $250 home charger rebate. Kansas's grid is roughly 40% wind-powered. The state's Panasonic battery plant in De Soto (opened 2024) supplies Tesla and other EV manufacturers, indirectly supporting in-state EV adoption.
Kansas EV & Tax Facts (2026)
| State Sales Tax | 6.5% |
| State Income Tax | progressive (up to 5.6%) |
| Avg. Property Tax Rate | 1.33% |
Kansas EV incentives — frequently asked questions
How much can I save by switching to an electric vehicle?
EV owners save an average of $1,000-1,500 per year on fuel and $500-800 per year on maintenance (no oil changes, less brake wear). Over 10 years, total savings can reach $15,000-25,000 depending on your driving habits.
Are electric cars cheaper to maintain than gas cars?
Yes. EVs have far fewer moving parts, no engine oil, and regenerative braking reduces brake wear. Maintenance costs are typically 30-50% lower than comparable gas vehicles.
How much does it cost to charge an EV at home?
At the US average electricity rate of about $0.16/kWh, a full charge for a 60 kWh battery costs roughly $9.60 and provides 200-250 miles of range. Monthly charging costs are typically $30-60 for average drivers.