Saskatchewan, Canada

EV Charging Cost in Regina, SK (2026)

Regina sits at $0.133/kWh for residential electricity — 51% above the Canadian average. Gasoline runs $4.28/gal, 3% below canadian average.

Rates shown in USD for cross-region calculator consistency. Local equivalent: $0.182 CAD/kWh, $1.55 CAD/L.

Local electricity

$0.133/kWh

vs $0.160 US avg

Local gasoline

$4.28/gal

vs $3.45 US avg

EV vs gas savings (annual)

$1,598.40

at 12,000 mi/year

Cost to charge popular EVs in Regina

VehicleBatteryFull charge costAnnual cost (12,000 mi)
2024 Ford F-150 Lightning 98 kWh $14.48 $665.00
2024 Ford Mustang Mach-E 70 kWh $10.34 $443.33
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EV vs gas annual cost in Regina

EV (3.5 mi/kWh)

$456.00

3,429 kWh × $0.133

Gas car (25 MPG)

$2,054.40

480 gal × $4.28

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to charge an EV in Regina?

At Regina's residential electricity rate of $0.133/kWh, charging a typical 75 kWh EV from 0–100% costs about $11.08 at 90% efficiency. That's 51% more than the US average.

Is owning an EV worth it in Regina, SK?

At local rates, an EV driver saves about $1,598.40/year in fuel costs vs a 25 MPG gas car at $4.28/gallon (12,000 miles/year). Over 5 years that's $7,992.00 — before accounting for maintenance savings (~$500–700/yr additional) and the $7,500 federal tax credit on qualifying purchases.

Where can I charge my EV in Regina?

Public DC fast charging in Regina is available through Tesla Superchargers, Electrify America, EVgo, and ChargePoint stations. Use the PlugShare or A Better Routeplanner apps to find specific locations. Public DC fast charging typically costs $0.40–$0.55/kWh — 2.5–3× the local home rate of $0.133/kWh, so home charging is dramatically cheaper for daily driving.

Does Saskatchewan offer EV incentives beyond the federal iZEV program?

Saskatchewan stacks with the Canadian federal iZEV program ($5,000 rebate for qualifying BEVs under $55,000 MSRP). Provincial top-ups: BC offers up to $4,000 (CleanBC), Quebec up to $7,000 (Roulez vert), Nova Scotia up to $3,000, and New Brunswick up to $5,000. Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan do not currently offer provincial EV purchase rebates but provide reduced registration fees and HOV lane access.