How to Calculate Your EV's Real MPGe (and Why It May Differ From the Sticker)
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
MPGe was created to solve a translation problem. Buyers spent decades judging cars by miles per gallon, but an electric vehicle has no gallons to count. To bridge that gap, the EPA anchored everything to a single fact: one gallon of gasoline holds about 33.7 kilowatt-hours of energy. That constant turns kilowatt-hours into a number that sits on the familiar MPG scale, letting a shopper line up a battery car next to a gas car using one yardstick.
To run your own figure, you need two inputs: the miles you covered and the energy you consumed over those same miles. The cleanest energy reading comes from a smart charger or your utility meter, because those capture the full draw from the wall. Divide miles by kilowatt-hours to get miles per kilowatt-hour, then multiply by 33.7. A car that travels 3.5 miles per kWh, for example, works out to roughly 118 MPGe.
There is often a meaningful difference between the number on the window sticker and the number you compute at home. EPA ratings come from standardized lab drive cycles that include charging losses from the wall to the battery. Your real driving adds variables the lab cannot fully capture: highway speeds that increase aerodynamic drag, cold weather that saps battery performance, cabin heating and air conditioning, and hilly terrain. All of these pull your real-world MPGe below the rated figure.
It also helps to know what MPGe deliberately leaves out. It is an energy-efficiency measure, not a cost measure, so two cars with identical MPGe can cost very different amounts to charge depending on local electricity prices and time-of-use rates. MPGe also says nothing about range, which is a function of battery capacity. A model can be extremely efficient yet still need more frequent charging than a larger, thirstier EV with a bigger pack.
Used carefully, the calculation becomes a practical tool rather than a marketing slogan. Compute MPGe across different seasons to see how winter affects you, compare it before and after changing your driving habits, or use it to settle a head-to-head between two cars you are considering. Pair the result with your actual electricity rate to estimate cost per mile, and you will understand your vehicle far better than the sticker alone allows.
Quick tips
- For the most accurate result, take your kWh figure from a wall charger or utility meter rather than the dashboard, so charging losses are included the same way the EPA counts them.
- If you only know your consumption as kWh per 100 miles, use the shortcut MPGe = 3370 / (kWh per 100 miles) to skip a step.
- Calculate MPGe separately for summer and winter driving; cold-weather figures can drop noticeably and reveal how much heating and battery temperature affect your efficiency.
- Remember that MPGe ranks energy efficiency, not running cost, so multiply your kWh used by your local electricity rate to get the dollars-per-mile number that actually matters for budgeting.
The MPGe Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.