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EV Incentives

Electric Vehicle Incentives in Kansas

EV tax credits, charging rebates, and utility programs for Kansas residents — everything you need to save on your next electric vehicle.

EV Registrations

~10,000

Charging Cost

$0.13/kWh

Public Chargers

~250 Level 2 + DC Fast

State Rebate

None (+ $100/yr BEV fee)

Home Charger Cost

$500–$1,100

Annual Fuel Savings

~$900–$1,300 vs gas

EV Landscape in Kansas

Kansas has a growing but still small EV market, with approximately 10,000 registered EVs as of mid-2025. The state imposes a $100 annual registration fee on battery electric vehicles. Kansas does not offer state-level EV purchase incentives, but its low electricity rates and strong solar/wind resources make EVs economical to own. The Kansas Turnpike Authority has been adding fast chargers along I-35.

Federal EV Tax Credits

The federal EV tax credits (Section 30D for new EVs, Section 25E for used EVs) expired for vehicles purchased after December 31, 2025 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The Section 30C credit for home charger installations was also terminated. Credits may still be claimed on 2025 tax returns for qualifying purchases made before the deadline.

Kansas EV Incentives

Kansas does not offer state-level EV rebates, tax credits, or sales tax exemptions. The state charges a $100 annual registration surcharge for battery EVs to offset lost motor fuel tax revenue. Despite the lack of incentives, Kansas's low cost of living and affordable electricity make EV ownership cost-effective over time.

Charging Installation Incentives

Kansas received approximately $40 million in federal NEVI formula funds for EV charging infrastructure along designated corridors including I-35, I-70, and I-135. Evergy (the state's largest utility) has invested in workplace and public charging stations. Home Level 2 charger installation in Kansas typically costs $500–$1,100.

Utility EV Programs

Evergy serves most of Kansas and offers a Clean Charge Network of public Level 2 chargers in the Kansas City metro area. Evergy has explored residential EV time-of-use rates that could benefit overnight charging. Kansas's average residential electricity rate of ~$0.13/kWh makes home charging affordable at roughly $4–$5 per full charge.

Pair Your EV with Solar

Kansas is excellent for solar+EV pairing, with 5.2 peak sun hours per day and wide-open rooftops ideal for solar installations. The state is also the #2 wind energy producer in the US, meaning Kansas's grid is already relatively clean. A 7–8 kW solar system can cover both household electricity and daily EV charging for a typical Kansas family. Without federal solar credits, payback periods are longer (10–14 years), but the combined fuel and electricity savings make it worthwhile.

EV Incentive FAQs for Kansas

Does Kansas offer any EV incentives?

Kansas does not currently offer state-level EV purchase rebates or tax credits. The state charges a $100 annual EV registration fee. Federal EV credits expired after December 2025. EV savings come from lower fuel and maintenance costs.

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

At Kansas's average residential rate of ~$0.13/kWh, a full home charge costs about $4–$5 for 250 miles of range. Monthly charging costs average $35–$50 for typical driving, compared to $110–$170 for gasoline.

Does Evergy have EV charging programs?

Evergy operates a Clean Charge Network of public Level 2 stations in the Kansas City area and has explored time-of-use rates that benefit overnight EV charging. Check Evergy's website for current EV program offerings.

Where are Kansas EV charging stations?

Kansas has ~250 public charging stations concentrated along I-35 (Wichita to KC), I-70 (Topeka to KC), and in metropolitan areas. Federal NEVI funding (~$40M) is expanding the network along major corridors.

Is solar + EV practical in Kansas?

Very practical. Kansas gets 5.2 peak sun hours/day and has flat terrain ideal for solar. A 7–8 kW system can power your home and charge an EV. Combined annual savings of $1,500–$2,500 in fuel and electricity.

Reviewed by the Net-Zero USA editorial team
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15

Sources: Kansas Corporation Commission, Evergy Clean Charge Network, US DOE AFDC, NEVI Formula Program — Kansas

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