Home charging cost
Charging a Chevrolet Silverado EV in New Jersey
What it actually costs to charge at home on New Jersey's average residential electricity rate.
Home charging at a glance
New Jersey rate
$0.17/kWh
Full charge
~$29.75
283–478 miles
Cost per mile
~8.3¢
Yearly home-charging cost
Based on the Chevrolet Silverado EV’s efficiency (2.1 mi/kWh) at New Jersey's average residential rate. For comparison, a 30-mpg gas car at $3.50/gallon runs about 12¢/mile.
Home vs. public fast charging
Costs below are for a 10%–80% charge — the usable fast-charge window, about 119 kWh of the Chevrolet Silverado EV’s 170 kWh battery. That’s the range most owners actually use, since charging past 80% slows down sharply.
Home charging
~$20.82
10 → 80% · 8.3¢/mile
$0.17/kWh
Public fast charging
~$59.50
10 → 80% · 23.8¢/mile
~$0.50/kWh (DC fast)
Charging the Chevrolet Silverado EV on public DC fast chargers costs roughly 2.9× more than at home — about $38.67 extra per 10→80% charge. Most owners charge at home and only use fast charging on road trips, so your real average lands much closer to the home number.
Level 1 vs. Level 2: can your outlet keep up?
The cost per kWh is the same either way. What changes is how fast the Chevrolet Silverado EV recovers range while parked at home.
Level 1 · standard outlet
~3 mi/hour
120V · no installation needed
~16 hours to recover 40 miles of driving. A 10-hour overnight plug-in adds about 25 miles.
Level 2 · 240V circuit
~20 mi/hour
240V · uses the Chevrolet Silverado EV’s 9.6 kW onboard charger
~2 hours to recover 40 miles. A 10-hour overnight plug-in adds up to 202 miles.
If your daily driving stays under ~25 miles, a regular outlet may be all the Chevrolet Silverado EV needs. Drive more than that, and Level 2 — or a workplace charger — becomes the difference between an EV that fits your life and one that doesn’t.
Does a Level 2 install pay for itself?
A home Level 2 setup — 240V circuit plus charger — typically runs $800–$1,800 installed. If the alternative is relying on public fast chargers, home charging the Chevrolet Silverado EV in New Jersey saves about $154.76/month at 12,000 miles a year.
At a mid-range install cost of $1,300, that’s a payback of roughly 8 months — and every month after that is pure savings.
Winter in New Jersey
New Jersey averages about 4 months a year cold enough to cut EV efficiency — typically 15–25% in deep winter. Here’s what that does to the Chevrolet Silverado EV’s numbers at a 20% efficiency loss:
Cost per mile
~10.4¢vs. 8.3¢ in mild weather
Full-charge range
~286 mivs. ~357 mi
The cost bump is minor — a few dollars a month. The range cut matters more: if your daily driving is close to the Chevrolet Silverado EV’s limits, winter is when a marginal charging setup stops working.
Will a Chevrolet Silverado EV actually work for your home in New Jersey?
Cost is one piece. The bigger question is whether your outlet and daily driving keep you covered without relying on public chargers. Answer 5 quick questions for a clear, personalized answer.
Check your EV readiness →Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to charge a Chevrolet Silverado EV at home in New Jersey?
At New Jersey's average residential rate of $0.17 per kWh, a full charge of the Chevrolet Silverado EV's 170 kWh battery costs about $29.75 — roughly 8.3 cents per mile.
What is the yearly cost to charge a Chevrolet Silverado EV in New Jersey?
Driving 12,000 miles a year, home charging a Chevrolet Silverado EV in New Jersey costs about $1,000 per year.
Can you charge a Chevrolet Silverado EV on a regular outlet?
Yes. On a standard 120V outlet (Level 1), the Chevrolet Silverado EV recovers about 3 miles of range per hour — roughly 25 miles overnight. A 240V Level 2 circuit charges about 8x faster.
Is it cheaper to charge a Chevrolet Silverado EV at home or at a public fast charger?
Home charging in New Jersey costs about 8.3 cents per mile, while public DC fast charging runs about 23.8 cents per mile — roughly 2.9x more.
Chevrolet Silverado EV charging cost in other locations
Other EVs in New Jersey
Electricity rate is the EIA state residential average. Charging cost assumes home (Level 1 or Level 2) charging; efficiency and battery figures from the EV guide. Rates last reviewed Q2 2026.