Got a question? You’ll most likely find the answer here. Select one of the help categories below. If you don’t see your question below, drop us an email and we will get back to you
All figures presented are estimates and are for guidance purposes only. These numbers are based on:
- Data you have provided
- Manufacturer car specifications and guide prices
- Other standard assumptions such as typical journeys
The savings that are presented when comparing an electric vehicle with a new petrol car of similar specification are calculated using a “total cost of ownership” approach. This approach includes all relevant annual costs. These include finance, electricity bills, fuelling charges, average running costs and insurance costs.
The total monthly cost is calculated using electricity bills, finance, fuelling charges and average running costs and insurance. All prices calculated here should be used for guidance only.
Carbon savings are based on both the reduction in emissions from changing to a zero tailpipe emissions car and the way you’ll want to charge it with greener than average sources of electricity.
There are two ways to find your perfect EV with Love my EV. First up, if you’re done the research and have narrowed it down to a few EV models, or just a single EV with multiple battery options, you can use our EV offers comparison tool to check finance, lease and subscription offers on your dream car!
If you’d like a bit more help, that’s ok, our EV match tool will have you sorted in no time! You don’t need to know anything about electric cars, just about what you need from a car:
- The size of car are you looking for
- Features you’re looking for in a car
- An idea of your budget
With just a few clicks, we’ll match you with vehicles. Our matching algorithm sorts the results, giving all the cars a score. This is about how well each model performs in your selected categories.
Once you have explored your results, and narrowed down your search to a few models, we can check the suitability of different battery sizes for your journey patterns using our suitability checker or you can skip to sees the latest finance, lease and subscription offers on your selected vehicles.
There are so many home EV chargers to choose from, but it’s likely that there are only a few that have all the features you need.
Our EV charger match tool shows all the differences between home chargers, and explains a little about each. You just need to select what matters to you and our algorithms sort through the EV chargers and show you models that best satisfy all your selected categories.
We give each charger a % match score that reflects the quality of each charger in your selected categories as determined by our research and charger know-how.
Love my EV was started by Mat and Laura Thomson. It was an idea that came out of our experience of switching to an EV in 2019. We could have done with an easy way to compare how various battery sizes worked for our journeys and find the best clean energy to charge an EV.
Love my EV shows anyone how the right EV and clean home energy stack up for their wallet, and for the planet.
There’s a lot to think about when you are making the switch to electric. We have free online tools that can help. Whether it’s simply finding suitable products, or crunching the numbers, we have calculators that can give your the answers you need at any stage of your journey to electric:
Just tell us what you need from a car and we’ll find the EVs to suit you with a EV suitability check > FInd your EV match
If you’ve narrowed your choice down to a few EVs, or even different battery-size versions of the same EV, we use clever algorithms to see which is more cost effective for you in our total cost of ownership calculator. We can even help you compare the total cost of lease, finance or even subscription > Compare total costs of ownership
If you are looking for a home charger, try our impartial home EV charger finder – Select all the EV charger features that you need and we’ll show you all the suitable chargers > Find a home EV charger
Make your EV affordable and greener with the right home energy – including a quick calculation of your payback from installing solar on your roof > EV tariff and solar checker
We compare tariffs from all the suppliers offering EV-friendly tariffs, but we can’t start a switch for you. This is because suppliers need time to check the information from your smart meter before you move to an EV-friendly tariff.
Instead, you can click through from your tariff results page to check the details on the utility’s website and start a switch to an interim tariff. Once the supplier has received information from your current smart meter (or, if you don’t yet have a smart meter, installed a smart meter at your property) they will switch you to an EV tariff.
When you switch supplier, it’s useful to have the following information:
- Your postcode.
- The name of your current supplier.
- The name of your current energy tariff.
- Your annual energy usage or costs.
You can find your tariff, supplier and annual information on a recent energy bill. Log into your online account if you don’t get paper bills.
All figures presented are estimates and are for guidance purposes only. These numbers are based on:
- Data you have provided
- Manufacturer car specifications and guide prices
- Other standard assumptions such as typical journeys
The savings that are presented when comparing an electric vehicle with a new petrol car of similar specification are calculated using a “total cost of ownership” approach. This approach includes all relevant annual costs. These include finance, electricity bills, fuelling charges, average running costs and insurance costs.
The total monthly cost is calculated using electricity bills, finance, fuelling charges and average running costs and insurance. All prices calculated here should be used for guidance only.
Carbon savings are based on both the reduction in emissions from changing to a zero tailpipe emissions car and the way you’ll want to charge it with greener than average sources of electricity.
There are two ways to find your perfect EV with Love my EV. First up, if you’re done the research and have narrowed it down to a few EV models, or just a single EV with multiple battery options, you can use our EV offers comparison tool to check finance, lease and subscription offers on your dream car!
If you’d like a bit more help, that’s ok, our EV match tool will have you sorted in no time! You don’t need to know anything about electric cars, just about what you need from a car:
- The size of car are you looking for
- Features you’re looking for in a car
- An idea of your budget
With just a few clicks, we’ll match you with vehicles. Our matching algorithm sorts the results, giving all the cars a score. This is about how well each model performs in your selected categories.
Once you have explored your results, and narrowed down your search to a few models, we can check the suitability of different battery sizes for your journey patterns using our suitability checker or you can skip to sees the latest finance, lease and subscription offers on your selected vehicles.
Like all other cars, electric cars need to be ‘type approved’ to tow a caravan or trailer. At the moment there are a few models with this approval, but it is true that today these are some of the more expensive options.
As with petrol or diesel cars, the efficiency of an EV drops with an extra weight to tow, so the range you could expect will be lower. Due to their instant torque EVs are, however, very well suited to towing.
Firstly, if an EV breaks down it can be towed safely out of immediate danger (for example, when in a live traffic lane), just like any other vehicle.
For towing at higher speeds and longer distances, EVs are best towed with the wheels off the ground.
This is also the case for many automatic petrol and diesel vehicles, so not a new challenge for vehicle recovery companies.
The AA and RAC have both developed ‘wheel-up’ innovations that allow standard patrol vans to tow an EV for long distances. If the problem is an empty battery, many patrol vans are being fitted with boosting capabilities to give you enough juice to get you to the nearest charge point.
Electric cars don’t use as much electricity as you might think. The UK’s Committee on Climate Change suggests that even electrifying the entire UK vehicle fleet would mean road transport makes up only 15-20% of total electricity demand in 2050.
With EV drivers charging at less busy times (such as overnight), there’s less need for strengthening the current infrastructure. Most people don’t need to fully charge their cars more than once a week. This means when you plug an EV in at home you are mostly ever only topping up. If you throw in cheap pricing as an incentive, most EV drivers will happily fill up more when there is high supply of renewable energy compared to demand.
Watch Top Gear’s Chris Harris interviewing Graeme Cooper from the National Grid to find out more.
Battery producers are obliged to take back EV batteries at the end of their life and ensure they are treated at permitted facilities that meet the required recycling efficiency standards.
It’s in everyone’s interest to create a circular economy for EV batteries to maximise the economic and environmental opportunities of the transition to zero emission vehicles.
The target is for an EV battery pack to be 95% recyclable by 2035.
There are well over 10 million EVs all over the world and there is no evidence to suggest that fears about battery lifespans are well founded. The life you should expect from an EV shouldn’t be any different from a petrol or diesel vehicle.
Most electric vehicle batteries have warranties of around 8 years (or 100,000 miles), but are expected to last much longer. As battery technology improves, their lifespan will continue to improve.
Yes, the price tags on an EV can be hefty, especially if you’re not normally in the market for a new car. But while you pay more upfront for an EV, the running costs are much lower than a conventional car.
For many people, EVs have a lower total cost even over the first few years of ownership. EVs don’t pay Vehicle Excise Duty (road tax) and emissions zone costs, they have a very low cost per mile when charged overnight at home, and require less maintenance.
You don’t have to buy an EV outright to start driving one – there are very cost-effective lease deals and even flexible month-by-month subscription services to consider.
Of current EV drivers, only around 10% can’t charge at home.
Home charging is definitely the most convenient and cost-effective way to charge. This doesn’t mean that you can’t go for an electric car if you don’t have a driveway.
There are numerous ways to get around not being able to charge at home. For more information and tips, head over to our article on charging an EV if you don’t have a driveway.
Today, if you are on the road in an EV, you are unlikely to be more than 25 miles away from a rapid chargepoint. There are public chargers along England’s motorways and A roads, and more at destinations and locations just off the beaten track.
The speed you can charge depends on both your car technology and on the charger speed itself. Even with an average new EV, on an average rapid charger you’ll be adding 100 miles every 30 minutes.Kia’s new EV6 can add 200 miles in less than 20 minutes.
As with any tariff, the energy that comes down the wires to your house is from a mix of sources that varies by time of day, and by where you live.
Love my EV calculates that electricity on the grid the off-peak hours of an EV tariff is about 26% lower carbon than energy you’d use if you just arrived home in the evening and started charging (August 2020 – August 2021 using National Grid ESO data).
It’s relatively cheap for any supplier to label a tariff as ‘green’ by buying certificates called REGOs. Cheap certificates don’t help fund more renewables on the grid. Signing up to a properly green tariff with a supplier that is committed to buying only green energy (not just the certificates) or, better still, even owns renewable power generation will support investment in further renewable generation.
Read more about this in our article, How green is your green tariff?
Your new supplier will start you off on a traditional ‘single-rate’ tariff to begin with. They do this to check they are receiving data from your smart meter. After a week or two, once they can see your meter is working correctly, they can move you onto the EV tariff you have chosen.
To avoid any surprises, you can check whether your smart meter is working as expected using the Citizen’s Advice smart meter check tool
Love my EV can’t offer you an automatic switching to an EV tariff.
This is because your new supplier needs to check that they are receiving data from your smart meter for a few weeks before they can move you onto the EV tariff you have chosen.
Once you have decided on a tariff, we get you straight to the relevant page of the supplier’s website. Because each supplier is different, you may have to input some of the information again.
Even though we can’t do this for you, we’ll provide you with clear information about what to expect for each supplier.
Many EV tariffs come as dual fuel, which means you must switch your gas with your electricity supply to the new supplier. However, if you don’t have gas, then most suppliers will be happy to have you on board.
The exception is E.On Next, who won’t take you on as a customer unless you have both a gas and electricity supply.
Octopus Energy, on the other hand, do not insist that you switch your gas to them. You can often get a better deal by leaving your gas with your current supplier or moving it to another provider.
It makes a difference where you live. The Southern and Central Regions use Telephonica (O2) as the mobile provider, whereas the Northern Region uses Arqiva’ Long Range RadioTechnology.
In Southern England, smart meters communicate through mobile communications and so the signal strength at your house is important. Your supplier will check that a premises has communications before visiting. Once on site they can check with a signal checking device if the signal is strong enough in the meter location.
If the signal isn’t strong enough, they can try a number of different aerials to try to boost the signal.
In areas of patchy mobile connectivity, but if your neighbours have a connected smart meter, your SMETS2 meter could establish a Wide Area Network (WAN) and connect with DCC like that. If all that fails, the engineer can leave the meter de-commissioned and ask the DCC to get the communications working.
If you have a poor mobile signal and no other SMETS2 meters in close vicinity then you are unlikely to have much luck. However, your mobile signal may improve or a large supplier could attempt a mass smart meter deployment for its customers in your area.
In the North, if a supplier installs a smart meter which can’t receive a signal on the Arqiva network they should report this to the DCC. DCC and Arqiva must work to improve the signal coverage.
If you have a newer SMETS2 you are safe to switch, as your meter will continue to work with your new supplier.
If you have an older smart meter and you’ve changed supplier since it was installed, the chances are that your meter lost its ‘smart’ capabilities.
These older (SMETS1) meters often use different support systems across different suppliers and therefore can stop working after switching suppliers.
Upgrades being rolled out mean that the smart functioning will restart – hopefully this Autumn (2021).
Provided your meter is on the list of SMETS 1 meters for adoption by DCC it should start working again shortly.
You can check whether your smart meter is sending data to your supplier using the Citizen’s Advice smart meter checker.
You can request a smart meter from your energy supplier. They will install a new meter free of charge. You typically do this by calling or logging into your online account.
How quickly they can install one depends on when they are planning to work in your area.
If you don’t have much luck in getting a date from your current supplier, it may be worth switching to a different supplier (with the EV tariff that works best for you) and making the request again.
You’ll need a smart meter to benefit from any EV tariff that has more than one rate.
A smart meter will understand and report back to your supplier so that they can bill for your electricity consumption. Either charging you depending upon the time of day you used each unit (time-of-use tariffs), or depending upon what you have used the energy for (type-of-use tariffs).
There are so many home EV chargers to choose from, but it’s likely that there are only a few that have all the features you need.
Our EV charger match tool shows all the differences between home chargers, and explains a little about each. You just need to select what matters to you and our algorithms sort through the EV chargers and show you models that best satisfy all your selected categories.
We give each charger a % match score that reflects the quality of each charger in your selected categories as determined by our research and charger know-how.
Most EV charging cables are only about 10 metres long. Whilst you can purchase models with longer cables, this will often come at an extra cost. EV chargers are weatherproof so they can be installed either in a garage or on the side of the house but the important thing is to get it installed near the place you park most regularly.
Remember that a significant part of the installation cost is the distance between your home’s fusebox and the charger.
It won’t take you long to come across this question: tethered or untethered? To put it simply, tethered chargers have the charging cable permanently attached to your wall, whereas untethered means you’ll need a separate charging cable.
Cost-wise we recommend sticking with tethered, as it makes plugging in just a little simpler. You might think about untethered if your EV came equipped with its own charging cable and you prefer a minimal look charger when you aren’t around.
This is dependent on two things, the power rating of your chargepoint and the battery size of your car.
A three-pin plug aka ‘granny cable’: These have a power rating of about 3kW and can take up to 12 hours to fully charge relatively small 40kWh battery. It’ll add 5 miles of range per hour.
A home charger is generally 7.4kW, and will deliver approximately 25 miles of range per hour.
Destination or ‘fast’ charging refers to most alternating current (AC) charging stations found in residential and commercial settings. This range covers most EV chargers found on the market with power ratings or 7.4kW, 11kW or 22kW. 7.4kW chargers deliver approximately 25 miles of range per hour, 11kW chargers deliver approximately 37 miles of range per hour and 22kW chargers deliver approximately 75 miles of range per hour. Perhaps not as ‘fast’ as all that.
Then there’s rapid charging charging, which utilises direct current (DC) to charge. These are found in pubs, fast food areas and services and they are great for short, rapid bursts of charge. These chargers can supply up to 350kW, so the limiting factor will probably be the max speed of your onboard charger.
The OZEV grant, provided by the Office for Zero Emission Vehicles (OZEV) can provide a 75% contribution to the price of your charger installation up to an amount of £350. As of March 31st 2022 this scheme was closed to homeowners. However, the scheme will remain open to:
- Homeowners who live in flats
- People in rented accommodation
- Landlords, who can receive up to 200 grants per year for residential properties (A total maximum grant of £70 000) and a further 100 grants for commercial properties. Note this is so landlords can install a large number of charge points on their properties.
- You must have designated off-street parking (the cable cannot cross a pedestrian pavement)
- You cannot claim the grant twice unless you own two OZEV eligible vehicles.
For more information read the charger grant details