Compare Australia's main EV charging networks by cost. Set how much you're adding and we'll rank them — rates are editable, because networks change their pricing often.
Tip: edit any rate to match what you actually pay — networks update pricing regularly.
Indicative rates as of mid-2026 — always check the network's app for live pricing.
Public DC fast charging in Australia generally runs 40–70c/kWh. Rates change often and vary by charger speed and time of day, so this is a guide — edit the rates to match reality. Estimates only, not advice.
Public fast-charging is the most expensive way to charge — but still typically cheaper per kilometre than petrol.
Rates on Australia’s DC fast-charging networks generally run between 40c and 70c per kWh, varying by charger speed, network and time of day. Faster 150–350 kW chargers usually cost more than 50 kW units. Some networks offer membership plans or per-minute pricing, and a few (like Tesla Superchargers) charge non-members a premium or a monthly fee.
Because rates change often, the comparison above lets you edit every network’s price to match what you actually pay. As a rule of thumb, home charging is dramatically cheaper than any public option, so most owners use public chargers mainly for road trips and top-ups rather than everyday charging.
Always check the network’s own app for live pricing before you plug in — rates and availability move around, and this tool is a guide rather than a live feed.