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OK EV Guide

Electric Vehicles in
Oklahoma

Incentives, charging infrastructure, right-to-charge laws, and savings data for EV owners in Oklahoma.

1,100
Public Chargers
300
DC Fast Chargers
$789
Est. Annual Savings
15,000
Registered EVs

Incentives & Credits

New EV Credit No state credit (Federal credit ended Sept 30, 2025)
Used EV Credit Federal used EV credit ended Sept 30, 2025
Charging Incentive OG&E offers EV TOU rates
Registration Fee $110 annual EV fee
EV Sales Tax Exempt No

Fuel Savings

Avg. Electricity Rate $0.126/kWh
Avg. Gas Price $2.90/gal
Est. Annual EV Fuel Cost $454
Est. Annual Gas Cost $1,160
Annual Savings vs Gas $789/yr

Right-to-Charge Law

Status No Right-to-Charge Law

Oklahoma does not currently have a right-to-charge law.

Landlord Incentives: Property owners may qualify for the federal Section 30C tax credit.

Charging Infrastructure

Total Public Chargers 1,100
DC Fast Chargers 300
Level 2 Chargers 800
Registered EVs 15,000
EVs per Public Charger 13.6

Frequently Asked Questions

What EV incentives are available in Oklahoma?

Oklahoma EV buyers can access No state credit (Federal credit ended Sept 30, 2025). Used EV buyers may qualify for Federal used EV credit ended Sept 30, 2025. OG&E offers EV TOU rates. The annual EV registration fee is $110 annual EV fee.

Does Oklahoma have a right-to-charge law?

Oklahoma does not currently have a statewide right-to-charge law. Tenants and condo owners should check local ordinances and negotiate directly with landlords or HOA boards.

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

The average electricity rate in Oklahoma is $0.126/kWh. For a typical EV using 30 kWh per 100 miles, this works out to about $454 per year to drive 12,000 miles on electricity, compared to approximately $1160 per year on gasoline. EV owners in Oklahoma save an estimated $789 per year on fuel.

EV Ownership in Oklahoma: What You Need to Know

Oklahoma has about 15,000 registered EVs and charges a $110 annual EV fee. Low electricity rates and low gas prices create moderate fuel savings. OG&E offers time-of-use rates for EV owners, and NEVI funding is expanding the state's fast-charging network.

With an average electricity rate of $0.126 per kWh and gas prices averaging $2.90 per gallon, EV owners in Oklahoma can expect to save approximately $789 per year on fuel compared to a traditional gasoline vehicle. These savings add up significantly over the typical ownership period of 5-7 years, potentially totaling $4,734+ in fuel savings alone — before accounting for reduced maintenance costs.

Oklahoma currently has 1,100 public charging stations, including 300 DC fast chargers for quick highway stops. With 15,000 registered electric vehicles, the state's charging infrastructure provides good coverage. The federal NEVI program continues to fund new fast-charging corridors across the state, making long-distance EV travel increasingly practical.

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