smokie
Prominent Member
Why would your usage increase with an EV tariff? Apart from the EV charging of course...
The 'daytime' tariff is higher than the price cap. I'd have to charge for at least 6 hours a week to break even verses being on a standard variable tariff.Why would your usage increase with an EV tariff? Apart from the EV charging of course...
It won't be in October.The 'daytime' tariff is higher than the price cap. I'd have to charge for at least 6 hours a week to break even verses being on a standard variable tariff.
I think for now and the fact we don’t drive everyday, we aren’t changing the tariff. It’s all cheaply loaded to a few hours at night and ridiculously priced in the day right now.Be careful about changing to a EV tariff , as it does increase all your normal daily usage fairly considerably , you need to work what you average daily use of electric and cost of charging at night etc .
I last charged on 22nd/23rd/24th May - going to 100% and balancing. Thanks to Covid, still got 70% charge left!Ok OK. Since last October I've managed to get 49% of my consumption into my cheap 4 hours with Go so I reckon I'm doing OK on an EV tariff. I don't really think I charge that much (2500 miles since 1 Dec), never yet charged away from home
Done 5k since 1st March. 99% charging has been free at work or bonnet, just done a couple of top ups for longer non commute round trips. (talking a couple of hours a month max)Ok OK. Since last October I've managed to get 49% of my consumption into my cheap 4 hours with Go so I reckon I'm doing OK on an EV tariff. I don't really think I charge that much (2500 miles since 1 Dec), never yet charged away from home
Exactly. It pays to do the Maths. We are towards the opposite extreme, 65% of our usage is now in the 4 hours of Go by time switching our usage and currently doing a portion of our heating via off-peak electricity (cheaper than Gas at the moment).I guess if you're out all day at work and charge often then an EV tariff makes sense, but not for us being retired.
We have 2 EVs we're both in the house most of the day and we do little mileage so a normal tariff is the cheaper option.
Almost certainly whatever fixed rate is being offered now will be higher per unit than what it’s expected to be in October.Unless you've got electric heating, oven, hobs, showers etc. (i.e. electric is your only energy source) then you'd probably benefit from an EV tariff assuming you charge 6+ hours a week ?
Also don't forget if you lock in now for 12 months, if the cap rises in September you'll already be better off anyway before you charge your car.
I do 49% 5p night rate and 51% solar at home. The MG5 has actually increased the solar % due to the bigger battery allowing sunnier days to be absorbed and longer dull gaps bridged. WFH of course helps too!I have a home-grown programme which downloads my half hourly usage from my supplier into a spreadsheet. I have data going back to end 2018 but I've not always been on this tariff - I was on the Agile tariff for a while where the cost varies each half hour.
For Nov 2018 - Feb 2019 29% of my overall consumption was on the cheap rate. I did have a PHEV then but only with 45 mile max range, so also had some petrol bills.
The 4 hour cheap slot is also used for washing and tumble drying. And with a modest solar panel array my daytime usage is lower than it might be.
Not according to Martin Lewis, but truthfully who knows.Almost certainly whatever fixed rate is being offered now will be higher per unit than what it’s expected to be in October.