Sponsored

Ouch!! First Electric Bill since getting the Lightning….yikes!

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,056
Reaction score
12,649
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
Well it’s been a scorcher of a summer so the AC deserves some blame…..

but opening up my first electric bill since taking delivery of my Lightning was a bit “shocking “🤣!

and I don’t even have the Charge Station Pro yet.
So this is all off the Stove plug, and the standard wall outlet.

anyone else gotten whacked yet on their first electric bill ?

B05E7DC6-DFBA-4E4F-A3F0-2ED30A377ADE.jpeg
Compared to last years daily consumption rate, looks like the trucks impact is around $156 on the total bill.
 

FirstF150InCasco

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2022
Threads
14
Messages
521
Reaction score
487
Location
Boston MA
Vehicles
F150 Lightning
Did you expect a decrease?

Not sure the purpose of those post.

You switched from paying for gas at the pump to electricity at home.

Let us know the cost to drive the miles for your current gas rates compared to your current electricity rate.
That's what I did: Compared the cost per mile with gas vs. the cost per mile with electric. That's the only metric that maters (not the size of my electric bill.)
 

FirstF150InCasco

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2022
Threads
14
Messages
521
Reaction score
487
Location
Boston MA
Vehicles
F150 Lightning
I hear ya 100%

I was being a bit tongue in cheek.

And I didn’t mean to come off as if I was not happy with the truck or that I was complaining about the electric bill.
Just getting used to the new math here with EV’s.

and definitely understand that there are plenty out there that want to make the case against EV’s with the argument that you just end up paying for it through the electric bill.

Ideally I’d get solar….but just don’t get enough sunlight the way my roof is surrounded by trees.

Lots to learn for me on all this stuff

but love waving at the gas stations as we drive by them. They do come in handy for bathrooms and gum still I suppose 😉
The only math that matters is the cost per mile (whether it is gas or electric.) Keep it simple.
 

FirstF150InCasco

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2022
Threads
14
Messages
521
Reaction score
487
Location
Boston MA
Vehicles
F150 Lightning
and, as a note, and as a former Mayor of my small town, where we had our OWN Electric Power Utility, and billing to customers, I saw many folks try to 'compare' a current monthly bill to one from last month, or last year - it's just not possible or reasonable to try to make that comparison - the weather is NOT the same month to month or year to year - NEVER. Your usage is also NEVER the exact same, or sometimes even CLOSE to the same, from year to year. Don't get caught up in simply looking at the bottom 'You Owe this much' number - compare the actual TRUE usage difference, IF you can even make those calculations, which is VERY difficult without separate METERS on each device, appliance, or EV charger. Everything else is pure guessing and speculation.
Yes, the only comparision that matters is the cost per mile for your EV lightnijng (vs what the cost per mile would be with non-EV 2022 F150.)
 

Labs4Lightning

Well-known member
First Name
C
Joined
Mar 30, 2022
Threads
22
Messages
774
Reaction score
688
Location
Maryland
Vehicles
19 150 lariat, 22 lightning lariat blend 4/18/22
Wow you guys pay a lot for electricity. I pay $0.12/kWh including all fees (I run a farm so my power bill is already $550/month due to using about 9000kWh/month.)
Where I am, we are paying $1.95/litre right now (a month ago it was $2.3/litre). After USD conversion that $1.95 is $5.75/gallon (a month ago it was $6.80/gallon).
I am estimating going from the 2008 f150 5.4L that I am driving now to the lighting it will cost about 1/8 the amount per km.

I am surprised that in high power cost areas there is a lot of uptake in EV vehicles right now as the price difference wouldn't make sense for the little amount that gets saved.

I am also surprised that there are people out there that don't realize how much it actually costs to charge an EV and are shocked when they get the bill. An advantage to EV is your "fuel" cost doesn't change like gasoline does.
Have you not seen the California guys who at least 31 and some higher? Ouch
im 13¢ with taxes. they offer a nice 3.5¢ overnight charging rate. I don’t qualify because I have net metering with my solar. Plenty of saving when gas 4 & 5 $ /gallon.
 

Sponsored

Yellow Buddy

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 5, 2022
Threads
23
Messages
2,311
Reaction score
3,024
Location
Mid-Atlantic
Vehicles
F-150L Pro, Rivian R1T, Model S, Model X
Occupation
Smart Ass
My rate is $0.15/KWh.

To simplify things, my past experience has been....
1 EV = 1 House running on electric everything but heat.

For just my house I was utilizing ~10MWh/year.
Add on a Model S + Model X and I'm utilizing ~30MWh/year

Each car drives ~15,000-20,000/year.

Hope that helps for the folks who don't want to do math.

================

For those that do...
My average gas was ~$200-$250/car/month
My average electricity was ~$125/mo
Total Monthly Expense: ~$625/mo.

After buying 2 EVs.
My average electricity was ~$375/mo
Sub-Total Monthly Savings: ~$250/mo

Cost of buying and financing solar over a 10 year period, covering the expenses above was $645/mo after federal incentives.

Sub-Total Monthly Expense: ~$395/mo

State incentives of ~$200/MWh generated =
Average Income of $750/mo

Net Monthly Income: ~$355/mo

That's a swing from paying $625/mo to making $355/mo. for a total budget impact of $980/mo. That's a free F150L XLT SR over a 5 year span.

Each state is different, but sometimes it makes sense to keep going and leverage/double up on the incentives.
 

jefro

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 28, 2021
Threads
3
Messages
699
Reaction score
231
Location
Texas
Vehicles
F150, Corvette, Bolt EV,
Last edited:

Regular150

Well-known member
First Name
Shawn
Joined
Feb 3, 2021
Threads
8
Messages
580
Reaction score
557
Location
Florida
Vehicles
18 F150 Platinum, 18 Mustang GT PP2, 14 QX80
Occupation
Purchasing
OP - Energy Engineer here. I've done a detailed analysis and I figure a daily-driver Lightning will about double my home energy consumption. Your bill seems to be about in line with what I expect for my circumstances anyway.
DB, (love the screen name), what do you estimate the Lightning using kwh per year and your miles per year? Thx
 

DadBald

Well-known member
First Name
James
Joined
Sep 12, 2021
Threads
14
Messages
227
Reaction score
261
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
2016 Honda Odyssey, 2013 Subaru Outback
Occupation
Energy Engineer
Thanks :LOL:

I don't have my worksheet in front of me, but it was approximately 10,000mi/year, assuming 0.5 kWh/mi makes 5,000 kWh annual charging usage (very roughly).

Electric rate tariffs make a huge difference in costs though. Get on a nighttime savers rate if you can.
 

vandy1981

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 21, 2021
Threads
62
Messages
1,509
Reaction score
2,474
Location
Tennessee
Vehicles
'19 Jaguar I-Pace, '22 Lightning Lariat ER
Occupation
Plumber
I know this wasn't the OP's intent, but the the title of this thread could be one of those "Scary EV" memes that pop up on Facebook.
 

Sponsored

Ruination

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 16, 2021
Threads
0
Messages
226
Reaction score
176
Location
MD
Vehicles
2012 F150 EcoBoost
Occupation
Chemist
Did you do a pole mount? How many panels on it? I'm not sure why different companies are trying to tell me I want rooftop instead.

Rack mount I suppose, 24. You get the perfect angle. You don't have bolts in your roof.

Why companies push roof? It's faster and requires less equipment for them. But it is cheaper.
 

Slohry

Member
First Name
Scot
Joined
Jul 11, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
15
Location
Riverside County, CA
Vehicles
2022 F-150 Lightning, 2021 Mach-E, 2019 Ford Fusio
Occupation
Musician
Here in CA a $500 electric bill is low during the summer. The lightning will put people into the overuse rate if they are still on the tiered rate. Putting a 15.2kw system on my house as soon as the solar company can get their stuff together and install it. 44 panels. Like pulling teeth to get them to follow any kind of timeline.
I feel your pain. My monthly bill was over $800 in the summer. (Riverside County)
It took me over a year to get it installed and operational and that was before covid.
 

hturnerfamily

Well-known member
First Name
William
Joined
Jan 8, 2022
Threads
45
Messages
1,861
Reaction score
2,231
Location
rural Georgia
Vehicles
22 LIGHTNING PRO IcedBlueSilver 8/23/2022
Occupation
Owner
Ford's window sticker show a 'average Fuel Cost' of $950 for the Lightning PRO, or about $75 monthly... I would assume they are using 'at home' charging cost, but who knows how they would come up with that number. I assess mine to be about $56 monthly if I'm driving 1,000 miles per month.

(edit) Ford uses 15,000 miles per year at .13cents per kwh for their calculation, per their foot note,
 

IdeaOfTheDayCom

Well-known member
First Name
Joe
Joined
Dec 21, 2021
Threads
29
Messages
859
Reaction score
1,102
Location
Staten Island, NY
Website
IdeaOfTheDay.Com
Vehicles
2022 F-150 Lightning XLT SR 312A
Occupation
Software Developer
Well it’s been a scorcher of a summer so the AC deserves some blame…..

but opening up my first electric bill since taking delivery of my Lightning was a bit “shocking “🤣!

and I don’t even have the Charge Station Pro yet.
So this is all off the Stove plug, and the standard wall outlet.

anyone else gotten whacked yet on their first electric bill ?

B05E7DC6-DFBA-4E4F-A3F0-2ED30A377ADE.jpeg
You should reach out to your energy company to see what kinds of savings programs they have for EV owners.

In my case, I use Con-Edison’s “Time of Day” based billing which drops the price per KWh to a fraction of the price between midnight and 8am, so most of my charging is at a deep discount.

My energy company also has a rewards program that gives me a rebate each month for any charging done in the NYC area. As it turns out, the rebate right now is even larger than my energy used. Last month I used $42 in electric, but got $62 back in rebates, sent directly to me via PayPal.
 
 





Top