kWhPrice

Cost to Charge Audi Q6 e-tron on Home Charging

Verdict

A full charge for the Audi Q6 e-tron on Home Charging costs $13.60 at 17¢/kWh. That is $0.40 more than home charging at the national average rate. The equivalent cost per 100 miles is $5.30.

Full Charge (80%)

$13.60

Half Charge (50%)

$8.50

Per 100 Miles

$5.30

Charge Time

7h 16m

Home Charging vs Home Charging

ScenarioHome ChargingHome (16.5¢/kWh avg)Difference
Full Charge (80%)$13.60$13.20+$0.40
Half Charge (50%)$8.50$8.25+$0.25
25% Top-Up$4.25$4.13+$0.13

Home Charging Cost Variation by State

Compare Home Charging (17¢/kWh) against home charging in each state. In some states, public networks become competitive.

StateHome RateHome Full ChargeHome ChargingHome Saves
North Dakota10.92¢$8.74$13.60+$4.86
Nebraska11.76¢$9.41$13.60+$4.19
Missouri11.8¢$9.44$13.60+$4.16
Idaho12.07¢$9.66$13.60+$3.94
Arkansas12.35¢$9.88$13.60+$3.72
Louisiana12.46¢$9.97$13.60+$3.63
Oklahoma12.62¢$10.10$13.60+$3.50
Iowa12.83¢$10.26$13.60+$3.34
Wyoming12.85¢$10.28$13.60+$3.32
Montana12.86¢$10.29$13.60+$3.31
Utah12.88¢$10.30$13.60+$3.30
Tennessee13.1¢$10.48$13.60+$3.12
South Dakota13.6¢$10.88$13.60+$2.72
North Carolina13.68¢$10.94$13.60+$2.66
Washington13.81¢$11.05$13.60+$2.55
Nevada13.98¢$11.18$13.60+$2.42
Mississippi14.24¢$11.39$13.60+$2.21
Kentucky14.27¢$11.42$13.60+$2.18
Kansas14.29¢$11.43$13.60+$2.17
Georgia14.46¢$11.57$13.60+$2.03
Oregon14.66¢$11.73$13.60+$1.87
New Mexico14.7¢$11.76$13.60+$1.84
West Virginia14.77¢$11.82$13.60+$1.78
Minnesota14.98¢$11.98$13.60+$1.62
South Carolina15.41¢$12.33$13.60+$1.27
Arizona15.61¢$12.49$13.60+$1.11
Texas15.69¢$12.55$13.60+$1.05
Virginia15.87¢$12.70$13.60+$0.90
Florida15.92¢$12.74$13.60+$0.86
Alabama16.06¢$12.85$13.60+$0.75
Indiana16.19¢$12.95$13.60+$0.65
Illinois16.36¢$13.09$13.60+$0.51
Colorado16.44¢$13.15$13.60+$0.45
Delaware16.51¢$13.21$13.60+$0.39
Ohio17.59¢$14.07$13.60-$0.47
Wisconsin18.2¢$14.56$13.60-$0.96
Washington D.C.18.5¢$14.80$13.60-$1.20
Michigan19.52¢$15.62$13.60-$2.02
Pennsylvania20.19¢$16.15$13.60-$2.55
Maryland20.61¢$16.49$13.60-$2.89
New Jersey23.13¢$18.50$13.60-$4.90
Vermont23.29¢$18.63$13.60-$5.03
Alaska25.52¢$20.42$13.60-$6.82
New Hampshire26.32¢$21.06$13.60-$7.46
Connecticut28.3¢$22.64$13.60-$9.04
New York28.37¢$22.70$13.60-$9.10
Rhode Island30.14¢$24.11$13.60-$10.51
California30.29¢$24.23$13.60-$10.63
Maine30.73¢$24.58$13.60-$10.98
Massachusetts31.16¢$24.93$13.60-$11.33
Hawaii39.79¢$31.83$13.60-$18.23

Practical Notes: Q6 e-tron on Home Charging

The Q6 e-tron's CCS port may require a CCS-to-NACS or NACS-to-CCS adapter depending on the station. Tesla Superchargers now ship "Magic Dock" CCS support at many sites, and most non-Tesla OEMs are distributing free NACS adapters to owners. Check the Home Charging app before your first session to confirm which connector your target station uses — mixed-connector deployments are common in 2026.

On a session-by-session basis, the Q6 e-tron's 270 kW peak charging speed exceeds what Home Charging's Level 2 hardware can deliver. You'll be limited by the car's onboard AC charger (11 kW), so a full charge takes roughly 7h 16m. L2 is best for destination or overnight charging, not road-trip pit stops.

Cost-wise, one $13.60 full charge on Home Charging represents $0.04 per mile of driving — about 4.2¢/mile. A gas equivalent at 30 mpg and $3.50/gal is roughly 11.7¢/mile, so this charging session is still cheaper than gas. Over 15,000 miles/year, exclusive reliance on Home Charging would cost roughly $794.39/year in fuel — a meaningful delta compared to mostly-home charging (~$771.03/year).

For most Q6 e-tron owners, the realistic use-pattern for Home Charging is road trips and occasional top-ups — not primary fueling. If you live in an apartment or condo and rely on public charging as your main option, factor in the per-session pricing with no membership option. For regular home charging in a specific state, check our home vs public analysis and your Q6 e-tron state-by-state breakdown.

Data sources: Home Charging published rate card; EPA fueleconomy.gov; manufacturer specs; EIA residential electricity averages. Charging speed and effective cost vary with temperature, state-of-charge, and station power.