Cost to Charge Audi Q6 e-tron on Home Charging
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
| Scenario | Home Charging | Home (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.
| State | Home Rate | Home Full Charge | Home Charging | Home Saves |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Dakota | 10.92¢ | $8.74 | $13.60 | +$4.86 |
| Nebraska | 11.76¢ | $9.41 | $13.60 | +$4.19 |
| Missouri | 11.8¢ | $9.44 | $13.60 | +$4.16 |
| Idaho | 12.07¢ | $9.66 | $13.60 | +$3.94 |
| Arkansas | 12.35¢ | $9.88 | $13.60 | +$3.72 |
| Louisiana | 12.46¢ | $9.97 | $13.60 | +$3.63 |
| Oklahoma | 12.62¢ | $10.10 | $13.60 | +$3.50 |
| Iowa | 12.83¢ | $10.26 | $13.60 | +$3.34 |
| Wyoming | 12.85¢ | $10.28 | $13.60 | +$3.32 |
| Montana | 12.86¢ | $10.29 | $13.60 | +$3.31 |
| Utah | 12.88¢ | $10.30 | $13.60 | +$3.30 |
| Tennessee | 13.1¢ | $10.48 | $13.60 | +$3.12 |
| South Dakota | 13.6¢ | $10.88 | $13.60 | +$2.72 |
| North Carolina | 13.68¢ | $10.94 | $13.60 | +$2.66 |
| Washington | 13.81¢ | $11.05 | $13.60 | +$2.55 |
| Nevada | 13.98¢ | $11.18 | $13.60 | +$2.42 |
| Mississippi | 14.24¢ | $11.39 | $13.60 | +$2.21 |
| Kentucky | 14.27¢ | $11.42 | $13.60 | +$2.18 |
| Kansas | 14.29¢ | $11.43 | $13.60 | +$2.17 |
| Georgia | 14.46¢ | $11.57 | $13.60 | +$2.03 |
| Oregon | 14.66¢ | $11.73 | $13.60 | +$1.87 |
| New Mexico | 14.7¢ | $11.76 | $13.60 | +$1.84 |
| West Virginia | 14.77¢ | $11.82 | $13.60 | +$1.78 |
| Minnesota | 14.98¢ | $11.98 | $13.60 | +$1.62 |
| South Carolina | 15.41¢ | $12.33 | $13.60 | +$1.27 |
| Arizona | 15.61¢ | $12.49 | $13.60 | +$1.11 |
| Texas | 15.69¢ | $12.55 | $13.60 | +$1.05 |
| Virginia | 15.87¢ | $12.70 | $13.60 | +$0.90 |
| Florida | 15.92¢ | $12.74 | $13.60 | +$0.86 |
| Alabama | 16.06¢ | $12.85 | $13.60 | +$0.75 |
| Indiana | 16.19¢ | $12.95 | $13.60 | +$0.65 |
| Illinois | 16.36¢ | $13.09 | $13.60 | +$0.51 |
| Colorado | 16.44¢ | $13.15 | $13.60 | +$0.45 |
| Delaware | 16.51¢ | $13.21 | $13.60 | +$0.39 |
| Ohio | 17.59¢ | $14.07 | $13.60 | -$0.47 |
| Wisconsin | 18.2¢ | $14.56 | $13.60 | -$0.96 |
| Washington D.C. | 18.5¢ | $14.80 | $13.60 | -$1.20 |
| Michigan | 19.52¢ | $15.62 | $13.60 | -$2.02 |
| Pennsylvania | 20.19¢ | $16.15 | $13.60 | -$2.55 |
| Maryland | 20.61¢ | $16.49 | $13.60 | -$2.89 |
| New Jersey | 23.13¢ | $18.50 | $13.60 | -$4.90 |
| Vermont | 23.29¢ | $18.63 | $13.60 | -$5.03 |
| Alaska | 25.52¢ | $20.42 | $13.60 | -$6.82 |
| New Hampshire | 26.32¢ | $21.06 | $13.60 | -$7.46 |
| Connecticut | 28.3¢ | $22.64 | $13.60 | -$9.04 |
| New York | 28.37¢ | $22.70 | $13.60 | -$9.10 |
| Rhode Island | 30.14¢ | $24.11 | $13.60 | -$10.51 |
| California | 30.29¢ | $24.23 | $13.60 | -$10.63 |
| Maine | 30.73¢ | $24.58 | $13.60 | -$10.98 |
| Massachusetts | 31.16¢ | $24.93 | $13.60 | -$11.33 |
| Hawaii | 39.79¢ | $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.