2025 Lucid Gravity Charging Costs
A 123 kWh battery, 450-mile EPA range, and NACS connector. Here is what it costs to charge at every major network and at home across all 50 states.
Battery
123 kWh
EPA Range
450 mi
Max DCFC
400 kW
AC Charger
19.2 kW
Cost to Charge at Each Network
Based on 80% state of charge (10% → 90%). All costs are estimates.
| Network | Rate | Full Charge (80%) | Per 100 Miles | Charge Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BestHome Charging | 16.5¢/kWh | $16.24 | $4.51 | 5h 8m |
| 28¢/kWh | $27.55 | $7.65 | 17 min | |
| 30¢/kWh | $29.52 | $8.20 | 5h 8m | |
| 30¢/kWh | $29.52 | $8.20 | 17 min | |
| 32¢/kWh | $31.49 | $8.75 | 17 min | |
| 35¢/kWh | $34.44 | $9.57 | 5h 8m | |
| 36¢/kWh | $35.42 | $9.84 | 17 min | |
| 40¢/kWh | $39.36 | $10.93 | 17 min | |
| 42¢/kWh | $41.33 | $11.48 | 17 min | |
| 44¢/kWh | $43.30 | $12.03 | 17 min | |
| 44¢/kWh | $43.30 | $12.03 | 5h 8m | |
| 48¢/kWh | $47.23 | $13.12 | 17 min | |
| 48¢/kWh | $47.23 | $13.12 | 17 min |
Home Charging Cost by State
Cheapest 10 states for charging the Lucid Gravity at home.
| State | Rate | Full Charge Cost | Per 100 Miles |
|---|---|---|---|
| North Dakota | 10.92¢/kWh | $10.75 | $2.98 |
| Nebraska | 11.76¢/kWh | $11.57 | $3.21 |
| Missouri | 11.8¢/kWh | $11.61 | $3.23 |
| Idaho | 12.07¢/kWh | $11.88 | $3.30 |
| Arkansas | 12.35¢/kWh | $12.15 | $3.38 |
| Louisiana | 12.46¢/kWh | $12.26 | $3.41 |
| Oklahoma | 12.62¢/kWh | $12.42 | $3.45 |
| Iowa | 12.83¢/kWh | $12.62 | $3.51 |
| Wyoming | 12.85¢/kWh | $12.64 | $3.51 |
| Montana | 12.86¢/kWh | $12.65 | $3.52 |
Detailed Network Comparisons
What It Costs to Own and Charge a Lucid Gravity
The 2025 Lucid Gravity uses 27.3 kWh per 100 miles on the EPA cycle — equivalent to about 123 MPGe. That efficiency drives every cost figure on this page. At the national average home rate of 16.5¢/kWh, driving 100 miles costs $4.51. At a 48¢/kWh fast charger, the same 100 miles costs $13.12 — 1292 dollars more over the course of 15,000 miles a year.
Real-world efficiency typically lands 5–15% worse than EPA figures because of highway speeds, cold-weather battery heating, and climate control load. In winter at 20°F, expect the Gravity's consumption to climb to roughly 34.2 kWh per 100 miles — about 25% worse than the EPA rating. This matters most for road-trip planning: budget your stops for 60–70% of the rated 450-mile range between charges if you want margin for detours and cold weather.
The Gravity's DC fast-charging peak of 400 kW is only held briefly — typically between 10% and 40% state of charge. From 40% to 80%, charging speed tapers as the battery management system throttles to protect longevity. The 10→80% charging window takes roughly 12 min on a capable charger. For home Level 2 on a 19.2 kW charger, a full empty-to-full charge takes about 5h 8m — easily overnight.
The NACS port on the Gravity determines which networks you can use natively. NACS (North American Charging Standard) gives you native access to Tesla Superchargers — the largest, most reliable network in North America — plus growing NACS support at Electrify America, EVgo, and IONNA sites. Most CCS stations require a physical adapter. Plan road trips around compatible stations using apps like A Better Routeplanner (ABRP) or PlugShare — Google Maps is improving but still misses many newer chargers.
Five-year total cost of charging for the Gravity at 12,000 miles/year: at home national average, roughly $2,706.00. At a mix of 80% home + 20% public fast charging (typical for commuters who take occasional road trips), roughly $3,476.80. Compare that to a gas equivalent at 28 mpg and $3.50/gallon: roughly $7,500 over the same 60,000 miles. The fuel savings are the single biggest operating-cost advantage of EV ownership.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to charge a Lucid Gravity?
At the national average electricity rate of 16.5¢/kWh, a full charge for a Lucid Gravity (123 kWh battery) costs approximately $16.24 at home. At public DC fast chargers, costs typically range from $25.58 to $44.28.
What connector does the Lucid Gravity use?
The 2025 Lucid Gravity uses a NACS connector. This means it is compatible with charging networks that support NACS standard connectors.
How long does it take to charge a Lucid Gravity?
At a DC fast charger (up to 400 kW), charging from 20% to 80% takes approximately 9 min. On a Level 2 home charger (19.2 kW), a full charge from empty takes about 5h 8m.
What is the cheapest way to charge a Lucid Gravity?
Home charging is almost always the cheapest option for the Lucid Gravity. In low-rate states like Idaho or Washington (10.5¢/kWh), a full charge costs $10.33. Among public networks, IONNA and Francis Energy currently offer the lowest rates at 24–30¢/kWh.
How efficient is the Lucid Gravity in kWh per mile?
The Lucid Gravity uses approximately 27.3 kWh per 100 miles (EPA rated). This is equivalent to about 123 MPGe.
Data sources: EPA fueleconomy.gov for range and MPGe; manufacturer spec sheets for battery and charging rates; EIA for state residential electricity averages; published network rate cards. Real-world efficiency varies with driving conditions, temperature, and speed.