Do you have a driveway where you could charge an electric? If so you could look at something like a 2-3 year old Kia eNiro (or sister car Hyundai Kona) - decent bit of space for carrying the kids around, 400km+ range and you’d have the remainder of the 7 year warranty. Super reliable car and being electric it’s got a fair bit of get-up-and-go so is fun to drive.
That would be about the cost to replace an entire battery yes, however the answer to your second question is that you’re unlikely to find anybody with real world experience of paying that because it is so exceedingly rare. Data suggests it is less common than needing to replace a petrol/diesel engine, which nobody (other than Land Rover Freelander buyers) gives a second thought to.The only thing that concerns me about EVs is the cost of battery replacements. Someone told me this can be up to €15,000 for a new battery for some EVs, is this true? Anyone any real world experience of battery replacements and the costs etc.?
My insurance didn’t change for a similarly priced electric vs. petrol/diesel and I understand that is the norm.What about insurance cover on EVs ? More expensive? Full EVs versus hybrids?
Beat me to it. A car with enough electric range to do local hops and with an ICE for longer journeys where it gets opportunities to go into re-gen for the batteries and a 3-pin charger when at home. Plus lower road-tax. I pay €169/qtr on my 1.4 ICE.The more short trips you do, the more a hybrid is probably the way to go, if you aren't ready to fully commit to an electric car.
Would you go new car?Doing 6k per year, I would go for a small petrol car.
Hyundai i10 would be my choice.
Your annual fuel cost would be approx 600 euro.
Minimal servicing cost.
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