this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2025
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All that, even over 10 or 20 years, is still less than a single battery. And the battery is an unexpected one time cost when the stuff you mentioned is mostly expected.
I base my ICE maintenance and repair cost expectations off Audi, BMW and Mercedes, why would I look at Hyundai or VW for EV repair costs?
Nope, not how it works at all. It doesn't just stop working. It slowly loses its top end power over time. In fact, when you pull it, it's still good for other things like home power storage.
Battery failure is unpredictable and the charge capacity can take an absolute nosedive over just a few months after years of being completely ok. There’s a reason there’s no standard model for battery wear
Nope not how it works at all. It drops off slowly:
https://www.geotab.com/CMS-Media-production/Blog/NA/December_2019/battery_degradation/ev-battery-degradation-tesla-models-vs-nissan-leaf.png
Here's the complete study: https://www.geotab.com/blog/ev-battery-health/
In all likelihood, the car will be replaced for other reasons before battery range drops too far.
Interesting, stark difference from lithium batteries then.
1.8% per year is still way too much over 10 years though, let alone 20. People only talk about EVs as new cars, but people forget most people can’t afford to buy brand new cars.
Those are lithium batteries. This stuff isn't degrading as fast in the real world as was initially found.
A 350 mile car would become a 280 mile car in 10 years. It's sufficient for 95% of drivers.