Calculate Your Electric Vehicle Range — kWh → Miles or Miles → kWh
Convert your EV battery capacity (kWh) to estimated driving range (miles) instantly. Enter your battery size and efficiency to get your real-world range — or work backwards from a target range to find the kWh needed. Free, fast, and accurate.
An electric vehicle's range depends on two things: the battery capacity (kWh) and the vehicle's efficiency (miles per kWh). Our EV range converter handles both directions — giving you instant, accurate range estimates based on real-world figures.
A kilowatt-hour (kWh) measures the energy stored in an EV battery — similar to how litres measure fuel in a petrol tank. A larger kWh rating means more energy stored and more range available. Modern EVs range from about 24 kWh (small city cars) to over 100 kWh (long-range models like the Tesla Model S). The usable capacity is typically 85–95% of the total rated capacity.
EV efficiency is measured in miles per kWh (mi/kWh) — how many miles the vehicle travels on each kilowatt-hour of energy. Most EVs achieve between 3 and 4 mi/kWh in real-world driving. Efficient models like the Tesla Model 3 reach about 4 mi/kWh, while larger SUVs or trucks may only achieve 2.5–3 mi/kWh. Temperature, speed, and load all affect real-world efficiency.
The formula is simple: Range (miles) = Battery (kWh) × Efficiency (mi/kWh). For example, a 75 kWh battery at 4 mi/kWh gives 300 miles of estimated range. Working backwards: if you need 250 miles of range at 3.5 mi/kWh, you need a 71.4 kWh battery. Use the converter below to calculate either direction instantly.
Enter your battery size and efficiency to calculate your EV range instantly
Calculating EV range from kWh is straightforward. You need two values: the usable battery capacity in kilowatt-hours (kWh) and the vehicle's efficiency in miles per kilowatt-hour (mi/kWh). The formulas below work in both directions.
The table below shows estimated EV range in miles for common battery sizes across three efficiency levels: 3.0 mi/kWh (low / large SUV/truck), 3.5 mi/kWh (average), and 4.0 mi/kWh (efficient sedan). Use the converter above for your exact efficiency value.
| Battery (kWh) | Range @ 3.0 mi/kWh | Range @ 3.5 mi/kWh | Range @ 4.0 mi/kWh | Example EV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24 kWh | 72 miles | 84 miles | 96 miles | Nissan Leaf (base) |
| 40 kWh | 120 miles | 140 miles | 160 miles | Nissan Leaf (40 kWh) |
| 50 kWh | 150 miles | 175 miles | 200 miles | VW ID.3 (base) |
| 60 kWh | 180 miles | 210 miles | 240 miles | Chevy Bolt EV |
| 75 kWh | 225 miles | 263 miles | 300 miles | Tesla Model 3 (LR) |
| 77 kWh | 231 miles | 270 miles | 308 miles | Hyundai Ioniq 6 |
| 82 kWh | 246 miles | 287 miles | 328 miles | Tesla Model Y (LR) |
| 90 kWh | 270 miles | 315 miles | 360 miles | Audi e-tron GT |
| 100 kWh | 300 miles | 350 miles | 400 miles | Tesla Model S / X |
| 112 kWh | 336 miles | 392 miles | 448 miles | Mercedes EQS |
| 131 kWh | 393 miles | 459 miles | 524 miles | GMC Hummer EV |
Planning a purchase and need to know what battery size achieves your target range? The table below shows the required battery capacity (kWh) to hit common range targets at different efficiency levels. Use this to compare EVs against your commute or travel needs.
| Target Range (miles) | kWh @ 3.0 mi/kWh | kWh @ 3.5 mi/kWh | kWh @ 4.0 mi/kWh |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 miles | 33.3 kWh | 28.6 kWh | 25.0 kWh |
| 150 miles | 50.0 kWh | 42.9 kWh | 37.5 kWh |
| 200 miles | 66.7 kWh | 57.1 kWh | 50.0 kWh |
| 250 miles | 83.3 kWh | 71.4 kWh | 62.5 kWh |
| 300 miles | 100.0 kWh | 85.7 kWh | 75.0 kWh |
| 350 miles | 116.7 kWh | 100.0 kWh | 87.5 kWh |
| 400 miles | 133.3 kWh | 114.3 kWh | 100.0 kWh |
| 500 miles | 166.7 kWh | 142.9 kWh | 125.0 kWh |
Understanding the relationship between battery capacity and driving range is essential for EV owners, buyers, and enthusiasts. Here are the most common situations where this converter comes in handy.
When comparing EVs, manufacturers list battery sizes (kWh) alongside rated range figures. Using this converter helps you verify those claims against your own expected efficiency — and compare models on an equal footing regardless of whether the range is given in miles or kilometres.
Before a long journey, use this converter to calculate whether your battery charge is sufficient to reach the next charging station. Enter your current usable kWh and your real-world efficiency to get a reliable range estimate rather than trusting the often-optimistic dashboard figure.
Cold temperatures can reduce EV efficiency by 20–40%. If your EV normally does 4.0 mi/kWh in summer, it may drop to 2.5–3.0 mi/kWh in winter. This converter lets you recalculate your real range for different conditions by simply adjusting the efficiency value.
Knowing your kWh-per-mile consumption helps you calculate charging costs precisely. If you drive 100 miles at 3.5 mi/kWh, you use 28.6 kWh. At £0.30/kWh or $0.15/kWh, you can calculate your exact cost per mile or per trip — far more accurate than using estimated range figures alone.
Fleet managers evaluating EV adoption need to match vehicle range to route requirements. This converter helps determine whether a given battery size (kWh) covers daily routes without mid-day charging — a critical factor in fleet planning and total cost-of-ownership analysis.
EV batteries degrade over time, reducing usable kWh. By tracking your real-world range against your original battery capacity, you can estimate how much capacity has been lost. For example, if a 75 kWh car now only delivers 250 miles at 4.0 mi/kWh, the effective usable capacity has dropped to ~62.5 kWh.
The US Environmental Protection Agency publishes official fuel economy and range ratings for all EVs sold in the US. These are the most reliable standardised range figures available for American-market vehicles.
View EPA EV Ratings →The Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicle Test Procedure (WLTP) is the standard used in Europe and the UK for EV range certification. WLTP figures are typically 10–15% higher than real-world range.
EV Database UK (WLTP) →Bjørn Nyland and other EV reviewers conduct standardised real-world range tests on production EVs. These results are often more useful for trip planning than official WLTP or EPA ratings.
AA EV Charging Calculator →