Electric vehicles are cheaper to fuel and maintain than those with combustion engines. The opposite is increasingly true when it comes to vehicle registration fees.

A car drives down a highway.
Credit: Doug Kerr / Flickr

Many states partially fund road upkeep with gasoline taxes, and it’s long been a popular line of attack by fossil fuel supporters to argue that EV drivers don’t pay their fair share. “The rest of us subsidize their use of our roads,” Pennsylvania state Rep. Ed Neilson recently told E&E News. Pennsylvania is home to the country’s second highest gasoline tax, and once it’s implemented, its $250 annual EV charge will be among the heftiest as well.

Supporters of steeper registration fees for EVs point to declining gas tax revenue as a reason to collect more. But here’s the thing: There just aren’t that many electric vehicles on U.S. roads yet. An Experian Automotive Market Trends report from the end of 2023 put the number at 3.3 million — a tiny piece of the estimated 280 million-plus cars in the country. The much bigger reason behind declines in gas tax revenue is the increasing fuel efficiency of combustion cars.

But 39 states — including many that have electric vehicle adoption goals and incentives — are still putting the blame on their small EV populations. As Minnesota state Rep. Frank Hornstein put it to E&E News, the fees are “more of an anti-electric vehicle policy than a road funding policy.”

“We’re not at a point where electric cars are in any way, shape or form quote-unquote ‘stealing’ from the gas tax,” Hornstein said. 

And sure, EV registrations are growing, with the National Renewable Energy Lab forecasting 30-40 million could be on the road by 2030. But fees that cut into EV savings could discourage drivers from making the switch, and make it hard to actually hit that goal.


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Kathryn brings her extensive editorial background to the Energy News Network team, where she oversees the early-morning production of ENN’s five email digest newsletters as well as distribution of ENN’s original journalism with other media outlets. From documenting chronic illness’ effect on college students to following the inner workings of Congress, Kathryn has built a broad experience in her more than five years working at major publications including The Week Magazine. Kathryn holds a Bachelor of Science in magazine journalism and information management and technology from Syracuse University.