Miles Per Kilowatt-Hour to Kilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour Converter

Convert miles per kilowatt-hour to kilometers per kilowatt-hour instantly with our free electric car efficiency conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

mi/kWh
=
km/kWh
1.60934
Kilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour (km/kWh)
1 mi/kWh = 1.60934 km/kWh
🔄 Swap Units (km/kWh → mi/kWh)
1 mi/kWh
=
1.60934 km/kWh
1 Mile Per Kilowatt-Hour = 1.609344 Kilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour

How to Convert Miles Per Kilowatt-Hour to Kilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour

To convert an electric car efficiency measurement from miles per kilowatt-hour to kilometers per kilowatt-hour, multiply the value by 1.609344. Since one mile per kilowatt-hour is equal to 1.609344 kilometers per kilowatt-hour, you can use this formula:

km/kWh = mi/kWh × 1.609344
Example: Convert 5 miles per kilowatt-hour to kilometers per kilowatt-hour.

Using the formula: km/kWh = mi/kWh × 1.609344

5 mi/kWh × 1.609344 = 8.04672 km/kWh

Therefore, 5 miles per kilowatt-hour equals 8.04672 kilometers per kilowatt-hour.

What Is 1 Mile Per Kilowatt-Hour in Kilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour?

One mile per kilowatt-hour is equal to 1.609344 kilometers per kilowatt-hour.

1 mi/kWh = 1.609344 km/kWh

What Is a Mile Per Kilowatt-Hour?

Miles per kilowatt-hour (mi/kWh) is a US customary unit of electric vehicle energy efficiency that measures the distance in miles a vehicle can travel using one kilowatt-hour of electrical energy. Higher values indicate better efficiency. This unit is the most intuitive way for American drivers to understand and compare EV efficiency, as it directly relates the familiar concept of “miles traveled” to electrical energy consumed. It is analogous to “miles per gallon” (MPG) used for gasoline vehicles, but uses kilowatt-hours instead of gallons. A typical modern battery electric vehicle achieves about 3–4.5 mi/kWh under normal mixed driving conditions. The most efficient EVs on the market can achieve 4–5 mi/kWh or more, while larger vehicles like electric trucks and SUVs may achieve 2–3 mi/kWh. Like all efficiency metrics, mi/kWh values depend heavily on driving conditions. City driving with frequent stops and starts often yields better mi/kWh than highway driving, because regenerative braking recovers energy during deceleration and aerodynamic drag is lower at lower speeds.

One mile per kilowatt-hour is equal to:

  • 1.609344 kilometers per kilowatt-hour (km/kWh)
  • 33.705 miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (MPGe)
  • 62.14 kilowatt-hours per 100 kilometers (kWh/100km)
  • 100 kilowatt-hours per 100 miles (kWh/100mi)

What Is a Kilometer Per Kilowatt-Hour?

Kilometers per kilowatt-hour (km/kWh) is a metric unit of electric vehicle energy efficiency that measures the distance in kilometers a vehicle can travel using one kilowatt-hour of electrical energy. Higher values indicate better efficiency. This unit provides a straightforward and intuitive way to evaluate how efficiently an electric vehicle converts stored electrical energy into distance traveled. It is the metric equivalent of “miles per kilowatt-hour” and is commonly used in countries that use the metric system, including most of Europe, Asia, and Oceania. A typical modern battery electric vehicle (BEV) achieves about 5–7 km/kWh under normal mixed driving conditions. Highly efficient models can exceed 7 km/kWh in favorable conditions, while larger SUVs and trucks may achieve 4–5 km/kWh or less. Efficiency in km/kWh varies significantly with driving speed, ambient temperature, terrain, use of climate control (heating and air conditioning), driving style, and tire pressure. Highway driving at high speeds typically yields lower km/kWh values than city driving, because aerodynamic drag increases with the square of speed.

One kilometer per kilowatt-hour is equal to:

  • 0.621371 miles per kilowatt-hour (mi/kWh)
  • 20.9433 miles per gallon gasoline equivalent (MPGe)
  • 100 kilowatt-hours per 100 kilometers (kWh/100km)
  • 160.93 kilowatt-hours per 100 miles (kWh/100mi)

Understanding Electric Car Efficiency

Electric car efficiency measures how effectively an electric vehicle (EV) converts stored electrical energy into distance traveled. Unlike gasoline vehicles, which burn fuel in an internal combustion engine, EVs use electric motors powered by battery packs. The efficiency of this energy conversion determines how far an EV can travel on a given amount of electricity.

There are two fundamental approaches to measuring EV efficiency:

  • Distance per energy (km/kWh, mi/kWh, MPGe) — measures how far the vehicle travels per unit of energy. Higher values are better.
  • Energy per distance (kWh/100km, kWh/100mi) — measures how much energy is consumed per distance traveled. Lower values are better.

These two approaches are mathematically inverse (reciprocal) to each other. Converting between a “distance per energy” unit and an “energy per distance” unit requires division rather than multiplication.

The EPA MPGe Standard

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) created the MPGe (miles per gallon gasoline equivalent) unit to help consumers compare EVs with gasoline vehicles. The EPA determined that one gallon of gasoline contains 33.705 kilowatt-hours of energy. An EV rated at 100 MPGe can travel 100 miles on 33.705 kWh of electricity — the energy equivalent of one gallon of gasoline.

Regional Standards

  • Europe & China: Use kWh/100km as the primary efficiency metric on official vehicle labels (WLTP cycle in Europe, CLTC cycle in China)
  • United States: Use MPGe and kWh/100mi on the EPA fuel economy label (Monroney sticker)
  • General use: km/kWh and mi/kWh are commonly used by EV enthusiasts and in everyday comparisons

Factors Affecting EV Efficiency

  • Driving speed: Aerodynamic drag increases with the square of speed, significantly reducing efficiency at highway speeds above 100 km/h (60 mph)
  • Temperature: Cold weather reduces battery efficiency and requires cabin heating, which can reduce range by 20–40%. Extreme heat also reduces efficiency due to battery cooling needs
  • Driving style: Aggressive acceleration and hard braking waste energy. Smooth, anticipatory driving maximizes efficiency
  • Regenerative braking: EVs recover energy during deceleration, making stop-and-go city driving relatively more efficient than in gasoline vehicles
  • Vehicle weight and size: Heavier and larger vehicles require more energy to accelerate and have greater rolling resistance
  • Tire type and pressure: Low rolling resistance tires and proper inflation improve efficiency
  • Terrain: Hilly terrain reduces overall efficiency, though regenerative braking helps recover energy on downhill sections

Tips for Electric Car Efficiency Conversions

  • Know the two types: km/kWh, mi/kWh, and MPGe are “distance per energy” units (higher is better). kWh/100km and kWh/100mi are “energy per distance” units (lower is better).
  • Reciprocal conversions: Converting between “distance per energy” and “energy per distance” units requires dividing a constant by the value, not multiplying. For example, kWh/100km = 100 ÷ km/kWh.
  • km ↔ miles: The conversion factor between kilometers and miles is 1.609344. This factor appears in many EV efficiency conversions.
  • The EPA gasoline equivalent: 1 gallon of gasoline = 33.705 kWh. This is the foundation of the MPGe unit. So mi/kWh × 33.705 = MPGe.
  • Typical EV ranges: Most modern EVs fall in the range of 4–7 km/kWh, 2.5–4.5 mi/kWh, 90–140 MPGe, 14–25 kWh/100km, or 24–40 kWh/100mi.
  • Quick mental math: To roughly convert km/kWh to mi/kWh, multiply by 0.6. To roughly convert kWh/100km to kWh/100mi, multiply by 1.6.
  • Calculating cost: kWh/100km and kWh/100mi make it easy to calculate driving costs. Simply multiply by your electricity rate ($/kWh) to get cost per 100 km or 100 miles.
  • Comparing EVs to gas cars: MPGe is the best unit for direct comparison. A 100 MPGe EV is roughly 3–4 times more energy-efficient than a 30 MPG gasoline car.

Miles Per Kilowatt-Hour to Kilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from miles per kilowatt-hour to kilometers per kilowatt-hour.

Miles Per Kilowatt-HourKilometers Per Kilowatt-Hour (km/kWh)
1 mi/kWh1.60934
2 mi/kWh3.21869
3 mi/kWh4.82803
4 mi/kWh6.43738
5 mi/kWh8.04672
6 mi/kWh9.65606
7 mi/kWh11.2654
8 mi/kWh12.8748
9 mi/kWh14.4841
10 mi/kWh16.0934
15 mi/kWh24.1402
20 mi/kWh32.1869
25 mi/kWh40.2336
30 mi/kWh48.2803
35 mi/kWh56.327
40 mi/kWh64.3738
50 mi/kWh80.4672
60 mi/kWh96.5606
70 mi/kWh112.654
80 mi/kWh128.748
90 mi/kWh144.841
100 mi/kWh160.934

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