Buying a Used Electric Vehicle in 2026
We have 4,249 electric vehicles in our database. Used EVs can be incredible deals — but you need to know what to check.
Available Used EVs — Live Data
| Model | Available | Avg Price |
|---|---|---|
| null null | 1689 | $55,262 |
| Chevrolet Bolt | 259 | $29,428 |
| Chevrolet Blazer Ev | 135 | $34,329 |
| Cadillac Lyriq | 132 | $48,404 |
| Ford Mustang Mach E | 109 | $29,381 |
| Honda Prologue | 104 | $50,375 |
| Chevrolet Equinox Ev | 99 | $31,870 |
| Toyota C Hr | 84 | $40,904 |
What to Check on a Used EV
- Battery health / degradation — the single most important thing. Ask for the battery health report (most EVs show this in the dashboard). Below 80% means expensive replacement.
- Remaining warranty — most EV batteries have 8-year/100K-mile warranty from the manufacturer
- Charging capability — does it support DC fast charging? What's the max charge rate?
- Software updates — is the car still receiving over-the-air updates?
- Home charging — do you have a place to plug in? Level 2 (240V) is recommended
The Value Proposition
Used EVs depreciate fast in years 1-3, then level off. A 3-year-old EV with 30K miles can be 40-50% off MSRP. Fuel savings of $1,000-$2,000/year, near-zero maintenance (no oil changes, no transmission, no exhaust system). The math often favors a used EV over a new gas car.