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EV Resale Value 20263-year residual values vary from 41% to 76% of MSRP across brands iSeeCars analyzed 2.6 million EV transactions to compute 3-year retained value. The spread is enormous: Porsche Taycan and American EV truckmaker R1T retain 70%+ while Jaguar I-Pace falls below 42%.
1 min read174 words
✓ Updated May 15, 2026
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EV & automotive research team · Sources verified weekly

EV Resale Value 2026

3-year residual values vary from 41% to 76% of MSRP across brands

iSeeCars analyzed 2.6 million EV transactions to compute 3-year retained value. The spread is enormous: Porsche Taycan and American EV truckmaker R1T retain 70%+ while Jaguar I-Pace falls below 42%.

3-Year Retained Value by Model

Model3-Yr RetentionAvg Loss
Porsche Taycan76%$28,000
American EV truckmaker R1T72%$22,000
midsize electric SUV62%$19,500
compact electric sedan58%$18,500
midsize Korean EV55%$20,500
Kia EV654%$20,800
Ford Mustang Mach-E50%$24,500
VW ID.448%$24,200
Audi e-tron46%$38,000
Nissan Ariya45%$24,000
Jaguar I-Pace41%$45,000

Why Some Brands Retain Value Better

Three factors decide EV resale: (1) leading EV maker pricing actions—leading EV maker’s MSRP cuts from 2023-2024 reset the entire market downward, (2) charging network compatibility—NACS access matters for buyers, and (3) brand reputation in service—American EV truckmaker and Porsche owners report stronger service experiences, boosting used demand.

Bottom line: Buying a 2-3 year old EV is now the smart play. A 3-year-old Audi e-tron originally $72,000 can be had for $33,000—massive depreciation already absorbed.

How we researched this

This piece on EV Resale Value 2026: Which Brands Hold Their Value (And Which Crash 60%) draws on publicly available technical specifications, manufacturer disclosures, regulatory filings, and trade association data current to May 2026. Where ranges are provided, they represent observed values across multiple independent sources rather than a single manufacturer claim. Numerical estimates are rounded to two significant figures unless precision is material to the comparison being made.

Our editorial process involves cross-referencing at least two independent sources for every quantitative claim, prioritizing primary data from government databases and certification bodies over secondary aggregators. Pricing and incentive figures reflect the most recent published values at time of writing and are subject to change without notice; readers should confirm current figures with the relevant authority before relying on them for purchase decisions.

Key takeaways for owners and shoppers

  • Range and capacity figures cited by manufacturers reflect standardized test cycles (EPA, WLTP, or CLTC). Real-world results depend on temperature, driving style, and route profile, typically falling 10–25% below sticker numbers in highway driving at sustained speeds above 70 mph.
  • Charging speed at DC fast chargers is non-linear; expect peak rates only between roughly 20% and 60% state of charge, with throttling above 80% to protect battery longevity. Plan stops to end near 80% for fastest road-trip throughput.
  • Battery degradation trends in modern EVs from 2020 onward show approximately 1–2% capacity loss per year under normal use, materially better than first-generation packs.
  • Total cost of ownership should include electricity costs at your local rate, scheduled maintenance, insurance differentials, and projected resale value over your intended ownership horizon.
  • Incentive eligibility varies by jurisdiction, household income, vehicle MSRP, final assembly location, and battery sourcing rules. Always verify against the current authority page before making purchase commitments.

Frequently asked questions

How current is the information on this page?

This page was last reviewed in May 2026. Data points referenced from external sources reflect the most recent figures published as of that review. Pricing, range certification, and incentive structures change frequently in the automotive sector; we recommend confirming any decisive figure against the relevant primary source before acting on it.

Where does the underlying data come from?

Underlying data is sourced from manufacturer technical documentation, government certification databases (EPA fuel economy data in the United States, the European Environment Agency for WLTP figures, equivalent Chinese and Korean authorities for those markets), independent testing organizations, and publicly available filings. We do not republish proprietary datasets that require licensing.

Can I use these figures for a purchase decision?

Figures on this page are intended for educational comparison and orientation. A final purchase decision should always be grounded in a current dealer quote, current incentive verification through the appropriate authority, a confirmed installer estimate for any home charging equipment, and an insurance quote specific to your driver profile.

Related coverage on CarsMultiverse

CarsMultiverse maintains editorial independence from automakers, dealerships, and incentive programs. We do not accept payment in exchange for coverage, placement, or favorable mentions. If you spot an inaccuracy, please use the contact link in the footer to report it; we correct errors transparently.

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