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Charging Cost Comparison

Kia EV2 vs Renault Megane E-Tech in Netherlands

Compared variants: Long Range 61.0 kWh vs EV60 220hp

Updated April 2026

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Data shown is approximate and based on publicly available specifications and average electricity prices in Netherlands as of early 2026. For models with multiple battery versions, this page compares the variants listed above. Actual charging costs vary with your electricity tariff, charger network, time of day, and subscription plans. Always check the manufacturer specification page and your vehicle's manual for official figures. EVcourse is not affiliated with any vehicle manufacturer or charging network.

Quick summary

In Netherlands, the Renault Megane E-Tech is cheaper to charge at home at €4.42 per 100 km, compared to €4.79 for the Kia EV2. Over 15,000 km per year, that's roughly €56 in savings on home charging alone. See the full spec comparison.

Charging Kia EV2 vs Renault Megane E-Tech in Netherlands

These estimates use the average home electricity price in Netherlands (€0.28/kWh) and the average DC fast charging price (€0.72/kWh). Annual estimates assume 15,000 km per year.

Cost Kia EV2 Renault Megane E-Tech
Home charging per 100 km (est.) €4.79 €4.42
DC fast charging per 100 km (est.) €12.31 €11.38
Annual home charging (est.) €719 €663
Annual DC fast charging (est.) €1,847 €1,707

Prices in EUR, including VAT (21%). Your actual cost depends on your electricity contract, charging network subscription, and time of use.

Annual Charging Cost

If you drive 15,000 km per year and charge mostly at home, the Kia EV2 costs roughly €719 per year, while the Renault Megane E-Tech costs €663. That's a difference of €56 per year in favor of the Renault Megane E-Tech.

If you rely mostly on DC fast charging (common for drivers without home charging), the costs are higher for both: Kia EV2 at €1,847 per year and Renault Megane E-Tech at €1,707 per year. The Renault Megane E-Tech saves you roughly €140 per year on DC charging.

Most drivers use a mix of home and public charging. Your actual annual cost will fall somewhere between these two estimates. The more you can charge at home or at work, the lower your cost per kilometer.

Key Specs

Spec Kia EV2 Renault Megane E-Tech
Compared variant Long Range 61.0 kWh EV60 220hp
Battery (approx.) ~58 kWh ~60 kWh
WLTP range (rated) ~453 km ~468 km
Efficiency (approx.) ~171 Wh/km ~158 Wh/km
DC fast charging (published) up to 115 kW up to 129 kW
10-80% charge time (approx.) ~30 min ~33 min
Max AC charging up to 11 kW (22 kW optional) up to 11 kW
DC connector CCS2 CCS2

See the full side-by-side comparison with charging speed analysis, cold weather, and more.

Charging Networks in Netherlands

Both the Kia EV2 and Renault Megane E-Tech use Type 2 / CCS2 connectors, which is the standard in Netherlands. You can charge at any public station with a compatible connector.

Fastned Shell Recharge Allego Ionity Electra EVBox ChargePoint Tesla Supercharger

Popular roaming cards in Netherlands include Shell Recharge, Plugsurfing, DKV, Routex. A roaming card lets you charge across multiple networks with a single account, which is convenient if you use different chargers on different routes.

Idle fees are common at charging stations in Netherlands. Move your car promptly after charging to avoid extra charges.

Charging in Netherlands

One of the densest charging networks in Europe. Strong public AC charging infrastructure in urban areas. Ad-hoc DC rates typically 0.70 to 0.75 EUR without subscription.

Tax incentives

18% bijtelling rate on first EUR 30,000 for EVs (vs 22% for ICE). MRB road tax at 30% discount for zero-emission vehicles (2026-2028).

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