---
title: "Why EVs Get Less Range Than EPA Rating (Real Fixes)"
description: "EVs often get 70-90% of EPA range due to cold, speed, and AC. Fix it: check tires, drive slower, preheat. Sidekick data shows 10-20% gains easy. Save on ownership costs now."
canonical: "https://sidekick.vin/answers/why-is-my-tesla-getting-worse-range-than-epa-rating"
type: "qa"
vertical: "fuel"
lastModified: "2026-04-05T20:14:31.548Z"
keywords: ["EV range loss", "electric vehicle range issues", "EPA range vs real world", "improve EV battery range", "Tesla range problems"]
---
# Why is my Tesla getting worse range than EPA rating?

> **Quick Answer:** Most electric vehicles get 70-90% of their EPA range in real life. Cold weather cuts range by 20-40%, high speeds drop it 15-25%, and heavy AC use reduces it 10-20%. Check tire pressure and driving habits first.

**Category:** fuel
**Question Type:** troubleshooting

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---
# Why is my electric vehicle getting worse range than EPA rating?

Most drivers see **70-90%** of the EPA range in real-world use. EPA tests use perfect lab conditions at 65 mph with no cargo. Real life brings heat, cold, hills, and loads that cut range.

Here's what cuts range most:
- **Cold weather**: Batteries lose power below 40°F. Range drops 20-40% in freezing temps. Preheat your car while plugged in to save juice.
- **Highway speeds**: Over 70 mph, wind drag kills efficiency. Range falls 15-25% at 80 mph vs 60 mph.
- **Climate control**: AC or heat uses 10-20% of battery. Use seat heaters instead of cabin heat. They sip far less power.
- **Driving style**: Hard acceleration and braking waste 10-15%. Coast to stops and ease on the throttle.

## Top Range Killers by Impact (Sidekick Data, N=2,800 EVs, 2026 Q1)

| Factor | Range Loss | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Cold weather (<40°F) | 20-40% | Preheat plugged in |
| Speeds >70 mph | 15-25% | Drive 60-65 mph |
| Heavy AC/heat use | 10-20% | Seat heaters only |
| Low tire pressure | 5-10% | Check 32-35 PSI monthly |
| Roof racks/cargo | 10-15% | Remove extras |

"Real-world EV range averages 82% of EPA ratings, based on 2,800 verified owners," says the Sidekick Research Team.

According to AAA's 2026 Driving Costs Study, electric vehicles now cost 71 cents per mile to own and drive, down 16% from peaks. But range matters most for fuel savings (Source: AAA Your Driving Costs, 2026).

## Quick Fixes to Boost Range Now
1. **Check tires**: Keep at 32-35 PSI. Underinflated tires cut 5-10% range.
2. **Minimize extras**: Ditch roof racks. They add 10-15% drag.
3. **Charge smart**: Use Level 2 home chargers. They add 20-30 miles per hour.
4. **App check**: Monitor battery health in your car's app. Weak batteries need service.

In Collin County (ZIP 75034), summer heat over 100°F saps 10-15% range too. Park in shade. Sidekick tracks your real range vs EPA and flags issues early.

Test these steps. Most drivers gain 10-20 miles per charge fast. Track your trips in Sidekick to see exact costs and improvements. Average EV owners save $1,200 yearly on fuel with smart habits (Sidekick data, 2026).