Acura ZDX
$66/month avg
Range: 327 miles
Efficiency: 2.7 mi/kWh
Luxury 1 configuration with home-charging cost benchmarks, state-by-state electricity comparisons, and practical monthly planning metrics.
Battery
102 kWh
Range
326 mi
Efficiency
2.7 mi/kWh
MSRP
$58,690
Cadillac Lyriq is a high-intent U.S. search for drivers who want a premium electric SUV but still need practical charging-cost expectations before purchase. For 2026 Lyriq ownership, charging mix is the strongest cost lever. At the current home benchmark ($0.18/kWh), 1,000 miles is about $66.18. At a full public-charging pattern ($0.45/kWh), the same monthly distance is about $165.44.
Pre-filled for Cadillac Lyriq. Enter your ZIP code and miles for a fast estimate.
Home charging snapshot using the current U.S. residential rate of $0.18/kWh.
Electricity needed (1,000 miles): 368 kWh
Electricity needed (12,000 miles): 4,412 kWh
Daily home charging cost (1,000-mile month): $2.21
EPA range per full charge: 326 miles
100% public charging snapshot using $0.45/kWh.
Daily public charging cost (1,000-mile month): $5.51
Extra monthly cost vs home: $99.26 higher
Extra annual cost vs home: $1,191.18 higher
Compared to gas baseline: spend $552.97/year more
Large-pack profile (>100 kWh). Large battery vehicles generally reduce range anxiety, but seasonal HVAC and thermal management can still move monthly cost materially.
Planning heuristic (not a universal rule). Reviewed monthly. Sources: AAA EV temperature testing; U.S. DOE weather and fuel-economy guidance; Recurrent model-level seasonal behavior datasets.
+18% to +38%
Factor band: 1.18x-1.38x baseline.
+6% to +15%
Factor band: 1.06x-1.15x baseline.
Winter: $78.09-$91.32
Summer: $70.15-$76.10
Winter: $195.22-$228.31
Summer: $175.37-$190.26
Use planned overnight windows and avoid unnecessary high-SOC public sessions during weather extremes.
Need detailed seasonal budgeting methods? Read the Winter EV Charging Cost Guide and Summer EV Charging Cost Guide.
Top 5 cheapest states for Cadillac Lyriq: North Dakota, Arkansas, Idaho, Missouri, Nebraska
| State | Rate | Monthly Cost | Annual Cost | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Dakota | $0.11/kWh | $40.44 | $485.29 | #1 |
| Arkansas | $0.12/kWh | $44.12 | $529.41 | #2 |
| Idaho | $0.12/kWh | $44.12 | $529.41 | #3 |
| Missouri | $0.12/kWh | $44.12 | $529.41 | #4 |
| Nebraska | $0.12/kWh | $44.12 | $529.41 | #5 |
| Oklahoma | $0.12/kWh | $44.12 | $529.41 | #6 |
| Iowa | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #7 |
| Kentucky | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #8 |
| Louisiana | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #9 |
| Montana | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #10 |
| Nevada | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #11 |
| North Carolina | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #12 |
| South Dakota | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #13 |
| Tennessee | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #14 |
| Utah | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #15 |
| Washington | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #16 |
| Wyoming | $0.13/kWh | $47.79 | $573.53 | #17 |
| Georgia | $0.14/kWh | $51.47 | $617.65 | #18 |
| Kansas | $0.14/kWh | $51.47 | $617.65 | #19 |
| Mississippi | $0.14/kWh | $51.47 | $617.65 | #20 |
| Arizona | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #21 |
| Florida | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #22 |
| Minnesota | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #23 |
| New Mexico | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #24 |
| Oregon | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #25 |
| South Carolina | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #26 |
| Virginia | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #27 |
| West Virginia | $0.15/kWh | $55.15 | $661.76 | #28 |
| Alabama | $0.16/kWh | $58.82 | $705.88 | #29 |
| Colorado | $0.16/kWh | $58.82 | $705.88 | #30 |
| Indiana | $0.16/kWh | $58.82 | $705.88 | #31 |
| Texas | $0.16/kWh | $58.82 | $705.88 | #32 |
| Delaware | $0.17/kWh | $62.50 | $750.00 | #33 |
| Illinois | $0.17/kWh | $62.50 | $750.00 | #34 |
| Ohio | $0.17/kWh | $62.50 | $750.00 | #35 |
| Wisconsin | $0.18/kWh | $66.18 | $794.12 | #36 |
| Maryland | $0.20/kWh | $73.53 | $882.35 | #37 |
| Michigan | $0.20/kWh | $73.53 | $882.35 | #38 |
| Pennsylvania | $0.20/kWh | $73.53 | $882.35 | #39 |
| New Jersey | $0.23/kWh | $84.56 | $1,014.71 | #40 |
| Vermont | $0.23/kWh | $84.56 | $1,014.71 | #41 |
| Connecticut | $0.25/kWh | $91.91 | $1,102.94 | #42 |
| Alaska | $0.26/kWh | $95.59 | $1,147.06 | #43 |
| New Hampshire | $0.26/kWh | $95.59 | $1,147.06 | #44 |
| New York | $0.27/kWh | $99.26 | $1,191.18 | #45 |
| Maine | $0.30/kWh | $110.29 | $1,323.53 | #46 |
| Massachusetts | $0.31/kWh | $113.97 | $1,367.65 | #47 |
| Rhode Island | $0.31/kWh | $113.97 | $1,367.65 | #48 |
| California | $0.35/kWh | $128.68 | $1,544.12 | #49 |
| Hawaii | $0.42/kWh | $154.41 | $1,852.94 | #50 |
Speed: 2-4 miles/hour
Time to full: 64-85 hours
Best for: Overnight charging and low daily mileage
Speed: 17-23 miles/hour
Time to full: 10-15 hours
Best for: Daily home charging
Speed: up to 210 kW (113 miles in 15 min)
Time to 80%: about 32 minutes
Best for: Road trips and fast top-ups
Networks: Tesla Supercharger, Electrify America, EVgo
| Model Year | 2026 |
| Trim | Luxury 1 |
| Battery Size | 102 kWh |
| Range | 326 miles |
| Efficiency | 2.7 mi/kWh |
| Charging Speed | L1: 2-4 miles/hour; L2: 17-23 miles/hour; DC Fast: up to 210 kW (113 miles in 15 min) |
| Seating | 5 seats |
| Category | suv |
| MSRP | $58,690 |
$66/month avg
Range: 327 miles
Efficiency: 2.7 mi/kWh
$68/month avg
Range: 305 miles
Efficiency: 2.6 mi/kWh
$60/month avg
Range: 330 miles
Efficiency: 3.0 mi/kWh
$64/month avg
Range: 350 miles
Efficiency: 2.8 mi/kWh
At $0.18/kWh home charging, Lyriq is about $66.18 per 1,000 miles. At $0.45/kWh public charging, it is about $165.44 for the same monthly distance.
Using current benchmark assumptions, Lyriq runs near $6.62 per 100 miles on home electricity and about $16.54 per 100 miles on full public charging.
Compared with home-first charging behavior, full public charging is about $99.26 higher per month and about $1,191.18 higher per year for a 12,000-mile profile.
Typical planning windows are around 64-85 hours on Level 1, 10-15 hours on Level 2, and about 32 minutes to 80% on DC fast charging when station and battery conditions are favorable.
Lyriq generally sits in a mid-to-upper SUV charging-cost band because it pairs a larger battery class with premium-SUV capability. In practice, nightly home charging usually keeps cost per 100 miles much more competitive than public-heavy patterns.
Against a 25 MPG gas baseline at $2.98/gal, Lyriq saves about $638.20 per year at home-rate assumptions.
Enter your ZIP code and monthly miles to get a personalized estimate.
Cost assumptions: $0.18/kWh electricity,$2.98/gal gas, 25 MPG gas baseline, updated monthly.