If you want the most range for your money right now, the Chevrolet Equinox EV is the pick — it starts under $35,000 and delivers up to 319 miles of EPA-rated range, which independent testers have actually matched or beaten in real-world driving. Edmunds recorded 356 miles of real-world range with the front-wheel-drive Equinox EV during its official EV Range Test. If your budget is tighter, the redesigned Nissan Leaf now starts near $30,000 with genuinely competitive range. Below, we break down five electric SUVs under $45,000, how their sticker range compares to what testers actually got on the road, and which one fits which kind of buyer.
Quick Summary
- Best overall value: Chevrolet Equinox EV — from ~$34,995, up to 319 mi EPA range
- Cheapest new EV SUV: Nissan Leaf — from ~$29,990, up to 303 mi EPA range
- Most space-efficient compact: Kia Niro EV — from ~$41,195, 253 mi EPA range
- Best for city-only driving: Hyundai Kona Electric — from ~$32,975–$34,000, ~200 mi EPA range
- Best all-wheel-drive off-pavement feel: Subaru Trailseeker — from ~$41,445, 260+ mi EPA range
Prices shown are base MSRP before destination fees, tax, and incentives, and may vary slightly by trim year and region. Always verify current pricing with the manufacturer before purchasing.
Why “Real-World Range” Matters More Than the Sticker Number
Every EV carries an EPA-estimated range figure, but that number comes from a standardized lab test, not from someone’s actual commute in traffic, cold weather, or at highway speed. The gap between sticker range and lived experience is exactly why independent testing labs — Edmunds, Cars.com, and U.S. News among them — run their own range tests using identical routes and conditions across multiple vehicles. That’s the data used below, rather than manufacturer marketing claims alone.
Chevrolet Equinox EV — Best Overall Value
The Equinox EV remains the standout in this price bracket. It starts at $34,995 before destination and carries an EPA-estimated range of up to 319 miles, and the front-wheel-drive version can add 77 miles of range in just 10 minutes of DC fast charging. Crucially, this isn’t just a lab number — Edmunds’ own range test measured 356 miles from the front-wheel-drive model, meaning real-world driving actually outperformed the EPA estimate in that test. All-wheel-drive versions trade a bit of range (307 miles) for 300 horsepower and quicker acceleration.
Who it’s for: Buyers who want the longest range per dollar and don’t mind a mainstream, non-flashy design.
Nissan Leaf — Cheapest True Electric SUV

Nissan’s third-generation Leaf abandoned its old hatchback shape for a crossover body in 2026, and it remains the lowest-starting-MSRP new EV on sale in the US, with the S+ grade beginning at $29,990. The top trim offers up to 303 miles of EPA-estimated range, though range drops on pricier trims with more features and bigger wheels. In testing, Edmunds’ Platinum+ test car exceeded expectations in the official EV Range Test, traveling 310 miles against an EPA estimate of 259 miles for that trim — another case where real-world results beat the sticker. The tradeoff: no all-wheel-drive option, and charging tops out at 150 kW.
Who it’s for: First-time EV buyers prioritizing low upfront cost over charging speed or AWD.
Kia Niro EV — Best Compact Utility

The Niro EV plays it straight down the middle: at roughly $41,195, it delivers 253 miles of EPA range, 201 horsepower, 85 kW DC fast charging, and Tesla Supercharger compatibility via adapter. It can go from 10% to 80% charge in around 43 minutes and takes about 6 hours on a home Level 2 charger. It’s not the longest-range or fastest-charging option here, but it’s a well-rounded compact crossover with genuine cargo flexibility.
Who it’s for: Buyers who want hatchback-style versatility in a smaller footprint.
Hyundai Kona Electric — Budget City Commuter

Hyundai simplified the 2026 Kona Electric down to a single SE Standard Range trim. The EPA hasn’t published an official 2026 rating as of this writing, but the closely related 2025 SE Standard Range was rated at 118 MPGe, with the 2026 version’s real-world range landing around 200 miles. That’s the shortest range on this list, but owners have reported the Kona Electric as one of the more efficient EVs tested, squeezing strong mileage out of a modest battery pack. Note: this is a step down in range from the outgoing long-range Kona, so cross-shop carefully if you’re upgrading from an older model.
Who it’s for: Commuters under 80 miles a day who charge at home and want the lowest possible price of entry.
Subaru Trailseeker — Best AWD Standard

Subaru’s EV entry stands out for making all-wheel drive standard rather than an upcharge. The Premium trim starts at $41,445 and pairs a 375-horsepower setup with a 3,500-pound tow rating and more than 260 miles of claimed range, along with a fast 10–80% charge window designed to keep road trips practical. It’s the closest thing on this list to a traditional Subaru driving feel, just electrified.
Who it’s for: Buyers who want genuine AWD capability and towing in an EV SUV.
Comparison Table
| Model | Starting Price | EPA Range | Real-World Test Range | DC Fast Charge Speed | Drivetrain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chevrolet Equinox EV | ~$34,995 | Up to 319 mi | 356 mi (Edmunds test, FWD) | Up to 150 kW | FWD / AWD |
| Nissan Leaf | ~$29,990 | Up to 303 mi | 310 mi (Edmunds test, Platinum+ trim) | Up to 150 kW | FWD only |
| Kia Niro EV | ~$41,195 | 253 mi | Not independently range-tested at time of writing | Up to 85 kW | FWD only |
| Hyundai Kona Electric | ~$32,975–$34,000 | ~200 mi | Owner-reported efficiency above EPA in mild weather | Up to ~100 kW | FWD only |
| Subaru Trailseeker | ~$41,445 | 260+ mi | Not independently range-tested at time of writing | Fast-charge capable (exact kW not confirmed) | AWD standard |
Prices are base MSRP, before destination fees, taxes, and incentives. Range and charging figures sourced from manufacturer specs and independent outlet testing (Edmunds, U.S. News, Cars.com) as of mid-2026.
Bottom Line
For most buyers, the Chevrolet Equinox EV is the best electric SUV under $45,000 in 2026 — it pairs the lowest price-per-mile-of-range in this group with real-world test results that actually beat its EPA sticker number. If upfront cost matters more than anything else, the Nissan Leaf undercuts it by several thousand dollars without sacrificing much range. Buyers who specifically need standard all-wheel drive should look at the Subaru Trailseeker instead.



