In 2026, electric heavy-duty trucks have moved beyond prototypes. Early production vehicles from Tesla, Volvo, and Freightliner are now hauling real freight on regional and selected long-haul routes. For fleet managers, the question has shifted from "if" to "where does the total cost of ownership (TCO) actually beat diesel?". At Energy Solutions, we benchmark heavy-duty TCO models across OEMs, routes, and energy price scenarios to understand when electric semis deliver a financial edge and when diesel still wins.
Who this brief is for
This Market Intelligence note is written for fleet operators, shippers, and lenders evaluating 2025-2028 procurement cycles. The numbers below are indicative - not price quotes - but they reflect realistic ranges from public announcements, Energy Solutions datasets, and interviews with fleet operators.
All values are scenario-based and expressed in real 2025 USD unless otherwise stated. Use them as directional guidance and always run a lane- and utility-specific model before committing capital.
What You'll Learn
- TCO Basics: How Fleets Compare Diesel and Electric
- Headline Specs and Purchase Cost Ranges (Tesla, Volvo, Freightliner)
- Illustrative 8-Year TCO per Truck
- Route and Duty Cycle Scenarios That Work (and Don't)
- Depot Charging, Megawatt Charging, and Grid Limits
- Sensitivity: Diesel, Power Prices, and Incentives
- Global Perspective: North America, Europe, and Emerging Markets
- Devil's Advocate: Payload, Degradation, and Residual Value Risk
- Outlook to 2030: When Do Electric Semis Become the Default Order?
- Methodology Note
- FAQ: Range, Residuals, and Practical Concerns
TCO Basics: How Fleets Compare Diesel and Electric
For a heavy-duty tractor, energy and maintenance dominate lifetime cost, but the electric transition changes the profile:
- Upfront vehicle CapEx: electric tractors often cost 1.6-2.3x a comparable diesel unit in 2025-2026 ordering cycles.
- Infrastructure CapEx: depot chargers, possible grid upgrades, and in some cases on-site storage add a per-truck cost that depends heavily on fleet size and utilisation.
- Energy spend: diesel vs electricity (plus demand charges) becomes the main driver of payback; spreads vary widely by region.
- Maintenance and downtime: fewer moving parts and no exhaust aftertreatment favour electric; brake wear also drops with regenerative braking.
- Residual value: battery health and future secondary markets are still uncertain, particularly for first-generation vehicles.
Most sophisticated fleets now compare options on an 8-10 year, net-present-value basis, normalised per kilometre or per tonne-kilometre moved for each lane. The tables and charts below follow that logic.
Headline Specs and Purchase Cost Ranges (Tesla, Volvo, Freightliner)
The table below summarises indicative specifications and purchase price ranges for early-stage electric semis versus a reference diesel tractor. Figures blend public announcements with Energy Solutions modelling and should be treated as order-of-magnitude only, not binding offers.
Indicative Vehicle Specs and Purchase Price (2025-2026 Orders)
| Vehicle | Battery / Tank | Typical Real-World Range* | Estimated Purchase Price (USD) | Primary Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diesel 4x2/6x2 tractor | Diesel tank 800-1,000 L | 1,600-1,800 km | 150,000-180,000 | Long-haul general freight, flexible routing. |
| Tesla-type long-range electric semi | ~800-900 kWh pack | 500-800 km (lane-dependent) | 260,000-320,000 | High-volume regional or selected long-haul with planned charging. |
| Volvo FH-class electric tractor | ~450-600 kWh pack | 250-440 km | 260,000-330,000 | Regional distribution, hub-and-spoke, urban freight. |
| Freightliner eCascadia-class tractor | ~400-550 kWh pack | 230-400 km | 250,000-320,000 | Port drayage, regional and urban routes with depot charging. |
*Ranges are indicative and depend on payload, weather, driving style, and topography. Values are scenario-based and not guarantees of performance.
Illustrative TCO per Kilometre vs Diesel (Selected Use Cases)
Illustrative 8-Year TCO per Truck
The next table shows an illustrative 8-year TCO comparison for a regional fleet operating 120,000 km per year per tractor. It assumes relatively favourable electricity prices and moderate diesel prices roughly where many early adopters are finding parity or better.
Scenario TCO (8 Years, 120,000 km/year, Real 2025 USD)
| Cost Component | Diesel Tractor | Electric Semi (Regional) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vehicle CapEx | $170k | $290k | Electric truck ~70% higher upfront. |
| Infrastructure (depot + grid, allocated per truck) | $10k | $35k | Assumes shared depot for 40-60 trucks. |
| Energy cost | $520k | $260k | Assumes 32 L/100 km diesel vs 1.3 kWh/km electricity with modest demand charges. |
| Maintenance and repairs | $120k | $70k | Simpler driveline and less brake wear for electric. |
| Residual value (net of risk) | - $40k | - $30k | Electric residual discounted for battery uncertainty. |
| Total 8-year TCO | $780k | $625k | ~20% lower total cost for electric in this scenario. |
| Average cost per km | ~$0.81/km | ~$0.65/km | Before incentives or carbon pricing. |
Figures are indicative and should be adapted to local fuel, power, and maintenance cost data. They exclude driver wages, insurance, and tyre costs, which are assumed similar for both powertrains.
TCO Advantage of Electric vs Diesel Across Energy Price Scenarios
Route and Duty Cycle Scenarios That Work (and Don't)
Where electric semis make the strongest business case today:
- High-utilisation regional lanes: predictable 200-400 km out-and-back routes with overnight depot charging and limited need for public fast charging.
- Port drayage and urban freight: stop-start duty cycles amplify regenerative braking benefits and emissions reductions in sensitive air-quality zones.
- Retail and grocery distribution: fixed routes between distribution centres and stores, with load profiles that are volume- rather than weight-constrained.
Use cases where the economics are more marginal in 2026:
- Very long-haul, irregular routing: where trucks change lanes frequently and rely heavily on public charging, range and utilisation can suffer.
- Maximum payload operations: if every kilogram of payload matters, battery mass penalties are harder to absorb.
- Regions with high industrial power tariffs: if electricity is consistently priced at diesel-equivalent levels, the TCO edge erodes or disappears.
Depot Charging, Megawatt Charging, and Grid Limits
Infrastructure planning is now the bottleneck for scaling electric semis more than the vehicle count itself. Fleets typically progress through three phases:
- Pilot depots (1-10 trucks): Level 3 DC chargers at 150-350 kW, usually service-entrance upgrades only.
- Scaling depots (10-50 trucks): mix of 150-350 kW chargers for opportunity charging and lower-power overnight units; may require dedicated transformer and utility engagement.
- Megawatt-scale hubs (50-200+ trucks): multi-MW connections, possible on-site storage or generation, and careful load management to avoid demand-charge shocks.
Illustrative Depot Infrastructure Cost Allocated per Truck
| Depot Type | Fleet Size (electric tractors) | Indicative Infrastructure CapEx | Approx. Cost per Truck |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pilot site with shared 350 kW DC | 5-10 | $0.4-0.8m | $40k-80k |
| Medium depot with mix of DC/AC chargers | 20-40 | $1.2-2.5m | $30k-70k |
| Large hub with megawatt charging | 60-150 | $4-9m | $40k-90k |
Actual costs vary by site, utility, and civil-works requirements. Many fleets blend grants or utility contributions into this capex.
Sensitivity: Diesel, Power Prices, and Incentives
The TCO edge of electric semis is highly sensitive to three external variables:
- Diesel price: higher pump prices strengthen the case for electrification; prolonged low diesel prices slow it.
- All-in electricity cost: both energy and demand charges matter; smart charging strategies can materially improve economics.
- Incentives and carbon pricing: purchase subsidies, tax credits, and emissions charges can shift the business case by tens of thousands of dollars per truck.
The sensitivity chart above shows a stylised view of the TCO gap at three price spreads. In the most favourable scenario high diesel, moderate electricity electric semis can deliver 20-30% lower TCO. In the opposite case, they may be cost-neutral or slightly more expensive until the second battery pack cycle.
Global Perspective: North America, Europe, and Emerging Markets
Roll-out speed and economics differ strongly by region:
- North America: strong policy push in California and selected states, with purchase incentives and zero-emission sales mandates. High average diesel use per truck makes savings compelling on regional freight corridors.
- Europe: higher fuel taxes and dense depot networks favour early adoption, but weight/length rules and cross-border operations add complexity.
- Emerging markets: rapid truck demand growth but tighter capital constraints and less mature grid infrastructure; pilot projects often focus on mining, ports, or captive industrial sites.
Globally, order books remain a fraction of total heavy-duty sales, but the learning curves for vehicles, charging hardware, and operations are steep. Many fleets are deliberately running small but growing electric cohorts in parallel with diesel renewals to avoid technology lock-in.
Devil's Advocate: Payload, Degradation, and Residual Value Risk
While the economics can look compelling on paper, there are structural risks that decision-makers need to price explicitly:
- Payload penalties: battery packs add several tonnes to tractor tare weight, though updated regulations in some regions provide limited weight exemptions.
- Battery degradation: performance over 8-10 years depends on charging patterns and duty cycles; a second pack mid-life may be required in some fleets.
- Technology lock-in: charging standards and connector formats are still evolving; misaligned investments can strand capital.
- Residual value uncertainty: used-truck markets for electric semis are nascent, making terminal value harder to estimate than for diesel.
Treat these risks as explicit line items in investment committees rather than soft concerns. Conservative residuals and stress-tested battery scenarios help avoid surprises later.
Outlook to 2030: When Do Electric Semis Become the Default Order?
Most mainstream forecasts see electric heavy-duty trucks gaining a meaningful but not dominant share of new sales by 2030, especially in regional haul. A plausible trajectory is:
- By the late 2020s, electric tractors become the default choice for high-utilisation regional lanes in markets with supportive power prices and incentives.
- Public megawatt-scale corridors and improvements in energy density expand viable long-haul use cases.
- Carbon pricing and emissions regulations increase the penalty for running diesel in sensitive corridors and urban zones.
Fleet strategies are shifting from "one big bet" to portfolio thinking: maintain an efficient diesel core, add electric where TCO is already positive, and keep optionality for hydrogen or other low-carbon fuels in specific niches.
Methodology Note
Benchmarks in this brief draw on manufacturer announcements, pilot project disclosures, and Energy Solutions scenario models up to Q4 2025. TCO figures represent stylised scenarios normalised for utilisation and expressed in real 2025 USD. They are not investment advice or guarantees. Fleets should build lane-specific models with their own duty cycles, tariffs, and maintenance experience before committing capex.