EV Charging + Snacks
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EV Charging + Snacks Receipt Example
This receipt documents a DC fast charging session combined with two convenience store purchases grabbed during the wait. The EV accepted 38.2 kWh at $0.43 per kWh ($16.43) plus a $1.00 session fee, the per-kWh rate is inclusive of state charges in this example. The coffee ($2.49) and Kind Bar ($1.89) are retail items taxed at the standard 7% state sales tax rate ($0.31). One receipt, two categories, and the correct tax treatment for each.
This EV charging with snacks receipt documents a 35-minute Tesla Supercharger session delivering 42 kWh at $0.36/kWh ($15.12) plus 2 bottled waters and a granola bar from the station convenience store ($6.47), totaling $21.59.
Receipt Breakdown
Session Summary:
Charger: 4B · Duration: 34 min · Energy: 38.2 kWh
No federal fuel excise tax on electricity
What Makes This Receipt Realistic
- • EV session and convenience items on one integrated receipt, common at modern stations
- • Sales tax on convenience items only (7%): EV rate is tax-inclusive in this example
- • Two separate subtotal buckets: EV charging and convenience shown before a single total
- • Session duration (34 min) on the receipt, standard DC fast charge session summary
- • Item names in uppercase, matching gas station thermal printer format
- • No fuel excise tax disclosure: electricity is not subject to the federal fuel excise tax
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this EV charging + snacks receipt show?
This receipt shows four line items: DC FAST CHARGE: 38.2 kWh @ $0.43/kWh = $16.43, SESSION FEE = $1.00, COFFEE LARGE = $2.49, and KIND BAR = $1.89. The EV charging session total ($17.43) has no additional sales tax in this state: the per-kWh rate is inclusive of all applicable charges. The convenience store items ($4.38) are taxed at the standard retail sales tax rate of 7% ($0.31), producing a grand total of $22.12. Payment: Mastercard ****2275.
Why is the EV charging not taxed but the snacks are on this receipt?
EV charging tax treatment varies by state. Some states apply sales tax to EV charging services; others do not or embed it in the rate. In this example the per-kWh charging rate and session fee are tax-inclusive: the $0.43/kWh already reflects all state charges on the energy service. Convenience store items (food, drinks) are always subject to standard retail sales tax regardless of how the charging service is taxed. The receipt separates the two subtotals so the correct tax is visible for each.
How long does a DC fast charge session take?
A DC fast charging session at a gas station or highway stop typically delivers 50–150 kW of power. At 50 kW, adding 38 kWh takes about 46 minutes. At 150 kW, the same energy takes roughly 15 minutes. Charging speed also slows as the battery approaches 80%, and most drivers stop at 80% for faster overall session times. The receipt records the exact kWh delivered and session duration, which is useful for tracking charging costs and reimbursements.