Adventure SUV comparison

Rivian R1S vs Jeep Grand Cherokee L

Which costs less to own over 5 years? Compare purchase price, fuel, maintenance, insurance, and depreciation — then customize with your own numbers.

Both vehicles are in the adventure suv class — a fair apples-to-apples comparison.

Rivian R1S vs Jeep Grand Cherokee L: Quick Verdict

Based on average driving (12,000 miles/year), the Jeep Grand Cherokee L costs approximately $1,253 less over 5 years compared to the Rivian R1S. The gas vehicle's lower purchase price outweighs the EV's fuel savings at this mileage.

Rivian R1S

$75,900

purchase price

Jeep Grand Cherokee L

$62,995

purchase price

Gas saves

$1,253

over 5 years

Customize your mileage, gas price, and electricity rate below to get a personalized comparison.

Your Numbers

Adjust the inputs to match your situation. Results update instantly.

Average American drives ~13,500 miles/year

Charge at home overnight — cheapest option

⚠️ It depends — the difference is smalllow confidence

Too Close to Call

Gas saves you

$1,253

over 5 years

EV saves per month

$145

fuel + maintenance

Operating cost payback

4.9 years

within ownership

Best case (Home charging): EV costs $1,253
Worst case (Public charging only): EV costs $6,599

The difference between the Rivian R1S and Jeep Grand Cherokee L is small — only $1,253 over 5 years.

Gas saves you

$1,253

over 5 years (all-in)

EV saves per month

$145

fuel + maintenance

Operating cost payback

4.9 years

achievable within ownership

Vehicles compared

Rivian R1S vs Grand Cherokee L

Adventure SUV

Full Cost Breakdown

Rivian R1S

Electric

Purchase Price$75,900
Monthly Fuel$43
Annual Fuel$515
Total Fuel$2,574
Total Maintenance$3,250
Total Insurance$13,000
Resale Value$39,468
Total Cost of Ownership$55,256

Jeep Grand Cherokee L

Gas

Best
Purchase Price$62,995
Monthly Fuel$159
Annual Fuel$1,909
Total Fuel$9,545
Total Maintenance$6,500
Total Insurance$11,500
Resale Value$36,537
Total Cost of Ownership$54,003

Cost Over 5 Years

Year 1Grand Cherokee L leads
Rivian R1S
$13,070
Grand Cherokee L
$12,011
Year 2Grand Cherokee L leads
Rivian R1S
$24,999
Grand Cherokee L
$23,352
Year 3Grand Cherokee L leads
Rivian R1S
$35,927
Grand Cherokee L
$34,090
Year 4Grand Cherokee L leads
Rivian R1S
$45,977
Grand Cherokee L
$44,289
Year 5Grand Cherokee L leads
Rivian R1S
$55,256
Grand Cherokee L
$54,003
Rivian R1S (EV)Jeep Grand Cherokee L (GAS)

Why This Result

At your inputs, neither option has a decisive cost advantage. Small changes in gas prices, electricity rates, or driving habits could tip the balance either way.

Fuel vs Charging

Charging the Rivian R1S costs about $515/year vs $1909/year for gas in the Grand Cherokee L. That's $1394/year in fuel savings alone.

Maintenance

EVs have fewer moving parts — no oil changes, less brake wear, no transmission fluid. The Rivian R1S saves roughly $3250 in maintenance over the ownership period.

Depreciation & Resale

The Grand Cherokee L holds 58% of its value vs 52% for the Rivian R1S. Purchase price and resale value are often the largest factors in total cost of ownership.

Insurance

EV insurance tends to run higher due to specialized repair costs. We've included $2,600/year for the Rivian R1S vs $2,300/year for the Grand Cherokee L in the total comparison.

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EV vs Gas is a close call for me — only $1,253 difference over 5 years. Check yours → isevworthit.com

About the Rivian R1S

The Rivian R1S is a fully electric adventure suv with an efficiency of 0.33 kWh per mile. Priced at $75,900, it costs around $650/year to maintain and $2,600/year to insure. It's widely regarded as the Adventure Ready option in its class.

About the Jeep Grand Cherokee L

The Jeep Grand Cherokee L is a gas-powered adventure suv achieving 22 MPG. Priced at $62,995, it costs around $1,300/year to maintain and $2,300/year to insure. This is a direct apples-to-apples comparison within the same vehicle class.

How We Calculate Total Cost

Total cost of ownership includes purchase price, fuel or charging costs over your ownership period, annual maintenance, annual insurance, minus estimated resale value based on depreciation. This gives you the true all-in cost of each vehicle — not just the sticker price.

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