Truck comparison

Rivian R1T vs Jeep Wrangler

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

Rivian R1T vs Jeep Wrangler: Quick Verdict

Based on average driving (12,000 miles/year), the Jeep Wrangler costs approximately $16,553 less over 5 years compared to the Rivian R1T. The gas vehicle's lower purchase price outweighs the EV's fuel savings at this mileage.

Rivian R1T

$69,900

purchase price

Jeep Wrangler

$33,690

purchase price

Gas saves

$16,553

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

Gas/Hybrid is better for this scenariohigh confidence

Jeep Wrangler Is Cheaper

Gas saves you

$16,553

over 5 years

EV saves per month

$126

fuel + maintenance

Operating cost payback

12.7 years

beyond ownership

Best case (Home charging): EV costs $16,553
Worst case (Public charging only): EV costs $22,223

The Jeep Wrangler costs $16,553 less over 5 years than the Rivian R1T.

These vehicles are in different classes. The comparison is still valid but keep the size/class difference in mind.

Operating cost payback falls outside your ownership period. You may not recover the extra upfront cost through fuel and maintenance savings alone.

Gas saves you

$16,553

over 5 years (all-in)

EV saves per month

$126

fuel + maintenance

Operating cost payback

12.7 years

beyond ownership period

Vehicles compared

Rivian R1T vs Wrangler

Truck

Full Cost Breakdown

Rivian R1T

Electric

Purchase Price$69,900
Monthly Fuel$46
Annual Fuel$546
Total Fuel$2,730
Total Maintenance$3,250
Total Insurance$12,500
Resale Value$36,348
Total Cost of Ownership$52,032

Jeep Wrangler

Gas

Best
Purchase Price$33,690
Monthly Fuel$159
Annual Fuel$1,909
Total Fuel$9,545
Total Maintenance$6,000
Total Insurance$10,500
Resale Value$24,257
Total Cost of Ownership$35,479

Cost Over 5 Years

Year 1Wrangler leads
Rivian R1T
$12,265
Wrangler
$7,351
Year 2Wrangler leads
Rivian R1T
$23,480
Wrangler
$14,567
Year 3Wrangler leads
Rivian R1T
$33,773
Wrangler
$21,654
Year 4Wrangler leads
Rivian R1T
$43,257
Wrangler
$28,622
Year 5Wrangler leads
Rivian R1T
$52,032
Wrangler
$35,479
Rivian R1T (EV)Jeep Wrangler (GAS)

Why This Result

The gas vehicle's lower purchase price and depreciation outweigh the EV's fuel savings at your current mileage. Driving more or higher gas prices could change this.

Fuel vs Charging

Charging the Rivian R1T costs about $546/year vs $1909/year for gas in the Wrangler. That's $1363/year in fuel savings alone.

Maintenance

EVs have fewer moving parts — no oil changes, less brake wear, no transmission fluid. The Rivian R1T saves roughly $2750 in maintenance over the ownership period.

Depreciation & Resale

The Wrangler holds 72% of its value vs 52% for the Rivian R1T. 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 $2,500/year for the Rivian R1T vs $2,100/year for the Wrangler in the total comparison.

Share Your Result

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At my mileage, the Jeep Wrangler beats the Rivian R1T by $16,553 over 5 years. Check yours → isevworthit.com

About the Rivian R1T

The Rivian R1T is a fully electric truck with an efficiency of 0.35 kWh per mile. Priced at $69,900, it costs around $650/year to maintain and $2,500/year to insure.

About the Jeep Wrangler

The Jeep Wrangler is a gas-powered truck achieving 22 MPG. Priced at $33,690, it costs around $1,200/year to maintain and $2,100/year to insure. Note that these vehicles are in different classes — keep size and use-case differences in mind.

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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