Site icon

“Effekt-tariffer” in Sweden – how will it affect EV owners

As an EV owner, the new effekttariff (power-based grid fee) mainly means you’ll start paying (part of) your grid bill based on how high your peak power (kW) gets, not just how many kWh you used.
—————————————————————————————————————————
Do you want EV news in your mailbox every week – SUBSCRIBE

Do you miss anything regarding EV’s on this site – send an email to info@ev-erything.com

—————————————————————————————————————————

What changes in practice

Your grid fee typically becomes (or already is) three parts:

  1. Fixed fee (abonnemang)
  2. Energy/transfer fee (öre/kWh)
  3. NEW: power/peak fee (based on your effekttoppar, i.e., how much you use at the same time) (ei.se)

Important: This is your elnätsavgift (grid company), not your elhandelspris (electricity retailer). (ei.se)

Why EV owners are affected more than average

Home charging can be one of the biggest “peak creators”:

Timing (Sweden) + Vattenfall note

What it means for your wallet (simple mental model)

You’ll pay more if you create high peaks during “busy” hours, and less if you spread or cap your power draw. The consumer guidance is basically: find what causes your peaks (EV charging is a classic one) and shift/limit it. (ei.se)

7 easy moves that usually help EV owners

  1. Charge at night (common advice: lower grid load → lower peak-fee impact). (Energimarknadsbyrån)
  2. Lower charging power in the car or wallbox (e.g., 11 kW → 3.7–7.4 kW).
    • Overnight, even 3.7 kW × 8h ≈ 30 kWh (often ~150–170 km depending on consumption).
  3. Avoid stacking loads: don’t fast-charge at home while running oven + sauna + dishwasher + tumble dryer. (ei.se)
  4. Enable dynamic load balancing in your charger (keeps house + EV under a chosen kW cap).
  5. Move “spiky” appliances away from typical peak times (often mornings/late afternoon; varies by grid company). (ei.se)
  6. Watch your peaks in your grid-company portal (“Mina sidor”) or via a real-time meter display. (ei.se)
  7. If you’re considering a home battery: it can shave peaks (charge slowly, discharge during spikes). Whether it pays off depends on your tariff design and battery cost.

Power-based grid tariffs (effekttariffer) by company — Sweden

(Focus: private customers / detached houses, since EV charging is usually most noticeable there. Note that grid prices can vary by network area/region even within the same company.)

Ellevio (private: house) — power fee already in place

Applies (per their price info): power-based subscription for houses from 1 Jan 2026.
How the power fee is calculated:

➡️ EV meaning: Ellevio clearly rewards night charging (half peak), and mainly “penalizes” your top 3 peak hours if you charge while running other heavy loads (oven/sauna/heat pump, etc.).

Vattenfall Eldistribution — power fee is coming for most customers (not yet for everyone)

What they say about rollout:

Already now (smaller customer group):

If you’re on “power subscription 80A+” (uncommon for houses):

➡️ EV meaning: In Vattenfall areas, the EV impact becomes real when the model is rolled out (autumn 2026). The model tested for some customers uses 5 peaks (averaged), which means you want to be consistent across the month—not just avoid one single “bad peak hour.”

E.ON Energidistribution — current price lists don’t show a power fee, but a new model is announced

Current private price lists (example North/South):

Announced introduction:

➡️ EV meaning: In E.ON areas, the EV “power cost” is mainly an upcoming change (announced for 2026-09-01). Always check your local price list/network area.

Quick comparison (what matters for EV charging)

—————————————————————————————————————————
Do you want EV news in your mailbox every week – SUBSCRIBE

Do you miss anything regarding EV’s on this site – send an email to info@ev-erything.com

—————————————————————————————————————————

Exit mobile version