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Petrol vs Diesel vs Electric Cars in Kenya: True Cost of Driving (2026)

With petrol above KES 214 and diesel above KES 232 a litre in 2026, the cost of driving in Kenya has changed — and diesel is now pricier than petrol. We compare petrol, diesel and electric on real cost per kilometre and total ownership.

June 5, 2026 4 min read PesaCalc Editorial 630 words

Something quietly flipped in Kenya in 2026: diesel is now more expensive per litre than petrol, reversing decades of the opposite. With petrol above KES 214 and diesel above KES 232 a litre, the “buy diesel to save fuel” rule no longer holds for everyone — and electric is suddenly the cheapest way to drive by a wide margin. Here is the real cost comparison per kilometre and over a year.

2026 Nairobi pump prices: Super Petrol KES 214.25/L · Diesel KES 232.86/L · Kerosene KES 191.38/L. Electricity for an EV works out to roughly KES 15–23 per kWh at home — a fraction of the cost per kilometre.

Cost per 100 km: the real comparison

VehicleConsumptionCost per 100 km
Petrol sedan (12 km/L)8.3 L≈ KES 1,785
Diesel SUV (14 km/L)7.1 L≈ KES 1,663
Efficient petrol (16 km/L)6.25 L≈ KES 1,340
Electric (15 kWh/100 km)15 kWh≈ KES 230
An EV costs roughly 87% less per kilometre than a petrol car. Over 20,000 km a year that is the difference between ~KES 357,000 in petrol and ~KES 46,000 in electricity. Check your own trip and monthly cost with the Fuel Cost Calculator.

Petrol vs diesel: which now?

With diesel pricier per litre but diesel engines 25–30% more efficient, diesel still wins on cost-per-km for long-distance and heavy vehicles. For ordinary city commuting in a small car, petrol is now often cheaper overall — especially once you factor in diesel’s higher servicing costs. The old “always buy diesel” advice is outdated for 2026.

Is an electric car worth it in Kenya?

On running cost, it is no contest — EVs are ~85% cheaper per kilometre and have far fewer moving parts to service. The barriers are upfront price and charging access outside Nairobi. But for a city commuter who can charge at home, the fuel saving alone can offset a chunk of the higher purchase price within a few years.

Factor in the import duty before you buy. Whether petrol, diesel or electric, the landed cost of an imported car includes KRA import duty, excise (lower for EVs), VAT, IDF and RDL. Estimate it accurately with the Car Import Duty Calculator before you commit.

What this means for your wallet

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City commuter, small car: petrol is now usually the cheapest fossil option; an EV is cheapest of all if you can charge at home.
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Long-distance / heavy loads: diesel still wins on fuel cost-per-km thanks to efficiency.
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Whatever you drive: fuel is a major monthly cost in 2026 — model your real spend with the Fuel Cost Calculator before deciding.

Frequently asked questions

QWhy is diesel more expensive than petrol in Kenya in 2026?
Global diesel demand and the structure of EPRA’s monthly pricing pushed diesel above petrol — a reversal of the historic pattern. Diesel engines are still more efficient, so for long-distance drivers diesel can remain cheaper per kilometre despite the higher pump price.
QHow much cheaper is an electric car to run in Kenya?
About 85–87% cheaper per kilometre. A petrol car at 12 km/L costs roughly KES 1,785 per 100 km in 2026; an EV at home costs around KES 230 for the same distance. The gap grows the more you drive.
QHow do I work out my monthly fuel cost?
Multiply your daily distance by working days, divide by your car’s km/L, and multiply by the pump price — or just use the Fuel Cost Calculator, which does it for petrol, diesel and EV and projects your monthly and annual spend.

The 2026 fuel landscape rewrote the rules: petrol now often beats diesel for everyday city driving, and electric beats everything on running cost. Match the car to how you actually drive, factor in the import duty and servicing, and model the real numbers with the Fuel Cost Calculator and Car Import Duty Calculator before you buy.

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