Gas hit $6.33 for super unleaded at Costco in Irvine last week. Not a policy projection or a worst-case scenario from an energy analyst. A real price at a real pump, in one of the largest suburban markets in Southern California, at the retailer people drive twenty minutes out of their way to save a dollar on.
For five years, Washington and the OEM communications departments ran the same argument about EVs. The problem was affordability. The solution was the new car lot. Get the federal tax credit in place, get the price of a new electric vehicle down close enough to what buyers were already spending on gas cars, add infrastructure, change behavior. The logic made sense at a certain altitude. The problem was the buyer it assumed.
The tax credit, worth up to $7,500 at its peak, was an admission written into the policy. It existed because the gap between what the market would pay for a new EV and what EVs actually cost was real and significant. The credit bridged that gap with public money. When income limits tightened and then the credit expired, the bridge came down and you could see exactly how wide the gap was by watching what happened to sales.
EVs came in at 6.3 percent market share in Q1 2026, down 1.4 points from a year ago. The mandate didn't close the gap. The subsidy bridged it temporarily. The policy machine had been solving for a buyer who needed $7,500 knocked off a $45,000 vehicle to make the decision. That buyer stayed skeptical all along. The buyer who actually moved was somewhere else, in a different transaction entirely, and nobody had planned for them.
More than 300,000 EVs are coming off lease in 2026. Two- and three-year-old models, most with under 30,000 miles, that entered the fleet at full new-car pricing and have since depreciated into a range that makes sense without any subsidy at all. Used EVs now cost an average of $900 more than a comparable gas car. Average range on returning lease vehicles has climbed to 325 miles, up from 293 a year ago. No federal credit required. No dealer markup drama. No infrastructure bill. Just depreciation doing what it has always done to every technology that makes the transition from early adopter to mainstream.
The policy machine spent five years trying to pull the price of a new EV down far enough to trigger mass adoption. The used market got there on its own, on its own schedule, through the ordinary mechanics of time and volume. Hundreds of thousands of units entered service, depreciated normally, and surfaced in the used market at prices that close the argument without any help from Washington.
The buyer doing the math right now was not in any of the policy models. They are not ideologically committed to EVs. They are not early adopters or incentive hunters or environmentally motivated in a way that would show up on a survey. They have noticed that gas is $6.33 a gallon for premium at Costco, that a three-year-old Bolt with 28,000 miles can be had for under $17,000, and that their commute is forty miles round trip. They are doing arithmetic. The arithmetic is not complicated.
This is the buyer five years of federal policy couldn't create. Depreciation and a fuel price created them in about eight weeks.
The EV affordability argument was always, at its core, a time problem dressed as a design problem. The market needed leases to cycle through, used inventory to build, and depreciation to close the gap that subsidies were trying to paper over. That gap has now closed, in the used lot, without a press conference or a policy announcement or a mandate deadline. At $6.33 a gallon in Irvine, it closes faster.
The EV moment arrived. It just parked in a different lot.