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I've Driven My Lucid Air 72,000 Miles With Zero Maintenance Costs, While My Corvette C8 Would Have Required $4,850 In Service For The Same Distance

He's put 72,000 miles on his Lucid Air with zero maintenance costs, while his Corvette C8 would have cost him $4,850 in service for the same distance. Is this the new face of performance?
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Author: Noah Washington
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There comes a time in every gearhead’s life when the priorities start to shift. Maybe it’s a back twinge while climbing into that slammed sports car, or maybe it’s the second time in a year your mechanic says, 

“Well, that’s gonna be another grand.” 

Call it maturity, pragmatism, or just the cold slap of reality, but there’s a moment when even the most ardent car guy considers a new path. And sometimes, that shift isn’t defeat, it’s just clarity. 

A recent post in a Lucid Air Facebook group made waves with its straightforward math and honest reflection: when it comes to high-performance cars, cost isn’t always about the sticker price; sometimes it’s about what comes after.

“Just in case you’re on the fence about buying a Lucid versus a new Corvette or any other exotic gas-driven car. Here are some cost comparisons between my C-8 Corvette and my Lucid.

I have 72,000 miles on my Lucid maintenance costs zero. I put new tires on it at 70,000 miles. I never rotated the old tires, but driving across the desert from Phoenix, I hit a piece of metal with the left front tire and took a chunk out of it the size of a silver dollar. The other three tires actually still looked pretty good, but I put four new ones on anyway.

 I only have 40,000 miles on my 2020 C8, but for purposes of comparison, let’s calculate the maintenance costs for driving it 70,000 miles.

 I would need seven oil changes at $150.00 each. $1,050.00

 I would need two transmission oil changes at on the low 

 End $600.00 or if the internal filter needs replacing $1,600.00

 So let’s assume that it would needat least one at  $1,600.00.

The total cost for transmission maintenance.                             $2,200.00

I replaced the tires at 35,000 miles. Since the cost of tires on both my cars is approximately the same, I will only add the cost of one extra set of tires on the Corvette.   $1,600.00

So my maintenance costs for 70,000 miles on my Corvette are 

$4,850.00 more than my Lucid. Then, when I add the additional cost for 70,000 miles of premium fuel, the advantages of an EV Lucid are substantial.

Now the fossil fuel advocates will say But look at all the time I save not waiting to recharge. Most people who have a charger in their garage never have to charge elsewhere unless they’re on a long road trip.

 Even then, if you’re like me, making long trips all the time, I only charge while I’m having breakfast or lunch and taking a toilet break, so no appreciable time is lost. If you consider the many hours I have spent taking my Corvette in for oil changes, I probably waste far less time charging than taking care of my Corvette.”

An infographic comparing the maintenance costs of a Lucid car and a C8 Corvette, highlighting significant cost differences.

On one hand, the C8 Corvette: mid-engine, V8 thunder, the distilled spirit of American performance. On the other hand, the Lucid Air: a whisper-quiet electric sedan that accelerates like a McLaren but costs next to nothing to maintain. Schell’s tale is the new car-guy crossroads: not abandoning horsepower, but finding a more logical way to harness it.

Lucid Air Battery Specs: 2170‑Cell Packs & 900V Ultra‑Fast Charging

  • The Air uses custom 2170‑cell lithium‑ion battery packs in configurations of approximately 88 kWh, 93 kWh, 112 kWh, or 118 kWh usable capacity, tailored per trim level, like Dream Edition or Grand Touring 
  • It operates on a 900‑volt+ electrical architecture, enabling ultra‑fast DC charging: up to 200 miles in about 12 minutes or 300 miles in 20 minutes when plugged into 300 kW+ chargers 
  • With efficiency often around 4 mi/kWh on highway testing, such as averaging 4.3 mi/kWh over 500 miles, the Air surpasses most rivals that typically average under 3 mi/kWh 
  • Compared with other EV models, Lucid stands out for pairing high‑energy‑density batteries with a  low drag design; its Grand Touring EPA‑rated range hits up to 516 miles, making it one of the longest‑range EVs available

In the past, we’ve accepted the price of performance as gospel. You want fast? You pay. Oil changes, brake jobs, premium gas, and the inevitable “while we’re in there” repairs that stack up like bar tabs at a track day. On corvetteforum.com, owners often discuss $250 brake services and $1,600 transmission fluid jobs like they’re part of the game. 

Lucid Air vs. Corvette C8: Zero Maintenance Saves $4.8K Over 72K Miles

That’s the tax of driving a modern supercar. But as Schell pointed out, and as other Lucid owners echoed, his EV has required none of it. Not one fluid top-off. Not one check engine light dance. Just a tire replacement after hitting debris on the highway. (And even those still had tread left.)

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2025 Lucid Air in silver, rear three-quarter view on rocky terrain with ocean horizon, sleek electric sedan design"

Now, not everything is cheaper. Tires for the Lucid Air aren’t bargain-bin specials. Replacement rubber runs between $800–$1,200 a set, depending on trim and driving style. But here’s the kicker: that cost aligns with performance ICE vehicles, not exceeds it. In fact, for many, that parity is what makes the transition feel like an upgrade, not a trade-off. 

Lucid Air Hyper‑Miling Record: 687.4‑Mile Charge Efficiency Test

  • In a controlled hypermiling challenge, a Lucid Air Dream Edition logged an astonishing 687.4 miles on a single charge before stopping, setting a real-world benchmark for EV efficiency 
  • That run pushed beyond the EPA’s claimed maximum by nearly 170 miles, underscoring its exceptional real-world efficiency even when variables are optimized 
  • The feat was achieved using strategic tweaks: minimal climate control, overinflated tires, removed floor mats, and aerodynamic aids like covering the glass roof with a sunshade, showcasing how low drag and high efficiency are fully leveraged 
  • While not typical daily use, this test powerfully illustrates Lucid's engineering focus: a car that prioritizes aerodynamics, energy-efficient components, and breakthrough mileage

And yet, this isn’t an obituary for the Corvette. Not even close. The emotional pull of that C8, the way it shouts down a canyon road, the way it stops traffic at gas stations, is still real. But for daily duty? For the grind between Phoenix and Vegas or LA and Tahoe? The Lucid makes a strong case.

Silver 2025 Lucid Air sedan parked beside rugged rocky cliff, showcasing elegant design and modern luxury

So what are we really talking about here? It’s not about giving up muscle for motors. It’s about growing into a kind of performance that respects your time and your bank account. It’s about having a 1,000-horsepower sedan that doesn’t drip oil in your driveway. 

About commuting without worrying whether the service light means a $250 fix or a $2,500 one. And it’s about driving something that still thrills, but doesn’t punish you for it later.

The soul of the car isn’t in the cylinders. It’s in the sensation. And if the Lucid Air delivers that while keeping the maintenance book closed, then maybe we haven’t lost our edge. Maybe we’ve just sharpened it.

Image Sources: Lucid Media Center

Noah Washington is an automotive journalist based in Atlanta, Georgia. He enjoys covering the latest news in the automotive industry and conducting reviews on the latest cars. He has been in the automotive industry since 15 years old and has been featured in prominent automotive news sites. You can reach him on X and LinkedIn for tips and to follow his automotive coverage.

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Comments

Db (not verified)    July 28, 2025 - 4:17AM

I'd drive the Corvette any day before a Lucid. Hope to get my 5th Gen next year. I don't care what the maintenance cost is. IT'S A CORVETTE.


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Db (not verified)    July 28, 2025 - 4:19AM

"Just in case you’re on the fence about buying a Lucid versus a new Corvette or any other exotic gas-driven car. " said ONE person on Earth.

Carlos (not verified)    July 28, 2025 - 9:59AM

That's great about your electric vehicle but if you plan to keep it longer you know you got to replace that battery and all the money you saved it's going to go down the drain to replace the battery.

Don't get me wrong I'm hoping battery is good more efficient easy to charge at home and maybe a couple of decades they'll definitely become a bigger part of our society.

I'm still sticking with my gas engine.

Ron C (not verified)    August 3, 2025 - 9:30AM

In reply to by Carlos (not verified)

My good friend bought one of the first 1,500 model S 12 or 13 years ago and his battery is still at over 90%. You are simply echoing the fear mongering around EVs. Unless you have a collector gas car, it is going toward 0 value.

Jake (not verified)    July 28, 2025 - 12:19PM

Don't forget about EV's losing half their value in the first few years. Depreciation is roughly 2x of gas cars right now. For a $100k+ electric, vehicle that's $10k down the drain every year.

Sum Guy (not verified)    July 28, 2025 - 12:21PM

The proper way to measure would be counting the total cost of ownership, which includes running costs and depreciation, and not just maintenance.

Ron C (not verified)    August 3, 2025 - 9:26AM

I also own a Lucid, and love it ( and I am definitely a car guy). The maintenance (and other operating costs like fuel depending on your state of residence) are generally SUBSTANTIALLY! lower for most if not all EVs. Wake up people!

However, my Lucid got only 7,500 mi on my first set of rear tires. I was not "lighting them up" but 1,000 hp, the heavy weight of the car, fast cornering and quick acceleration has its price. I am now near 15K mi total and am happy to note I expect to double the mi on rear tires this time around.