Volvo has just lobbed a rather electrifying offer into the Swedish car market: buy one of their new fully electric models, and the company will cover your home charging bill for an entire year. That’s right — one year of fossil-free electricity, on the house. Or rather, from the house.
The initiative, a partnership between Volvo Cars and energy giant Vattenfall, kicks off in February 2026 and is aimed squarely at making the leap to electric life less of a financial jolt. The math isn’t trivial either — Volvo reckons that’s up to 25,000 km of free driving, enough to get you from Malmö to the Arctic Circle and back more times than anyone sane would attempt in a winter.

The setup is simple. Private buyers or lessees sign an electricity contract with Vattenfall, plug their car in at home, and let Volvo’s app handle the clever bits. Using smart charging, the system times your EV’s charging sessions for periods of lower grid demand — when the electricity is cheaper, cleaner, and less likely to upset Greta. The app will even keep track of your car’s energy consumption and deduct those costs automatically from your bill. Or, in this case, not deduct them, because Volvo’s picking up the tab.
Alejandro Castro Pérez, Volvo’s VP of Energy Solutions, summed it up nicely: “We’re listening to our customers. Free charging adds value, but it also moves us closer to a smarter, greener society.”
And that’s the subtext here — this isn’t just a PR stunt with a plug. It’s a pilot for something bigger. Volvo’s calling Sweden its test bed before expanding the idea across Europe and beyond. The brand wants its cars to be more than silent commuters; it wants them to become active players in the energy grid.
By 2026, Volvo plans to roll out vehicle-to-everything (V2X) capabilities, meaning cars like the new EX90 will be able to send electricity back to your house or even sell it to the grid. Imagine running your home office on yesterday’s commute or earning beer money because your car decided to moonlight as a miniature power plant.
This isn’t the first time Volvo and Vattenfall have teamed up to nudge the world toward a cleaner future. The two companies collaborated over a decade ago to produce the world’s first diesel plug-in hybrid, the V60 Plug-in Hybrid, back when most manufacturers were still arguing over whether hybrids were witchcraft.

Vattenfall’s Branislav Slavic calls Volvo’s new offer “a positive, sustainable step toward a fossil-free future.” And for once, corporate speak and common sense line up neatly. Free home charging? For a year? It’s hard to argue with that.
Volvo already has five fully electric models out in the wild, and with the upcoming EX60 due in January, the Swedes clearly aren’t easing off the current. This new initiative could make the brand’s Scandinavian serenity just a little more appealing — especially when it comes with a year of guilt-free, cost-free kilowatts.
Because if there’s one thing better than driving electric, it’s driving electric on someone else’s dime.
Source: Volvo