Love my new 330e i've just bought, only had it a few weeks though.
My fuel costs have dramatically reduced, but the car cost more than my last one so i'm not saving as much as I could, but that was my choice.
As for Ionity, it's a supply/demand thing. The EV infrastructure in this country is a joke and at the moment, if you've got something rare - like a 350kwh rapid charging infrastructure, it makes perfect business sense to charge the earth for it. If you have a full EV that isn't a tesla and you don't want to wait for ages charging, then they are great. Though, your car only charges as fast as it can charge. If it can't charge at 350kwh then you don't need to use a 350kwh rapid charger. If your car is only capable of charging at 70kwh, use one of those stations that don't charge the earth. It's common sense but there's a lack of knowledge around EV's so people panic and jump to conclusions.
For those that don't have drives, I believe you'll be able to install curbside charge points as long as they are in front of your house boundaries in the near future, just like people with drives can buy charge points that attach to the house. Government gives you £500 off the price at the moment too. Thanks Boris. You tit.
Most of it is a mindset thing. Most people have no issue going home and plugging their phone in to charge each day. You just apply the same mindset with your car and it becomes routine. On the Octopus Agile energy tariff, sometimes overnight the price of electricity is actually a credit rather than a charge, so you're essentially paid to charge your car. Do enough research and get the right environment and it's clearly the way to go. Not sure I could go full EV yet but not sure my mindset has fully switched over yet. I like having that fuel tank as a backup.