British Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt announced on Thursday that electric vehicle (EV) owners will no longer be exempt from paying vehicle tax, beginning in 2025.
“Because the OBR [Office for Budget Responsibility] forecasts half of all new vehicles will be electric by 2025, to make our motoring tax system fairer I’ve decided that from then, electric vehicles will no longer be exempt from vehicle excise duty.”
However, EV owners will stay pay less tax than those who drive conventional vehicles.
He added: “Company car tax rates will remain lower for electric vehicles, and I have listened to industry bodies and will limit rate increases to one percentage point a year for three years from 2025.”
Currently, owners of EVs are exempt from paying VED, which is charged to all other vehicles that drive on roads in the United Kingdom.
New Vehicle Tax Is ‘Fair’
A flat rate of £165 ($196) is paid in subsequent years, regardless of the carbon emissions.Nicholas Lyes, the head of the British automotive services company RAC, welcomed the move, adding that he does not anticipate the tax change will have much of an impact on dampening demand for EVs, pointing to the “many other cost benefits of running one.”
“The fact that company car tax increases on EVs will be kept low should also keep giving fleets the confidence to go electric, which is vital for increasing the overall number of EVs on our roads.”
‘The Chancellor Is Clearly Looking for Revenues’
However, Ian Plummer, director of automotive classified advertising company Auto Trader, raised concerns that the removal of the tax exemption could prompt a decline in demand from potential EV buyers at a time of soaring inflation.In its survey of owners of more than 300,000 vehicles from the 2000 to 2022 model years as well as early 2023 models, Consumer Reports found that owners of electric vehicles reported issues with charging systems, batteries, and electric motors.
The study noted that while Tesla continues to be the “market leader in EV sales and the manufacturer on which Consumer Reports received the most data from owners,” only the Model 3 has average reliability, while all the other Tesla models—the S, Y, and X—have below-average reliability.