EV Road Tax - From £0 To £195 A Year!
EV Road Tax - From £0 To £195 A Year!
Author
Discussion

rjfp1962

Original Poster:

8,890 posts

91 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
This topic (or similar) must have been done elsewhere, but I was randomly on a number plate/vehicle check site - Typed in a couple of friends registrations only to see their cars going from £0 to £195 a year to tax! One is a Mustang Mach-E and the other a Vauxhall Mokka.

I'm not an ev driver myself and this move is unlikely to encourage me to change...!


PBCD

853 posts

156 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
rjfp1962 said:
This topic (or similar) must have been done elsewhere...
Here you go:
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

Zero Fuchs

2,749 posts

36 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Meh. Drop in the ocean TBH

Jazoli

9,392 posts

268 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Vehicle tax in the UK is really cheap, why shouldn’t EV owners pay their ‘fair’ share?

Zero Fuchs

2,749 posts

36 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Jazoli said:
Vehicle tax in the UK is really cheap, why shouldn’t EV owners pay their ‘fair’ share?
It was previously on emissions duh. Goalposts moved so they are now the same.

Tailpipe emissions, before someone chimes in with brake dust or tyre particulates laugh

TheBinarySheep

1,419 posts

69 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Since I switched to EV, I'm saving £2-3k in running costs each year. This tax isn't going to make much difference to me.

It does however appear to be a silly decision if the idea is to push people into EV's.

Evanivitch

25,034 posts

140 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Jazoli said:
Vehicle tax in the UK is really cheap, why shouldn’t EV owners pay their ‘fair’ share?
Of course they should (and I say that as a household with 2 EVs for daily)

Not sure why a post 2015 ZEV pays many times more tax than a pre-2017 diesel or petrol though...

(Years might be wrong)

Edited by Evanivitch on Friday 16th May 09:32

DSMSMR

362 posts

7 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Jazoli said:
Vehicle tax in the UK is really cheap, why shouldn’t EV owners pay their ‘fair’ share?
+1

Ankh87

1,002 posts

120 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
You can always buy a petrol or diesel that is £35 a year.
It's not like this £195 came out of no where, it was all over the place.
End of the day if you don't want to pay it then there's plenty of other options that won't cost you any road tax.

FlatSixBoxer

2,517 posts

193 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Even with the rise, EVs are still going to be the cheaper of ICE and EV to tax for new and ongoing vehicles. so it is still going to be a motivator to switch in the longer term.

andrewpandrew

1,151 posts

7 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
rjfp1962 said:
This topic (or similar) must have been done elsewhere, but I was randomly on a number plate/vehicle check site - Typed in a couple of friends registrations only to see their cars going from £0 to £195 a year to tax! One is a Mustang Mach-E and the other a Vauxhall Mokka.

I'm not an ev driver myself and this move is unlikely to encourage me to change...!
If you can't afford £195, maybe car ownership isn't for you?

Mikehig

916 posts

79 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
The extra £410 (?) for each of years 2 - 5 for all cars - including EVs - over k£40 list price is a much bigger hit.

JD

3,044 posts

246 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
rjfp1962 said:
This topic (or similar) must have been done elsewhere, but I was randomly on a number plate/vehicle check site - Typed in a couple of friends registrations only to see their cars going from £0 to £195 a year to tax! One is a Mustang Mach-E and the other a Vauxhall Mokka.

I'm not an ev driver myself and this move is unlikely to encourage me to change...!
What kind of person checks theirs friends cars are taxed and insured I think is the bigger question here.

And you do this often to notice the change from £0 to £195

confused

ScoobyChris

2,136 posts

220 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Evanivitch said:
Not sure why a post 2015 ZEV pays many times more tax than a pre-2017 diesel or petrol though...

(Years might be wrong)

Edited by Evanivitch on Friday 16th May 09:32
Think the start date is April 2017 (when they introduced the luxury car tax). Our 2016 EV is now £20.

Chris


Edited by ScoobyChris on Friday 16th May 13:19

Benny Saltstein

738 posts

231 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Mikehig said:
The extra £410 (?) for each of years 2 - 5 for all cars - including EVs - over k£40 list price is a much bigger hit.
This - that £40k is the threshold for the lux car tax seems wholly out of date now.

Zero Fuchs

2,749 posts

36 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Mikehig said:
The extra £410 (?) for each of years 2 - 5 for all cars - including EVs - over k£40 list price is a much bigger hit.
That's true. Although we're really back to the diesel days where people just need to crunch the numbers. If you have a drive, do average miles or more and can buy an EV without paying much more than an equivalent ICE then an EV will still make sense for private buyers. Even more so for company or business users.

I ran an i3s REx through the business and paid the £40k tax (only just stopped paying it recently). The savings still made it a no brainer.

Evanivitch

25,034 posts

140 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Ankh87 said:
You can always buy a petrol or diesel that is £35 a year.
It's not like this £195 came out of no where, it was all over the place.
End of the day if you don't want to pay it then there's plenty of other options that won't cost you any road tax.
What are the options that won't cost you any road tax? A nearly 10 year old car?

ScoobyChris

2,136 posts

220 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
Ankh87 said:
You can always buy a petrol or diesel that is £35 a year.
It's not like this £195 came out of no where, it was all over the place.
End of the day if you don't want to pay it then there's plenty of other options that won't cost you any road tax.
The change means all cars from April 2017 are taxed the same way from the 2nd year, irrespective of emissions. Anything before that (and post March 2001) is on the emissions based scale and EVs and low-emission petrol/diesels are much less than £195.

Chris


Edited by ScoobyChris on Friday 16th May 13:20

SDK

1,984 posts

271 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
As an EV owner I'm happy to contribute towards the wider vehicle tax system smile

Not too happy about the older dirty diesels getting a very cheap pass on this, they should be taxed off the road !

Monkeylegend

27,892 posts

249 months

Friday 16th May
quotequote all
EV owners should be paying more, they are so much heavier boxedin