The Herald

Electric vehicles to lose road tax exemption

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ELECTRIC vehicle owners will be subject to vehicle tax for the first time under plans announced yesterday by the Chancellor.

Jeremy Hunt revealed that zero-emission vehicles will lose their vehicle excise duty (VED) exemption from April 2025.

Owners of electric vehicles who currently pay no VED will face an annual charge of up to £165 for cars and £290 for vans.

Mr Hunt said this will “make our motoring tax system fairer” as the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity has forecast that half of all new vehicles will be electric by 2025.

VED is a tax levied on UK vehicles which depends on when they were first registered and their carbon emissions.

The Treasury said the changes are estimated to raise an extra £1.6 billion by 2027-28.

AA president Edmund King said the move will “slow the road to electrific­ation”.

He went on: “This may delay the environmen­tal benefits and stall the introducti­on of EVS on to the second-hand car market.

“Unfortunat­ely, the Chancellor’s EV taxation actions will dim the incentive to switch to electric vehicles.”

Ian Plummer, director of the classified advertisin­g company Auto Trader, said the new rules policy, combined with other incentives being scrapped and high energy bills, will “drive more would-be buyers away from EVS”.

He added: “An excise duty raid is deeply unhelpful and sends the wrong message if we’re to be serious about getting EVS into the mainstream.”

Mike Childs, head of policy at Friends of the Earth, said EVS have a “big part to play” in creating a “clean transport system”.

He warned that the announceme­nt will “do little to persuade people to choose greener cars”.

New pure electric cars registered from April 1, 2025, will also lose their exemption from having to pay an extra £355 per year if their price is more than £40,000.

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufactur­ers and Traders (SMMT), described this as “the sting in the tail”, claiming it will “unduly penalise” people who buy electric cars, which generally cost more than convention­ally fuelled models.

Sales of new petrol and diesel cars and vans in the UK will be banned from 2030.

Latest SMMT figures show the number of new, pure, electric cars registered during the first 10 months of the year was 38.4% more than in the same period in 2021.

 ?? ?? Electric cars will face an annual charge of up to £165
Electric cars will face an annual charge of up to £165

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