Electric vehicle excise duty

Written by AJN Accountants
30 November 2025

If you drive an electric or plug-in hybrid car you will have to pay a new mileage-based charge from April 2028.

The electric vehicle excise duty (eVED) will be charged on top of the current vehicle excise duty charge paid by all vehicles. The charge will equal 3p per mile for fully electric cars and 1.5p per mile for plug-in hybrids from 1.4.28. The average electric car driver covering 8,000 miles is expected to be charged £240 a year, roughly half the rate of fuel duty tax paid by petrol and diesel drivers.

How the scheme will work is subject to a consultation. Under the current proposal motorists will be required to estimate their mileage for the year ahead; pay a charge upfront (or split into smaller monthly payments); and submit their actual mileage at the end of the year. This will trigger a balancing payment if the estimate was too low, or a credit towards next year’s liability if the actual mileage was lower than estimated.

Mileage checks will be performed annually by an accredited provider during the car’s MOT or, for new cars that do not yet require an MOT, around their first and second registration anniversaries.

Other vehicle types such as vans, buses, coaches, motorcycles and HGVs as well as hybrid cars that use petrol or diesel as their sole external power source (ie those that do not plug in to charge) will be out of scope for the eVED. 

Changes to statutory sick pay

Two major changes to statutory sick pay will be introduced by the Employment Rights Act 2025 from 6 April 2026. Statutory sick pay (SSP) is the minimum amount of sick pay that employers in the UK must pay eligible employees when they are off work due to illness. ...

Why Voluntary National Insurance Contributions Are Changing – And What It Means for You

From April 2026, individuals working overseas – including British citizens abroad and UK business owners with international operations – will face significant changes to voluntary National Insurance Contributions (NICs). If you spend time outside the UK, run an...

Loan charge settlement opportunity

The Chancellor has announced significant and welcome changes for individuals facing tax bills under the loan charge. The loan charge was introduced in 2019 to tackle 'disguised remuneration' schemes, where workers were paid through loans instead of salary to avoid...

Related Posts

Private hire taxis excluded from VAT TOMS

Private hire taxis excluded from VAT TOMS

From 2 January 2026, suppliers of most standalone private hire and taxi journeys can no longer use the tour operators’ margin scheme (TOMS). Previously, some private hire operators, including certain app-based platforms acting as principal in supplying the journey,...

How winter fuel payments will be taxed 

How winter fuel payments will be taxed 

Most people who were eligible to receive the 2025-26 winter fuel payment (WFP) and did not opt out will have received it automatically in November or December 2025. The payment is means-tested, so individuals with gross income for 2025-26 above £35,000 will be...

Changes to statutory sick pay

Changes to statutory sick pay

Two major changes to statutory sick pay will be introduced by the Employment Rights Act 2025 from 6 April 2026. Statutory sick pay (SSP) is the minimum amount of sick pay that employers in the UK must pay eligible employees when they are off work due to illness. ...

We use contact information you provide to us to contact you about our relevant content, products, and services. You may unsubscribe from these communications at any time. For information, check out our Privacy Policy.