UK’s New EV Pay-Per-Mile Tax: Complete Guide to the 2028 Charge

UK’s New Electric Vehicle Pay-Per-Mile Tax: How the 2028 Charge Works

From April 2028, electric and plug-in hybrid drivers will pay a mileage-based charge. Here’s the complete breakdown of rates, how it’s collected, and what it means for your wallet.

The Budget 2025 introduced a new pay-per-mile charge for electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids, set to begin in April 2028. Electric car drivers will pay 3p per mile, while plug-in hybrid drivers will pay 1.5p per mile, with rates increasing annually with inflation.

The government consultation describes this as creating a “fairer system for all drivers” by addressing the fact that electric vehicles currently avoid fuel duty. According to the Office for Budget Responsibility, the measure is expected to raise £1.1bn in the 2028-29 financial year, rising to £1.9bn by 2030-31, though the yield is uncertain and depends on EV adoption rates.

All new cars will be electric or plug-in hybrid from 2030, when the ban on sales of new petrol and diesel cars takes effect. Zap-Map analysis from November 2025 suggests approximately 1.7 million fully electric cars are already on UK roads, representing about 5% of the total vehicle fleet.

The tax applies to UK-registered EVs and plug-in hybrids, with mileage checked annually during MOT inspections or at registration anniversaries for newer vehicles. Payment will be integrated into the existing Vehicle Excise Duty system administered by the DVLA.

Key Facts at a Glance

Essential numbers from the Budget 2025 and government consultation

💷
3p
Per mile for battery electric vehicles from April 2028
Source: GOV.UK eVED consultation
🔌
1.5p
Per mile for plug-in hybrid vehicles from April 2028
Source: GOV.UK eVED consultation
📈
£1.9bn
Projected revenue by 2030-31 (£1.1bn in 2028-29)
Source: OBR Economic Forecast
1.7m
Fully electric cars on UK roads (Nov 2025)
Source: Zap-Map analysis

How the Pay-Per-Mile Charge Works

Drivers will pay the charge based on how many miles they drive from April 2028. Motorists will have their mileage checked annually, typically during their MOT or for new cars, around their first and second registration anniversary, according to the Treasury consultation document.

Payment will be integrated into the existing Vehicle Excise Duty system administered by the DVLA. The government has confirmed no continuous satellite or telematics tracking will be required. Mileage readings will be based on vehicle odometers, which the consultation acknowledges can be subject to tampering (“clocking”). The government recognizes the introduction of the tax may increase the likelihood of motorists choosing to clock their vehicles and is seeking views on mitigation measures.

Under the measures, an electric car driver clocking up 8,500 miles in the 2028-29 financial year is expected to pay approximately £255. According to OBR comparisons, this represents roughly half the per-mile amount petrol and diesel drivers pay in fuel duty—a result that depends on assumptions about fuel prices and vehicle fuel economy.

The charge applies to UK-registered vehicles. The consultation seeks views on how miles driven abroad should be treated in practice, raising practical questions for drivers who spend significant time outside the UK, particularly Northern Ireland residents who frequently cross the border into the Republic of Ireland. EVs registered abroad but driven in the UK are exempt from the charge.

Calculate Your Annual EV Tax

Adjust your annual mileage to see how the new pay-per-mile charge will affect your costs

1,000 13,000 25,000
8,500 miles/year
🔋 Electric Vehicle
£255
🔌 Plug-in Hybrid
£128
⛽ Fuel Duty Equiv.
£510
💡 Cost Comparison: At this mileage, EV drivers pay approximately 50% less in mileage-based tax compared to the petrol/diesel fuel duty equivalent (based on OBR analysis).
Note: Petrol/diesel equivalent shown is an approximate per-mile fuel-duty comparison based on typical fuel prices and vehicle mpg. Actual fuel duty per mile varies with fuel price and vehicle economy. EV and PHEV rates will increase annually with inflation from April 2028.

Other Electric Vehicle Tax Changes

The pay-per-mile charge is being introduced alongside other taxation changes affecting electric vehicles. On 1 April 2025, Vehicle Excise Duty became payable on EVs for the first time. For new cars, the payment in the first year is £10, rising to the standard rate of £195 in the second year. Electric cars registered between April 2017 and March 2025 pay £195 from the start.

From 1 April 2025, some EVs became liable for the Vehicle Excise Duty “expensive car supplement.” The government has confirmed that the threshold for zero-emission vehicles will rise to £50,000, with the change taking effect from 1 April 2026.

From 2 January 2026, zero-emission cars will lose full exemption from the London congestion charge. Transport for London confirmed a 25% Auto Pay discount will apply to eligible electric cars, making the discounted daily charge £13.50 for EVs registered on Auto Pay.

In July 2025, the government introduced the Electric Car Grant scheme, offering grants of up to £3,750 for eligible models priced at £37,000 or below, with an initial fund of £650m. An additional £1.3bn of funding was announced in Budget 2025.

Timeline: When Tax Changes Take Effect

Key dates for electric vehicle taxation and the 2030 transition

1 April 2025
Vehicle Excise Duty Introduced for EVs
First-year payment of £10 for new EVs, rising to standard rate of £195 in year two. Electric cars registered between April 2017 and March 2025 pay £195 from the start.
2 January 2026
London Congestion Charge Changes
Zero-emission cars lose full exemption from the London congestion charge. A 25% Auto Pay discount applies to eligible electric cars (discounted daily charge £13.50 on Auto Pay).
1 April 2026
Expensive Car Supplement Threshold Raised
The Vehicle Excise Duty expensive car supplement threshold for zero-emission vehicles increases from £40,000 to £50,000.
April 2028
Pay-Per-Mile Charge Begins
New mileage-based charge takes effect: 3p per mile for electric vehicles and 1.5p per mile for plug-in hybrids. Mileage checked annually at MOT or registration anniversary. Rates will increase with inflation each year.
2030
Ban on New Petrol and Diesel Cars
Sales of new pure petrol and diesel cars end from 2030. All new cars must be zero-emission or hybrid. Some hybrids may be permitted until 2035 under specific rules. The government aims for 80% of new car registrations to be fully electric by this date.

EV Market and Infrastructure Context

UK sales of new fully electric cars have been growing. SMMT data shows the number registered rose from 29,800 in October 2024 to 36,800 in October 2025, equivalent to a quarter of new car registrations. In October 2025, approximately 73% of new electric cars were bought by businesses or for fleets, with 27% registered to private buyers.

The range of electric cars has improved, as has the number of public charge points, though concerns remain about distribution. Zap-Map data shows almost 87,000 public charging devices across the UK in approximately 44,000 locations, including places like supermarket car parks and lamppost chargers.

A report by the Public Accounts Committee said availability on motorways was still “patchy” and noted that “too few have been installed outside of the South East and London, which currently host 43% of all charge points.” The government announced a further £200m investment for speeding up the rollout of charge points in Budget 2025.

Charging costs vary significantly. Industry data from RAC Charge Watch and Zap-Map show typical home charging estimates used in public analysis are in the single-digit pence per mile range, while some rapid and ultra-rapid public charging prices reach mid-20p per mile in sampled months. Domestic electricity supplies used for home charging are typically subject to the reduced VAT rate available for qualifying domestic energy supplies (commonly 5% for qualifying uses), while electricity supplied at public charge points is generally standard-rated VAT at 20%.

Tax Comparison Across Vehicle Types

How the new charges compare for different vehicles (based on 8,500 annual miles)

Vehicle Type Per-Mile Rate (2028) Annual Cost (8,500 miles) Additional VED/Costs
⚡ Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV) 3p £255 £195/year VED
🔌 Plug-in Hybrid (PHEV) 1.5p £128 £195/year VED
⛽ Petrol Vehicle ~6p (fuel duty equiv.) £510 (approx.) £195/year VED
🛢️ Diesel Vehicle ~6p (fuel duty equiv.) £510 (approx.) £195/year VED
💎 Luxury EV (>£50k from Apr 2026) 3p £255 £195 + expensive car supplement

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common questions about the new pay-per-mile charge

How will my mileage be checked?
Mileage will be verified annually through your vehicle’s odometer reading, typically during your MOT inspection or around your vehicle’s registration anniversary for newer cars. The government consultation explicitly states no continuous satellite or telematics tracking will be required, though authorities acknowledge odometer tampering (“clocking”) is a risk and are seeking views on mitigation measures through the consultation process.
Do I pay for miles driven outside the UK?
The draft policy is designed to apply to UK-registered vehicles. The consultation seeks views on how foreign miles should be treated in practice. This raises particular questions for Northern Ireland residents who frequently cross the border into the Republic of Ireland. The final implementation details will be determined following the consultation period, which runs until March 2026.
Are foreign-registered EVs charged when driven in the UK?
No. According to the consultation documents, EVs registered abroad but driven in the UK are exempt from the pay-per-mile charge. The tax only applies to UK-registered electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles.
Who pays for leased or company cars?
The charge will be integrated into the existing Vehicle Excise Duty system administered by the DVLA. Legal responsibility for tax typically falls to the registered keeper. The consultation is examining specific arrangements for fleet and company cars. This is particularly significant as SMMT data shows approximately 73% of new electric car registrations in October 2025 were to businesses or fleets.
Can the rates increase over time?
Yes. Budget 2025 and the consultation documents state the rates of 3p per mile for EVs and 1.5p per mile for plug-in hybrids will be uprated annually with inflation from April 2028 onwards.
Why mileage instead of electricity consumption tax?
The government considered taxing electricity consumption (per kWh) instead of mileage, which some experts argue would better reflect energy use and vehicle efficiency. However, significant complexities arise from VAT differences: domestic electricity supplies used for home charging are typically subject to the reduced VAT rate (commonly 5% for qualifying uses), while public charging is generally standard-rated at 20%. The mileage-based approach was chosen for administrative simplicity, though consultation feedback notes it doesn’t account for vehicle weight, efficiency, or charging method.
Will this slow EV adoption?
The Office for Budget Responsibility models that the charge will reduce EV demand by increasing lifetime costs, potentially resulting in approximately 440,000 fewer EV sales, though other government policies (such as the extended Electric Car Grant) may offset around 320,000 of these. Industry bodies including the SMMT and charge-network operators have expressed concern about the timing, particularly its potential impact on drivers without access to cheaper home charging.

Industry and Expert Reactions

Car manufacturer Ford and the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders industry body both described the new tax as “the wrong measure at the wrong time.” Ford stated the Budget conveyed “a confusing message” in the government’s attempt to encourage motorists to switch to electric vehicles.

The SMMT welcomed the government’s pledge to invest £1.3bn to encourage EV use through the Electric Car Grant extension but warned the pay-per-mile charge would “undermine demand” at a critical time for meeting the 2030 targets.

Delvin Lane, chief executive of InstaVolt which develops and installs chargers, said the tax could discourage people from switching to electric cars. He noted drivers without home chargers were already paying more in tax for public charging, and that rural and low-income drivers would be disproportionately affected. “We urge the government to work closely with the charging and automotive sectors to co-design a fair, future-proof system that maintains incentives to switch to zero-emission vehicles while ensuring sustainable road taxation,” he stated.

Edmund King, president of the AA, commented: “The Budget has put drivers at a fork in the road with the chancellor announcing major tax proposals for EV owners. Drivers fully understand that the government needs to get the balance right between raising cash for roads investment, whilst ensuring it doesn’t slow down the transition to electric cars in order to meet environmental targets.”

Some policy experts and transport academics have pointed out that electricity taxation could better capture external costs such as vehicle weight and efficiency. However, the government consultation notes the administrative challenges of implementing uniform electricity taxation given the current VAT structure differences between home and public charging.

📌

Key Takeaways

  • The pay-per-mile charge begins in April 2028, with rates of 3p for electric vehicles and 1.5p for plug-in hybrids, checked annually at MOT or registration anniversaries. Rates will increase with inflation each year.
  • At typical mileage (8,500 miles per year), EV drivers will pay approximately £255 annually. According to OBR comparisons, this represents roughly half the per-mile amount petrol and diesel drivers pay in fuel duty—a result that depends on assumptions about fuel prices and vehicle economy.
  • The draft policy applies to UK-registered vehicles; the consultation is seeking views on how to treat miles driven abroad, raising practical questions for cross-border drivers, particularly in Northern Ireland.
  • Industry data (RAC and Zap-Map) show wide variation in charging costs: typical home charging estimates are in the single-digit pence per mile range, while some rapid and ultra-rapid public charging prices reach mid-20p per mile, creating potential inequality for those without home charging access.
  • The government expects the measure to raise about £1.1bn in 2028-29, rising to £1.9bn by 2030-31 according to OBR projections, though the yield is uncertain and depends on actual EV adoption rates.

Summary

The Budget 2025 announced a new mileage charge for UK-registered electric and plug-in hybrid cars, set at 3p and 1.5p per mile respectively from April 2028. Collection will be integrated into Vehicle Excise Duty with mileage checked annually. The OBR’s yield estimates and the government’s consultation documents were provided as primary sources.

The policy is part of a broader transition as the UK moves toward the 2030 ban on new petrol and diesel car sales. Additional context on charging infrastructure, VED changes, and the Electric Car Grant scheme was discussed. The consultation period runs until March 2026, allowing stakeholders to provide feedback on implementation details including cross-border mileage treatment and verification methods.

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Sunita Somvanshi

With over two decades of dedicated service in the state environmental ministry, this seasoned professional has cultivated a discerning perspective on the intricate interplay between environmental considerations and diverse industries. Sunita is armed with a keen eye for pivotal details, her extensive experience uniquely positions her to offer insightful commentary on topics ranging from business sustainability and global trade's environmental impact to fostering partnerships, optimizing freight and transport for ecological efficiency, and delving into the realms of thermal management, logistics, carbon credits, and energy transition. Through her writing, she not only imparts valuable knowledge but also provides a nuanced understanding of how businesses can harmonize with environmental imperatives, making her a crucial voice in the discourse on sustainable practices and the future of industry.

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