PolicyLens

Conservative - Motoring tax

Cancel the 5p fuel-duty rise

Keep the temporary 5p fuel-duty cut rather than allowing the scheduled rise to take effect.

Last updated: May 2026.

Read the policy-specific methodology note

Duty baseline

The scenario maintains the temporary 5p fuel-duty cut. The OBR has repeatedly treated reversal of temporary freezes and cuts as a scheduled receipts increase in the forecast baseline.

  • Drivers gain lower pump prices.
  • Receipts fall versus forecast baseline.
  • Emissions and congestion costs remain underpriced.

Core trade-offs

Drivers and road-haulage users gain from lower fuel costs. The Exchequer loses receipts, while cheaper fuel encourages driving and weakens emissions incentives.

  • Motorists gain a visible tax cut.
  • Treasury loses fuel-duty receipts.
  • Environmental externalities rise.

Fiscal impact by 2028-29

+GBP 1.8bn to +GBP 3.8bn. Central estimate: +GBP 2.7bn.

  • Positive numbers mean net fiscal cost; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
  • Main cost is lower fuel-duty receipts.
  • Lower transport costs recover small receipts.
  • The policy weakens emissions incentives.
  • This is not an official costing.

Economic impact by 2028-29

  • Jobs: Road-intensive firms benefit modestly; little aggregate jobs effect.
  • Wages: Real income rises for drivers; no underlying wage change.
  • Prices: Fuel prices lower; some delivery costs may fall if passed through.
  • GDP / productivity: Small short-run boost, but congestion and emissions costs are negative.

Assessment

Keeping the 5p cut is a straightforward tax cut for drivers. The fiscal cost is material, and the policy is weakly targeted because cash gains rise with fuel consumption.

Confidence: Medium. Fuel-duty baselines are strong; behavioural fuel use and pass-through are modest uncertainties.

Main risks

  • Revenue loss: Fuel duty is a large, declining but still important tax base.
  • Emissions: Cheaper fuel raises emissions relative to the baseline.
  • Distribution: Benefits depend on mileage and vehicle use, not household need.

Safeguards

  • Show distribution by income and rurality.
  • Pair with road-pricing transition work.
  • Keep emissions effects explicit.

Academic evidence

UK government evidence

Office for Budget Responsibility, 2024

OBR October 2024 forecast

The OBR scores fuel-duty, EPL and environmental-receipts measures and discusses oil-and-gas uncertainty.

Anchors energy and motoring estimates.

Economic and fiscal outlook: October 2024 (2024)

Office for Budget Responsibility, 2026

OBR fiscal forecast

The OBR forecast sets the macro, borrowing and receipts baseline used for broad fiscal context.

Prevents treating tax cuts or spending changes as self-financing.

Economic and fiscal outlook: March 2026 (2026)

Sources

Other Conservative policies

PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and should not be treated as official costings.