Labour - Transport tax
Introduce EV mileage charge
Apply a per-mile charge to electric and plug-in hybrid cars from April 2028.
Last updated: May 2026.
Policy baseline
Budget 2025 introduces Electric Vehicle Excise Duty from April 2028. Electric cars pay a mileage supplement alongside VED.
- Targets EV and plug-in hybrid drivers.
- Protects motoring revenue as fuel duty erodes.
- Could slow EV adoption at the margin.
Core trade-offs
The direct beneficiaries are road-funding sustainability and taxpayers. The costs fall mainly on ev drivers and plug-in hybrid owners. The main economic question is higher running costs may slow transition.
- Road-funding sustainability and taxpayers gain most directly.
- Costs fall mainly on ev drivers and plug-in hybrid owners.
- Key risk: higher running costs may slow transition.
Fiscal impact by 2029-30
-GBP 2.5bn to -GBP 0.3bn. Central estimate: -GBP 1.1bn.
- Positive numbers mean net fiscal cost; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Main channel is the scored tax, spending or delivery change.
- Offsets depend on tax receipts, behaviour and pass-through.
- Range reflects uncertain implementation and economic response.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2029-30
- Jobs: Little direct job effect; sector-specific taxes can reduce hiring in affected industries.
- Wages: Legal taxpayers may shift costs to workers, owners or consumers over time.
- Prices: Some pass-through likely where market power or fixed demand exists.
- GDP / productivity: Usually mildly negative before spending use; stronger if investment or mobility responses rise.
Assessment
This is a real trade-off, not a free gain. Road-funding sustainability and taxpayers benefit, while ev drivers and plug-in hybrid owners bear most costs. Overall output depends on behaviour, capacity and pass-through.
Confidence: Medium-low. Higher on the policy target and fiscal channel; lower on behaviour, pass-through and economy-wide effects.
Main risks
- Behavioural response: Avoidance, timing and relocation can reduce receipts.
- Incidence uncertainty: Legal taxpayers may shift costs to workers, consumers or investors.
- Investment risk: Higher taxes can reduce investment where returns are mobile.
Safeguards
- Use HMRC microsimulation before legislating.
- Close avoidance routes before rate rises.
- Review receipts and investment annually.
Academic evidence
Parry and Small, Journal of Urban Economics, 2005
Road-pricing evidence
Efficient motoring taxes should reflect congestion, accidents, pollution and revenue needs.
Relevant to EV mileage and fuel duties.
Does Britain or the United States Have the Right Gasoline Tax? (2005)
Davis and Kilian, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2011
Fuel taxes and emissions
Fuel taxes can reduce gasoline consumption and emissions, with distributional and behavioural effects.
Relevant to motoring and aviation tax measures.
Estimating the Effect of a Gasoline Tax on Carbon Emissions (2011)
UK government evidence
HM Treasury, 2025
Budget 2025 measures
Budget 2025 sets out implemented welfare, energy, motoring and tax-threshold measures.
Used for current government delivery policies.
HM Treasury, 2025
Budget 2025 costings
Costings provide scored fiscal impacts for the two-child limit, salary sacrifice and EV mileage charge.
Used where government costings exist.
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology for introduce ev mileage charge Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- Budget 2025 policy costings UK government costing - HM Treasury, 2025
- Budget 2025 UK government budget - HM Treasury, 2025
- Estimating the Effect of a Gasoline Tax on Carbon Emissions Academic article - Davis and Kilian, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2011
- Does Britain or the United States Have the Right Gasoline Tax? Academic article - Parry and Small, Journal of Urban Economics, 2005
- Change: Labour Party Manifesto 2024 Party policy source - Labour Party, 2024
Other Labour policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and should not be treated as official costings.