Car Tax Calculator 2026

Calculate your UK Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) for 2025/26. Instant results by CO2 emissions, fuel type and registration date.

UK Car Tax Calculator 2025/26

Your Car Tax Result

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Amount Due This Year-
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Mustafa Bilgic Tax & Motoring Specialist — Updated 20 Feb 2026
VED 2025/26DVLA Rates

What Is Car Tax (VED)?

Vehicle Excise Duty (VED), commonly called car tax or road tax, is an annual tax charged by the UK government on most vehicles used or kept on public roads. It is administered by the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) and must be paid before driving your car legally.

VED has undergone significant reforms in recent years. Since April 2017, rates for new cars are heavily linked to CO2 emissions, particularly in the first year of registration. From April 2025, even fully electric vehicles are now subject to VED for the first time, marking a major policy shift.

The money collected goes to general government spending, not directly into road maintenance. It is a legal requirement – you must either tax your vehicle or declare a Statutory Off Road Notification (SORN).

How VED Is Structured

There are two key rates for cars registered from April 2017:

  • First Year Rate: A one-off charge based on CO2 emissions, paid when the car is first registered. This is often the highest single VED payment you will make.
  • Standard Rate: The flat annual rate paid from year two onward. For 2025/26, this is £190 for most cars, or £620 for cars with a list price above £40,000 (the premium rate).

First Year VED Rates 2025/26 (New Cars)

These rates apply to brand-new cars registered for the first time on or after 1 April 2017. They are based solely on the CO2 emissions figure shown on the V5C registration document.

CO2 Emissions (g/km)Petrol / Diesel (RDE2)Diesel (non-RDE2)Alt Fuel / Hybrid
0 (zero emission)£10N/A£10
1–50£10£30£10
51–75£30£135£20
76–90£135£175£125
91–100£175£195£165
101–110£195£220£185
111–130£220£270£210
131–150£270£680£260
151–170£680£1,095£670
171–190£1,095£1,650£1,085
191–225£1,650£2,340£1,640
226–255£2,340£2,745£2,330
Over 255£2,745£2,745£2,735
Important: Non-RDE2 diesel cars registered after April 2018 pay one CO2 band higher than the standard petrol rate for the first year. RDE2-compliant diesels pay the same as petrol equivalents.

Standard Annual VED Rates 2025/26

From year two onward, most cars registered after April 2017 pay a flat standard rate, regardless of CO2 emissions. This significantly simplifies ongoing taxation.

Standard Rate (Year 2+)
£190/year
Alternative Fuel (Hybrid/PHEV)
£180/year
Zero Emission (EV)
£190/year
6-Month Option
£104.50

Premium Car Surcharge (£40,000+ List Price)

If a car's published list price (including options) exceeded £40,000 when new, an additional surcharge of £620 per year is added to the standard rate for years two through six (five years total).

This means the annual VED for a premium electric car costing £45,000 is £810/year (£190 + £620) from year two until year six, after which only the standard £190 applies.

The surcharge applies even if you buy the car used, as long as the original list price exceeded £40,000. DVLA tracks this from the original registration date.

Cars Registered Before April 2017

Different rules apply depending on when your car was first registered in the UK.

March 2001 to March 2017

Cars in this bracket are taxed on a CO2 band system with separate rate bands. The rates range from £0 for Band A (up to 100g/km) to £695 per year for Band M (over 255g/km). These rates have been frozen for several years but are reviewed in each Budget.

Before March 2001

Cars registered before 1 March 2001 are taxed based on engine size rather than CO2 emissions:

  • Up to 1549cc engine: £210 per year
  • Over 1549cc engine: £345 per year

Historic Vehicles

Vehicles over 40 years old are classified as Historic Vehicles and are exempt from VED entirely. They must still be taxed (at zero cost) or have a valid SORN declaration.

Electric Car Tax Changes from April 2025

One of the most significant changes in recent years is the end of the VED exemption for electric vehicles. From 1 April 2025, all zero-emission cars registered on or after that date now pay road tax.

The new rules for electric vehicles are:

  • New EVs (registered from April 2025): £10 first-year rate, then £190 standard rate from year two
  • EVs registered April 2017 – March 2025: Now pay £190 standard rate annually
  • EVs registered before April 2017: Pay the standard pre-2017 Band A rate
  • EVs over £40,000 list price: Also subject to the £620 premium surcharge for years two to six

This change is expected to raise approximately £1.3 billion per year for the UK Treasury by 2029/30, as the proportion of EVs on UK roads continues to grow rapidly.

SORN – When You Don't Need to Pay

If you are not using your vehicle on public roads, you can declare a Statutory Off Road Notification (SORN). This means you do not need to pay VED but you also cannot drive or park the vehicle on a public road.

A SORN is free and can be declared online at the DVLA website, by phone, or by post. It starts on the first day of the following month. You can keep a SORN indefinitely as long as the vehicle is kept off the road.

Tip: If you buy a vehicle and need to drive it home before taxing it, you must ensure it is taxed first. You can tax it online using the 11-digit reference number on the V5C (logbook) or the green new keeper slip.

How to Pay Car Tax

Car tax can be renewed or paid in several ways:

  • Online: Via the DVLA website at gov.uk/vehicle-tax. You need the 11-digit reference from your V11 reminder letter or the V5C.
  • Phone: Call the DVLA 24-hour automated service.
  • Post Office: In person at a Post Office that deals with vehicle tax. You need your V5C logbook or V11 reminder, plus a valid MOT certificate (if required).

You can pay annually or in 6-month instalments. A 5% surcharge applies to 6-month and monthly direct debit payments, so paying annually saves money.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is car tax calculated in the UK?
UK car tax (VED) is based on CO2 emissions for cars registered after April 2017. First-year rates vary by CO2 band, then a flat standard rate of £190 applies from year two onward. Cars over £40,000 list price pay an extra £620 surcharge for five years. Older cars (pre-2001) are taxed by engine size; cars from 2001 to 2017 use CO2 banding.
How much is car tax for a zero emission car in 2026?
Zero emission cars registered before April 2025 now pay £190/year (standard rate). New EVs registered from April 2025 onward pay £10 in year one, then £190 from year two. If the EV's list price exceeded £40,000, an additional £620 surcharge applies for years two through six.
What is the standard car tax rate for 2025/26?
The standard annual VED rate for most cars from year two onward is £190 for 2025/26. Alternative fuel vehicles (hybrids, PHEVs) pay a slightly reduced rate of £180. Cars with a list price over £40,000 when new pay an additional £620 premium surcharge annually for years two to six (total £810/year).
Do electric cars pay road tax in 2026?
Yes, from April 2025, electric cars are no longer exempt from VED. New zero emission cars pay £10 in year one then £190 annually. Previously exempt EVs (registered before April 2025) now pay the standard £190 rate. This ended the EV road tax exemption that had been in place since 2001.
What happens if I don't pay car tax?
Driving without valid car tax is illegal in the UK. DVLA uses automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras to detect untaxed vehicles. Penalties include a fine of up to £1,000, vehicle clamping, impoundment, and potential destruction if not claimed. DVLA also sends a £80 late licensing penalty. There is no grace period.
Can I get a refund on car tax if I sell my car?
Yes. When you notify DVLA of a sale, scrapping, or export, VED is automatically cancelled and a refund is issued for any complete remaining calendar months. You will never receive a refund for a partial month. The new owner must tax the vehicle immediately – VED is not transferable between owners.
Does the £40,000 premium rate apply to used cars?
Yes, but based on the original list price when the car was new. If a car was listed at £42,000 when first registered, the premium surcharge applies regardless of what you pay for it second-hand. The surcharge runs for five years from the original registration date, so buying a 4-year-old premium car could mean paying the surcharge for just one more year.
What is a V11 reminder and do I need it?
A V11 is the tax renewal reminder sent by DVLA approximately a month before your current VED expires. It contains an 11-digit reference number that you can use to renew online, by phone, or at the Post Office. If you have not received a V11, you can still renew using the reference number on your V5C logbook (the 11-digit number starts with the letters at the top of the V5C).