How the ZEV Mandate Is Already Changing What Cars Are Available and at What Price

Costa Mesa, Californis - USA- Saturday March 29, 2025: Tesla Electric Car Dealership.
Costa Mesa, Californis - USA- Saturday March 29, 2025: Tesla Electric Car Dealership (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Costa Mesa, Californis - USA- Saturday March 29, 2025: Tesla Electric Car Dealership.
Costa Mesa, Californis - USA- Saturday March 29, 2025: Tesla Electric Car Dealership (image courtesy Deposit Photos)

One in every three new cars sold in Britain must now be fully electric. That is not a target for the future; it is the legal requirement in place right now, under the Zero Emission Vehicle mandate that the government reintroduced and confirmed for 2026. Manufacturers that fall short of their individual targets face fines of £12,000 for every non-compliant car sold outside their allowance. That financial pressure is reshaping which vehicles are available, at what prices, and how urgently manufacturers are competing for electric vehicle buyers. Understanding how the ZEV mandate works gives you a clearer picture of why the new car market looks the way it does in 2026 and what it means for your next purchase.

How the ZEV Mandate Works

The Zero Emission Vehicle mandate, which came into law on 3 January 2024, requires car manufacturers to sell a minimum percentage of zero-emission vehicles each year. The percentage rises annually until 100% of new car and van sales must be zero-emission by 2035. For 2026, the target is 33% of new car registrations. For vans, the 2026 target is 24%.

The target applies individually to each manufacturer based on their total UK sales volume. A manufacturer that sells 100,000 cars in 2026 must register at least 33,000 of them as zero-emission to meet its obligation. If it registers 30,000 electric cars instead, it has a shortfall of 3,000 vehicles. At £12,000 per vehicle, that shortfall would generate a fine of £36 million. The penalty is substantial and escalates quickly with larger gaps.

The system is not entirely rigid. Manufacturers can bank credits from previous years if they exceeded their targets, and they can also borrow against future years within set limits. They can trade credits with other manufacturers in the same corporate group. A manufacturer that was well ahead of its target in 2025 can use those banked credits to offset a shortfall in 2026 without incurring a fine. This flexibility was designed to allow the industry to smooth out year-to-year variation without abandoning the long-term trajectory.

The fines were reduced from the original £15,000 per vehicle to £12,000 following lobbying from the motor industry, which argued that the original level was too steep given the pace of consumer demand for electric vehicles. The revised figure still represents a meaningful deterrent. For a manufacturer with a large market share, missing the target by even a small margin generates nine-figure liability.

What the 2026 Target Means in Practice

The UK new car market registered around 1.9 million vehicles in 2025. If 2026 follows a similar pattern, meeting the 33% ZEV target across the industry means roughly 627,000 electric cars need to be registered this year. Industry data from January through to April 2026 suggests the market is tracking broadly in line with that pace, though performance varies significantly between manufacturers.

Some manufacturers are comfortably ahead. Those with established, popular electric model ranges and the production capacity to supply them are accumulating credits and reducing the pressure on future years. Others, particularly those whose electric model ranges are limited or whose vehicles have not gained strong traction with buyers, are facing more pressure and are more likely to be reaching for incentives to move electric stock.

The incentive dynamic is directly visible to consumers. Dealers for manufacturers under ZEV pressure are offering larger deposit contributions, enhanced part-exchange values, and lower monthly payments on electric vehicles. In some cases, manufacturers are effectively subsidising the cost of electric vehicles to ensure the registrations count against their obligation. That is not a bad situation for buyers who were already considering an electric vehicle, since it means competitive offers are available in the market in a way that would not exist without the mandate.

How the ZEV Mandate Is Affecting Petrol and Diesel Availability

The mandate does not ban the sale of petrol or diesel cars. Manufacturers can continue to sell combustion engine vehicles alongside their electric ranges. What the mandate does is create a financial cost for selling too many non-electric vehicles relative to the manufacturer obligation. As a result, some manufacturers have taken steps that affect the availability and pricing of petrol and diesel models.

Several manufacturers have restricted the production allocation of petrol models in the UK market to ensure that their overall registrations do not shift too far towards combustion engines. This can show up as longer waiting times for certain petrol variants, limited colour or specification options, or higher prices relative to comparable electric versions. It is not universal, and it affects some nameplates more than others, but it is a real market effect that some buyers are noticing.

The relative pricing of electric versus petrol models has also shifted at the top of some ranges. Where a petrol version of a given model was once significantly cheaper than an equivalent electric version, the gap has narrowed in some cases, either because the electric variant has come down in price through mandate-driven incentives or because the petrol variant has been priced up slightly to make the electric alternative more attractive. Neither of these is a coincidence; both reflect the commercial pressure the mandate creates.

The Schedule Beyond 2026

The 33% target for 2026 is the current benchmark, but the trajectory rises steeply in subsequent years. The mandate requires 38% zero-emission car registrations in 2027, 52% in 2028, 66% in 2029, and 80% in 2030, before reaching 100% in 2035. For vans, the 2026 target of 24% rises to 34% in 2027, 46% in 2028, 58% in 2029 and 70% in 2030.

The jump from 33% in 2026 to 52% in 2028 is particularly significant. That two-year step requires the market to move from a third of sales being electric to more than half. Manufacturers are already planning their model launches and production capacity around those future targets, which is why the pipeline of new electric models across most brands is heavier than the pipeline of new petrol and diesel models for 2027 and 2028.

Whether the infrastructure to support those volumes of electric vehicles on UK roads will be in place in time is a separate question. The government has commitments to expand the public charging network substantially, and the Competition and Markets Authority is actively working on pricing transparency and network reliability. The mandate is, in effect, running ahead of infrastructure in some areas, particularly for drivers without home charging access, though the gap is narrowing as investment in public charging accelerates.

What This Means If You Are Buying a New Car This Year

The mandate creates several practical implications for anyone in the new car market in 2026. If you are open to an electric vehicle, the current market conditions are among the most favourable seen in the UK for some time. Manufacturers under ZEV pressure are offering genuine financial incentives, and the combination of those incentives with lower running costs at current fuel prices means the total cost of ownership case for electric vehicles is stronger than it has been at any point in the past two years.

If you are committed to buying a new petrol or diesel car, you may find that certain models have longer lead times or more limited specification options than in previous years, as manufacturers manage their mix of registrations. Pricing for combustion engine models is also likely to be less aggressive than for electric equivalents, since discounting a petrol car does nothing to help a manufacturer meet its ZEV obligation.

If you are weighing up whether to buy now or wait, the mandate trajectory points clearly in one direction. The percentage of new car sales that must be zero-emission will be 52% in 2028 and 66% in 2029. That increasing pressure means the incentives to buy electric are likely to remain strong, and the relative availability and pricing of petrol vehicles is likely to continue shifting in the direction of electric over time.

The ZEV mandate is the single most powerful force reshaping the UK new car market right now. Whether you are buying electric or petrol, understanding how it works helps explain the prices, availability, and deals you are seeing in showrooms.


Sources:

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

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