How to Drive Into London This Summer Without Getting Hit by a £30 Bill
Driving into London this summer is going to cost more than most people expect. The capital runs several overlapping charging zones, and if your car does not meet the right emissions standards, those charges stack up fast. A single trip through central London in a diesel that fails the Ultra Low Emission Zone standard could leave you with a bill exceeding thirty pounds before you have even found a parking space.
The rules have changed significantly over the past twelve months, and many drivers who have not been into central London recently will be surprised at what now applies to them. This guide explains every charge you need to know about, how to check whether your vehicle is affected, and how to reduce what you pay on summer trips into the capital.
What You Now Pay Just to Enter the Capital
The Congestion Charge is the oldest of London’s road pricing schemes, but it is no longer the modest fee it once was. As of 2 January 2026, the standard daily charge increased from fifteen pounds to eighteen pounds. The charge applies in the Congestion Charge Zone, which covers central London roughly within the Circle line, from Monday to Sunday between 7am and 6pm on weekdays and noon to 6pm on weekends and bank holidays. An additional night charge runs from 6pm to 9pm each evening.
If you drive into central London regularly, the Auto Pay scheme registers your vehicle and bills you automatically, removing the need to remember to pay before midnight each day. The charge remains eighteen pounds unless your vehicle qualifies for a specific discount, and Auto Pay is the only way to access whatever discounts do apply.
The Ultra Low Emission Zone covers a far broader area than many drivers realise. Since the expansion in August 2023, ULEZ applies across all thirty-three London boroughs, stretching from the M25 inwards in most directions. The ULEZ charge is twelve pounds fifty per day and applies twenty-four hours a day, every day of the year. There are no time windows to take advantage of, no evenings or weekends excluded.
To avoid the ULEZ charge, petrol cars must meet Euro 4 standards, which in practice means first registration after January 2006 in most cases. Diesel cars face a tougher threshold, needing to meet Euro 6, which generally means first registration after September 2015. Older vehicles, and many diesel cars from the mid-2010s, do not meet the standard and attract the daily charge automatically.
The two charges combine without mercy. A diesel car built in 2014 driving into central London on a Tuesday morning would pay both the eighteen pound Congestion Charge and the twelve pound fifty ULEZ charge, totalling thirty pounds fifty for the day’s access before fuel or parking. That is the figure that catches many drivers completely off guard.
Electric Cars Are No Longer Free to Drive In
Until late 2025, driving an electric car into London came with a genuine financial advantage over petrol and diesel vehicles. The ULEZ has never applied to zero-emission vehicles, which remains true. But the Congestion Charge exemption for battery electric cars ended on 25 December 2025.
Electric cars no longer receive a one hundred per cent discount on the Congestion Charge. Instead, they qualify for a twenty-five per cent discount, bringing the daily charge down to thirteen pounds fifty via Auto Pay. This still represents a saving over the standard rate paid by petrol and diesel vehicles, but the era of EVs entering the Congestion Charge Zone for nothing is over.
Plug-in hybrids and mild hybrids receive no Congestion Charge discount at all. They are charged at the full eighteen pound rate. The only vehicles that retain a meaningful exemption from both the ULEZ and the Congestion Charge are hydrogen fuel cell vehicles and certain disabled tax class vehicles.
For EV drivers who were accustomed to free entry, this change is worth factoring into summer travel budgets. A week of daily trips into central London in an electric car now costs around ninety-four pounds fifty with Auto Pay, compared to nothing twelve months ago. That is a cost that did not exist last summer and may catch early adopters by surprise.
How to Check Whether Your Car Is Compliant
TfL runs a free vehicle checker at tfl.gov.uk/check-your-vehicle. Enter your registration plate and the tool will tell you exactly which charges apply to your vehicle, whether it meets ULEZ standards, and what your daily cost would be. The check takes under a minute and works on mobile as well as desktop. It is the single most useful step any driver can take before planning a trip into London this summer.
The tool covers ULEZ compliance, Congestion Charge eligibility, and also flags the Low Emission Zone, which applies to heavier vehicles including lorries, coaches, and larger vans throughout Greater London. If you are travelling in a large van or a motorhome this summer, the LEZ may apply even if the ULEZ does not, and the daily charge for non-compliant larger vehicles is considerably steeper.
Drivers unsure about their car’s Euro standard should also check their V5C logbook or contact the manufacturer directly. Euro 6 diesel vehicles manufactured after September 2015 are ULEZ compliant, but the registration date alone is not always a reliable guide because some vehicles were registered slightly outside the standard cycle dates.
Smarter Ways to Reach London Without Paying the Full Rate
The most straightforward way to avoid London’s charges is to leave the car outside the network and take the train for the final leg. Several major stations outside the charging zones offer long-stay car parks at reasonable daily rates, with good rail connections into central London. Stations along the Elizabeth line in Essex and Berkshire, services at Ebbsfleet International in Kent, and Watford Junction in Hertfordshire are all popular options that avoid both the Congestion Charge Zone and, in many cases, the outer ULEZ boundary entirely.
For drivers who need to bring a vehicle into Greater London without going into the centre, routing around the inner Congestion Charge Zone is straightforward in most cases. The zone is bounded by main roads including the Euston Road to the north, Tower Bridge Road to the south, and Park Lane and Edgware Road to the west. Journeys staying outside these boundaries avoid the eighteen pound daily charge, though the ULEZ still applies across all London boroughs regardless of how far from the centre you travel.
Motorcycle riders receive a discount on the Congestion Charge, paying nine pounds per day rather than the full rate. For riders planning a summer visit to central London, this can represent a worthwhile saving, and motorcycles that meet Euro 3 standards, which generally means registered after July 2007, also avoid the ULEZ charge.
The Penalty for Forgetting Is Steep
TfL issues penalty charge notices automatically where a vehicle enters a charging zone without payment being registered. The standard penalty for non-payment of the Congestion Charge is one hundred and sixty pounds, reduced to eighty pounds if paid within fourteen days. For the ULEZ, the penalty structure is identical. Failing to pay both on the same day brings a combined penalty exposure of three hundred and twenty pounds before any reduction, which makes the original charge look trivial by comparison.
Payment for the Congestion Charge must be made before midnight on the day of travel if you are not using Auto Pay. The TfL website and phone app both allow same-day payment, and registration for Auto Pay takes around ten minutes with a payment card. For anyone planning more than one trip into London this summer, Auto Pay is the safest and cheapest way to stay compliant without remembering to pay each time.
London has always been an expensive city to drive in, and 2026 has raised the cost further across every category of vehicle. Understanding exactly which charges apply to your car before you travel means you can plan around them rather than discover them on your bank statement several days later. The free TfL vehicle checker removes most of the uncertainty, and the alternatives to driving all the way into the centre have never been more accessible or better connected.
Planning a road trip this summer? Read our guide on what every UK driver needs to carry when taking their car to Europe.