Why Rural Drivers Will Pay Three Times More Than Londoners Under the New Pay-Per-Mile Car Tax

Battery electric cars lined up at SMMT Test Day 2026 in Bedfordshire
Battery electric cars lined up at SMMT Test Day 2026 in Bedfordshire

A driver living in a rural part of England will pay approximately three times more in electric vehicle road tax under the government’s new pay-per-mile system than a driver living in central London, according to analysis of the scheme’s mechanics published ahead of its April 2028 launch. The disparity arises not from any deliberate policy decision to penalise rural drivers but from the straightforward reality of how miles accumulate: people who live far from work, schools, hospitals, and shops drive more. Under a flat per-mile charge, higher mileage means a higher bill, with no adjustment for the absence of alternatives.

The new Electric Vehicle Excise Duty, known as eVED, will charge battery electric vehicle drivers 3 pence per mile and plug-in hybrid drivers 1.5 pence per mile from April 2028. The government has published an average annual cost estimate of £240 for a typical BEV driver. That average conceals a gap that analysis by the BVRLA and New AutoMotive has shown to be as wide as three to one between high-mileage rural postcodes and low-mileage urban ones, with rural drivers likely to pay between £247 and £260 per year while drivers in the City of London and Westminster pay around £79.

How Pay-Per-Mile Electric Vehicle Tax Will Work from April 2028

The eVED system replaces the current Vehicle Excise Duty arrangements for electric vehicles, which were changed in 2025 to bring EVs into the standard VED framework for the first time. From April 2028, the charge moves to a usage-based model: instead of paying a flat annual rate, EV drivers will pay based on how many miles they cover in a year. The exact mechanism for reporting and collecting mileage-based charges is still being developed, with options including odometer-based declarations at MOT, telematics-linked reporting, and self-declaration systems.

For battery electric vehicles, the rate is set at 3 pence per mile. For plug-in hybrid vehicles, which have both an electric motor and a combustion engine, the rate is 1.5 pence per mile. These rates apply to all EV and PHEV drivers regardless of where they live, what they earn, or how much access they have to alternative transport. The system is deliberately simple in design, which is also the source of its most significant limitation: simplicity and fairness are not always the same thing when the baseline level of road use varies as sharply as it does between a city-centre flat and a rural farm.

Fuel duty, by contrast, is not being increased. The government confirmed this week that the existing fuel duty freeze continues, which means drivers of conventional petrol and diesel vehicles will not face a corresponding increase in running costs from the same policy cycle. EV drivers transitioning away from petrol will move from paying fuel duty as part of every tank they fill to paying a per-mile charge on every mile they cover. For high-mileage rural drivers, the comparison between their old fuel costs and their new eVED bill will be one of the factors shaping decisions about whether to switch.

Why the Postcode Lottery Hits Rural Drivers Hardest

Analysis by the BVRLA and New AutoMotive has mapped the projected annual eVED cost by postcode area across England, Wales, and Scotland. The results show a clear geographic pattern. The highest individual bills are concentrated in rural and semi-rural areas where public transport coverage is thin, distances to key services are long, and driving is not a lifestyle choice but a practical necessity.

Rural drivers are projected to pay between £247 and £260 per year in eVED at the proposed 3p per mile rate. Drivers in the City of London and Westminster, where journey distances are short and public transport is the primary mode of travel for many residents, face an estimated annual cost of around £79. The gap between those two figures is not a rounding error. It is the direct financial expression of a geographic reality that policy makers have not yet resolved.

Toby Poston, chief executive of the BVRLA, has described the rural-urban disparity as one of the central fairness questions that the government will need to address before the system launches. The concern is not that a per-mile charge is inherently wrong as a mechanism, but that applying it uniformly without any geographic weighting or rural discount creates a system where the people with the least access to alternatives pay the most. A rural nurse driving 15,000 miles a year to cover community visits will pay significantly more than an urban commuter who drives 4,000 miles a year to reach a train station.

Tanya Sinclair, chief executive of Electric Vehicles UK, has highlighted the compound disadvantage facing rural EV drivers. They will pay more in eVED because they drive more miles, and they will also face higher charging costs because rural public charging infrastructure is thinner and more expensive per kWh than urban provision. The combination of a higher per-mile tax and a more expensive charging environment creates a cumulative cost burden that does not apply to their urban counterparts.

What the Fleet Sector Stands to Lose

The BVRLA and New AutoMotive analysis estimates the total annual cost of eVED to the fleet sector at £260 million per year once the scheme is fully operational. This figure reflects the large numbers of company cars and fleet vehicles that are already transitioning to electric, driven by the Benefit-in-Kind tax advantages that have made electric company cars the default choice for many employers and employees over the past three years.

At a geographic level, the analysis identifies Brent East as the postcode with the highest projected total eVED liability across all vehicles in the area, at an estimated £7.6 million per year. This reflects the density of registered vehicles in that part of London rather than particularly high individual mileages, and it illustrates how the scheme’s aggregate revenue impact will be heavily concentrated in high-vehicle-density urban areas even if the per-driver cost is higher in rural ones.

Fleet operators who manage large numbers of electric vehicles across dispersed geographies will need to build eVED costs into their total cost of ownership calculations from 2028. For fleet managers who have spent recent years building the case for EV adoption on the basis of lower running costs compared with petrol and diesel equivalents, the introduction of a per-mile charge is a material change to the financial model. Whether it changes the fundamental economics of electric fleet operation depends heavily on the mix of urban and rural mileage in any given fleet.

The Impact on Electric Vehicle Uptake in Rural Areas

Ginny Buckley, chief executive of Electrifying.com, has pointed to research suggesting that the introduction of pay-per-mile charging has a measurable deterrent effect on EV consideration among drivers who have not yet switched. A poll of 13,000 drivers conducted in connection with the eVED analysis found that 55 per cent of non-EV drivers said they would be less likely to make the switch to electric if a pay-per-mile charge were introduced. That is more than half of the people the industry and government need to convert to hit electric vehicle adoption targets.

For rural drivers specifically, the deterrent effect may be stronger than the average. A driver in a rural area who already drives high mileage, who has limited confidence in the public charging network for long journeys, and who is now told they will face a higher annual eVED bill than a city driver making fewer journeys has multiple reasons to hesitate. The financial case for switching is narrowed, and the practical case depends on infrastructure improvements that are happening more slowly in rural areas than in cities.

The government’s ZEV mandate requires an increasing proportion of new car sales to be zero emission each year, with the target reaching 80 per cent by 2030 and 100 per cent by 2035. Achieving those numbers depends on consumers choosing to buy electric vehicles. If a significant minority of potential buyers is deterred by a per-mile tax that disproportionately affects high-mileage rural drivers, the impact on mandate compliance and on the broader EV transition could be significant.

What Drivers Should Be Thinking About Now

The eVED system does not launch until April 2028, which means drivers buying an electric vehicle today are not yet subject to per-mile charging. The current flat-rate VED applies until the new system begins. Drivers considering a switch to electric in 2026 or 2027 should factor the post-2028 running costs into their decision, particularly if they drive high annual mileages.

At 3 pence per mile, a driver covering 15,000 miles per year will pay £450 in eVED annually. A driver covering 8,000 miles will pay £240. For most drivers, this will be substantially less than the fuel duty element of their current petrol costs, which at current pump prices and fuel duty rates represents a significant proportion of a full tank. The overall financial case for electric still holds for most drivers, but the margin is smaller for high-mileage users than the headline figures suggest.

Rural drivers evaluating the switch should also consider the charging cost picture. Public charging costs vary significantly across the country, and rural drivers who rely primarily on home charging will generally pay less per mile for electricity than those who use public rapid chargers regularly. Home charging overnight on an economy tariff remains the cheapest way to run an electric vehicle, and for rural drivers with off-street parking and access to a home charger, it remains the most practical option.

The consultation period before the 2028 launch gives the government time to respond to the rural fairness concerns that the BVRLA and others have now formally raised. Whether any adjustment to the flat-rate charge is made remains to be seen. For now, drivers in rural areas watching the policy develop have good reason to follow it closely and to ensure their views are heard through the consultation process while there is still time to influence the final design.

Sources: GB News (28 May 2026); WhichEV (May 2026); BVRLA and New AutoMotive eVED analysis (May 2026); Electrifying.com consumer survey (13,000 respondents, 2026); HM Treasury fuel duty announcement (May 2026).

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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Freedom or safety for young drivers? UK can and must deliver both, says GEM 11/05/2026 SHARE: Images are for editorial use only. Experts gathering at Young Driver Focus in London on 13 May to press for action, not further delay Young drivers remain disproportionately at risk, with preventable deaths continuing on UK roads International evidence shows graduated driver licensing can cut crashes by up to 40% GEM Motoring Assist will return to the RAC Club, London, on 13 May as headline sponsor of Young Driver Focus 2026, renewing calls for decisive action to improve protection for newly-qualified drivers. Despite years of evidence and advocacy, the UK has yet to introduce a comprehensive system of graduated driver licensing (GDL) - a move GEM and other road safety groups say is costing young lives. GEM head of road safety James Luckhurst said: “We are long past the point of asking whether we should act. The evidence is overwhelming, and the consequences of delay are measured in lives lost and families devastated.” GDL is a phased approach that allows new drivers to gain experience under lower-risk conditions before progressing to full driving privileges. Common measures include limits on late-night driving and restrictions on carrying same-age passengers during the months after passing the test. International research consistently shows crash reductions of between 20% and 40% where GDL systems are in place. In some regions of Canada, reductions in young driver deaths have exceeded 80%. In the UK, drivers aged 17 to 24 account for around 20% of road deaths, despite making up just 7% of licence holders. Inexperience, distraction and overconfidence remain key risk factors - precisely the issues GDL is designed to address. GEM stresses that a well-designed system supports rather than penalises young people, and a recent TRL review1 found no significant negative impact on access to education, employment or social activity. GEM supports a system that extends structured learning, reduces known high-risk conditions and allows young drivers to build skills progressively and safely. GEM head of road safety James Luckhurst said: “We do many things well in the UK, particularly in driver training, but the current system offers too little structured support once someone passes the test. That’s where the real risk begins. “The choice is simple: continue with a system we know is failing too many young people, or take proven steps that will save lives. Doing nothing is not a neutral position - it is a decision with consequences… and Young Driver Focus offers a chance to translate the latest insight into real-world action.”

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