SMMT warns of new

tax threat

SMMT, 2025, October new car registrations
SMMT, 2025, October new car registrations, best selling cars
SMMT, 2025, October new car registrations, by fuel type and year to date
SMMT, 2025, October new car registrations, by sector
SMMT, 2025, October new car registrations, 2009 to 2025

THE UK new car market remained stable in October as registrations rose 0.5 per cent to reach 144,948 units, according to the latest figures published by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.

Registrations by fleets declined slightly, falling 1.5 per cent, but the decline was offset by a small increase in registrations by private buyers, up 2.0 per cent.

Business registrations rose by 32.7 per cent although, as a very small volume portion of the market, this sector is always subject to volatility.

Electrified vehicles were the only powertrain technologies to record growth, largely driven by battery electric vehicle uptake, registrations of which rose by 23.6 per cent, equivalent to 7,028 additional units.

As a result, BEVs took a 25.4 per cent market share, the second highest recorded this year, although still short of the 28 per cent target set by the ZEV Mandate.

Plug-in hybrid vehicle uptake rose 27.2 per cent to account for 12.1 per cent of the market, while hybrid electric vehicles posted growth of 2.1 per cent to claim a 13.3 per cent share.

Combined, electrified vehicles comprised the majority of new car registrations for the second consecutive month, with 50.8 per cent of the market.

While October's growth was more modest, year to date the overall BEV market is now up 28.9 per cent, at 386,244 units - more than registered in the whole of 2024 - with two months still to go before the year ends.

BEVs now account for 22.4 per cent of all new sales, thanks to massive manufacturer investment and, more recently, government support through the Electric Car Grant.

The latest quarterly industry outlook anticipates the overall new car market for 2025 will top two million units (2.012 million) for the first time since pre-pandemic 2019, with BEVs expected to account for 23.3 per cent of uptake.

For 2026, the overall market is expected to reach 2.032 million units, a moderate improvement on the previous outlook, with the BEV outlook maintained at 28.2 per cent.

While this would represent exceptional progress, it would still fall short of mandated targets for 2026, which call for zero emission vehicles to comprise one in three new car registrations.

The gap is set to widen in 2027, with BEV share anticipated to hit 32.2 per cent against a 38 per cent target.

However, even this modest growth is at risk due to government plans to end Employee Car Ownership Schemes (ECOS).

These schemes play a key role in attracting top talent into UK Automotive, enabling employees to access the products they make and sell in an affordable manner.

Government plans to make ECOS vehicles liable for company car tax would lead to the closure of these schemes, putting these vehicles out of reach for most workers and reducing a crucial supply of new and increasingly zero emission vehicles into the market.

With around 100,000 cars supplied via ECOS a year - equivalent to around five per cent of the annual new car market - such a step would depress growth and seriously impact the nearly-new and used markets.

More than £1 billion in revenue would be lost to industry and 5,000 manufacturing jobs put at risk, while the Treasury would incur a half-billion pound hit from lost VAT and Vehicle Excise Duty receipts.

The total cost would be more than double that allocated to the Electric Car Grant, effectively wiping out the growth it is intended to stimulate.

Mike Hawes, SMMT chief executive, said: "The government has backed the UK automotive sector with EV incentives and global trade deals, helping drive growth and encourage decarbonisation.

"But scrapping ECOS would undermine that progress - penalising workers, reducing Exchequer income and putting green investment at risk. At a time when the Budget should fuel growth, the measure will do the exact opposite. It is time for a rethink."

LATEST MOTORING NEWS

ROAD safety organisation GEM Motoring Assist is urging motorists to take extra...

Read more View article

THE new Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV and the latest-generation Mitsubishi L200...

Read more View article

JUST a few months before its world premiere, a fleet of almost production-ready...

Read more View article

LATEST NEWS

Google+