PROTECT YOUR DNA WITH QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY
Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by Adpathway- Sam Fenny - Memes and headline comments by David Icke
- 25 April 2026

Labour is pressing ahead with plans to make hybrid drivers liable for a new pay-per-mile tax despite admitting they barely use their vehicles in electric mode. The Telegraph has the story.
Plug-in hybrid cars (PHEV) will become liable for Rachel Reeves’s new electric road tax from 2028, with each mile driven attracting a 1.5p fee. It will be half the 3p levy paid by owners of electric vehicles (EVs).
Last year, justifying the policy, the Treasury said PHEV motorists drove “more or less than 50% in electric mode”. But analysis quietly published by the Department for Transport last week revealed that the Government had overestimated the number of miles plug-in hybrid owners covered with battery power.
“Evidence indicates that PHEVs complete a smaller proportion of their journeys in electric mode than previously assumed,” the document on fuel efficiency read.
Critics said the decision to tax PHEV drivers pay-per-mile and fuel duty felt like “double taxation”.
Despite this, the Government will press ahead with the tax in two years’ time. Known as electric vehicle excise duty (eVED), the tax is being introduced to offset some of the money lost from dwindling fuel duty receipts.
The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimates pay-per-mile will bring in £7 billion for the Treasury come 2050. That is far below the £24 billion currently raised each year from fuel duty.
Plug-in hybrids typically have a limited range in their battery pack, so it is common for drivers to ignore the electric capability of their car.
The average range of the electric component of a PHEV is 15 to 60 miles. This is dwarfed by the capabilities of pure electric vehicles, which can achieve in excess of 300 miles on one charge, according to tests run by the consumer group Which?
The limited battery range of PHEVs means many owners don’t bother charging their car or using the electric function. Yet they will still be charged 1.5p for every mile they drive, in addition to what they already pay in fuel duty, which is equivalent to 6-7p per mile.
PHEV owner Ross Williamson said: “While there is logic in pure EVs having a charge per mile, I struggle with hybrids such as my Land Rover Defender P400 paying a charge on total mileage.
“It has a maximum electric range of 26 miles.
“I already pay full road tax of £620 a year and fuel duty on the vast majority of my mileage, so the Government’s argument makes little sense and feels like double taxation.”
Read More: Hybrid Drivers Face Pay-Per-Mile Tax Hit Despite Proof They Rarely Use Electric


1 month ago
49

















.png)






.jpg)



English (US) ·
French (CA) ·