Skip to main content

Road user charging for the UK?

Road user charging is being considered for the UK.
By MJ Woof November 17, 2020 Read time: 1 min
As electric vehicles proliferate on UK roads, road user charging will have to be introduced to replace duty on fuel - image © courtesy of Mike Woof

Road user charging is being considered for the UK as a future means for raising revenue. The plans are being revealed now as a way of generating revenue as the switchover from electric and diesel fuelled vehicles to electric vehicles continues. 

Both petrol and diesel fuels are heavily taxed in the UK. This provides significant revenue for the British Government. But as EV use grows, there is a need deliver another source of funding to replace the estimated £40 billion generated by duty on fuel.

The concept of road user charging is by no means new, having been mooted several times in the past. But with far more EVs now being used on the roads, the concept has once again been suggested. Technology has advanced considerably in recent years and with most modern vehicles now featuring GPS systems, determining location would not be as difficult as previously.

There are numerous different models being considered, though the most logical would be to set rates based on factors including distance travelled, whether journeys are made at peak times and if trips are made in congested urban areas. Drivers travelling at night along quiet country roads for example would be required to pay considerably less than those using busy urban routes during the peak rush hour times.

Related Content

  • Highway 99 revisited
    March 6, 2024
    David Arminas recently returned to Seattle for an inside look at some of the features of the now-complete SR99 tunnel that was a World Highways key project report in November 2017.
  • European transport pricing deadline
    September 3, 2012
    Public consultation is nearing completion on the sensitive issue of internalising external costs to make transport users pay for the perceived negative effects they inflict on society, including air pollution, CO2 emissions, accidents and congestion. Within six months a universal model will be unveiled by the European Commission (EC).
  • Road user charging to pay for road improvements?
    February 20, 2012
    What is the current situation with Russian roads? It is an objective answer to this question that is contained in the official report of the Federal State Statistics Service for 2009. Here it states: "...public roads are of poor quality: 8.4% of roads accounted for groundwater, nearly a third of roads are gravel, rubble or cobblestone.
  • Road pricing could boost UK road investment
    July 4, 2012
    UK road users receive a mere £4 billion in capital investment, and congestion increases. Road pricing could provide the roads needed and reduce taxes, says a new report UK motorists receive a "paltry" £4 billion (€5 billion) investment in road capacity in return for the €57.5 billion a year they contribute in road user taxes, according to the 2008/9 Road File, published by the UK Road Users Alliance (RUA). Over the last decade, this infrastructure spend has led to a minimal 1% increase in the road network t