UK Performance Enthusiasts vs. Rising VED

For enthusiasts running internal combustion engine (ICE) performance cars, the latest changes to the UK’s Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) system — implemented by the UK Government and administered via the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) — reshape the cost landscape in several important ways.

Here’s a focused breakdown of what it means if you own (or want to buy) a petrol or diesel performance car.

1️⃣ First-Year “Showroom Tax” Hits Hardest

The biggest impact is on new performance cars.

VED for brand-new vehicles is heavily CO₂-based in the first year. The higher the emissions, the steeper the bill — and most ICE performance cars sit near the top bands.

What that means:

* A new high-output V8, turbocharged six, or performance SUV can attract a four-figure first-year tax bill.
* This is paid upfront as part of registration — effectively increasing the on-the-road price.
* The system strongly penalises high CO₂ outputs, even if the car will be low-mileage or weekend-only.

For enthusiasts, this makes brand-new ICE performance cars significantly more expensive to put on the road compared to even a few years ago.

2️⃣ Standard Annual Rate: The “Flat Tax” Era

After the first year, most post-2017 cars move to a flat annual VED rate (currently just under £200 per year).

On the surface, this sounds reasonable. But here’s the catch for enthusiasts:

* That flat rate applies whether your car emits 120g/km or 320g/km.
* There is no longer a sliding annual emissions scale for newer cars — the punishment is front-loaded into year one.

For many buyers, this shifts the decision:

Buying nearly new (1–2 years old) can avoid the worst of the first-year tax hit.

3️⃣ The £40,000 “Expensive Car Supplement”

This is the sleeper issue for performance buyers.

If your car had a list price over £40,000 when new (including options), you pay an additional annual supplement for five years starting in year two.

And here’s the reality:

* Almost every new performance car clears £40k.
* Even moderately specced hot hatches now breach that threshold.
* The supplement effectively adds hundreds of pounds per year for five years.

For ICE enthusiasts, this means:

* Ownership costs remain elevated even after the initial emissions hit.
* Heavily optioned cars are penalised further.
* Buying used does not remove the supplement if the car is still within that five-year window.

4️⃣ Pre-2017 Cars: A Different Game

If you’re running older performance machinery, things work differently.

Cars registered between 2001 and 2017 are taxed under a graduated CO₂ band system.

Implications:

* Big-engined 2000s performance cars can sit in very high annual tax bands.
* Some V8s, V10s, and early turbocharged performance models carry substantial yearly VED.
* However, they avoid the expensive car supplement entirely.

For enthusiasts of 2000s “modern classics,” this creates an interesting dynamic:

* The car may be cheaper to buy.
* But annual tax can still be significant.
* There’s no extra five-year surcharge.

5️⃣ 40-Year Classic Exemption

If a vehicle is over 40 years old and registered as historic, it becomes VED-exempt.

For ICE enthusiasts this means:

* 1980s performance cars are gradually ageing into exemption.
* Long-term ownership of true classics becomes financially attractive.
* There’s a growing incentive to preserve and restore older ICE cars.

This has already influenced values in the classic market.

6️⃣ No Direct “Usage” Consideration (Yet)

Unlike potential future mileage-based systems being discussed for EVs, ICE vehicles are still taxed primarily on:

* Emissions (year one)
* Flat rate + value supplement (afterward)

Your actual mileage does not change your VED.

For low-mileage performance car owners:

* You may feel disproportionately taxed relative to usage.
* Weekend or track cars are treated the same as daily drivers.

7️⃣ Market Behaviour Among Enthusiasts

The system is subtly reshaping enthusiast behaviour:

More Nearly-New Buying

Avoids the brutal first-year rate.

Longer Ownership Cycles

Keeping cars longer spreads the tax cost.

Increased Appeal of Older Performance Cars

Pre-2017 and especially pre-2001 cars operate under different structures.

Greater Focus on Total Cost of Ownership

Tax now plays a bigger role in buying decisions than it did a decade ago.

 

The Bigger Picture for ICE Enthusiasts

The current system doesn’t ban performance cars — but it:

* Front-loads financial penalties onto high-emission new cars.
* Adds multi-year costs to most performance models via the £40k supplement.
* Encourages buyers toward used, older, or eventually classic vehicles.
* Makes emissions figures a serious financial consideration.

For committed ICE enthusiasts, the landscape hasn’t ended — but it has become more strategic.

 

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