Although it’s often one of the biggest concerns for people considering an electric car, worries about charging tend to dissolve quickly once they’ve made the switch.
Ditching fuel station runs for topping up wherever you park – at home, at work, or on the road – can turn out to be a real perk once you get used to the change of routine. However, that mix of fuel sources means travel expenses get a little more complicated than claiming for a tank of petrol or diesel. Here’s what you need to know.
What can you claim for charging at home?
Most electric vehicle drivers charge overnight at home. It’s the most convenient way to top up, but a little challenging from an expenses perspective. After all, it’s hard to separate the electricity used to charge your car from the rest of your household consumption, let alone split that usage into business and private journeys.
Autocar's company car tax calculator shows exactly what you'll pay for every make and model
As far as HMRC is concerned, electricity isn’t a fuel, but it does have a per-mile rate for drivers to claim back the cost of business trips in an electric car. The Advisory Electric Rate (AER) was set at 5p per mile in November 2021, reflecting what you might expect to spend charging a mid-size EV (think Volkswagen ID.3) at home and on a flat-rate tariff.
This has two main problems. Firstly, the AER applies to all EVs, regardless of size, so it won’t cover the cost of charging a larger and less efficient car (such as the Audi e-tron or Mercedes EQC, SUVs). It also hasn’t kept pace with spiralling energy prices during 2022, so drivers who are on ‘default’ tariffs could also be left out of pocket for business trips, even if they’re driving something small and efficient like the new Fiat 500.
Unfortunately, alternatives to the AER can be complicated. HMRC treats reimbursed domestic electricity as a taxable Benefit-in-Kind, unless the vehicle is only available for business use. For a company car, where some journeys will be private, it’s up to employers to prove how the energy has been used.
Luckily, most new chargepoints can already record usage and share it via a built-in data connection. This means there are a few hardware-agnostic solutions to support more accurate reimbursement, without getting tied up in complex audits:
- Centrica’s ‘virtual fuel card’ is a single account for accessing home, workplace and public chargepoints. Home energy is then automatically reimbursed via payroll, but it’s designed for business-only vehicles (such as vans) and not for company cars.
- NewMotion’s solution is similar. It’s a card for accessing workplace and public chargepoints but also logs energy used at home and reimburses drivers in their pay package. However, drivers would need a separate account for private journeys.
Add your comment