'Luxury' car tax......
 

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'Luxury' car tax....a first world grumble

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£40 is definately a luxury car. List price of a Dacia Sandero is about a third of that. Looking at what you can get for £40k,

– Base spec tesla model 3
– Hyundai Ioniq 5
– A posh spec long wheelbase caddy life with the biggest engine, autobox and a couple of grand of extras.

Hell, you can get a focus for under £30k that comes with luxuries like adaptive cruise control!

I think it is a bit like bikes; manufacturers have made their products better and more complex and sold consumers the idea that they still need products with the same brand name. So yes, the base spec passat is almost £40k, but it is a far more luxurious and complex car than the passat I had 20 years ago. That certainly didn’t have luxuries like autodimming headlights, a satnav with integrated ChatGPT or an electric tailgate! I’m not sure that even included air con as standard in base spec.

So the tax doesn’t include everything, but it is a simple tax which makes it cheap to adminster and hard to game.

lol these are all bog standard, bang average cars that you've listed.  Go and ride in an S Class, or a Range Rover Vogue, or a 7 series then tell me that any of those  you've listed are luxury. I mean Hyundai is literally the non-luxury arm of HMG, yet their base spec family car is only £100 under the 'luxury' tax level. It's not a luxury car, it just isn't.


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 10:11 pm
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yes it is - by virtue of the fact on the well off can afford one.  a cheap car is an i10!

To be able to afford a £40 000 car you need to be earning well above the average.  How out of touch are you?  Two average earners will not take home much more than £40 000 pa


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 10:21 pm
peteza, wheelsonfire1, doris5000 and 7 people reacted
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tjagain

To be able to afford a £40 000 car you need to be earning well above the average. How out of touch are you?

It's not me that's out of touch here, it's you.

The only reason things like Passats etc are falling into this tax bracket is because we've had high inflation in general, even moreso on cars and the threshold hasn't been increased in line with it.


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 10:36 pm
andy4d and andy4d reacted
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Someone who can afford a Rolls, Range and Audi S5 surely isn’t that bothered about a couple of grand a year in rfl?

but maybe someone who can’t really afford them, but has them anyway, might be?


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 10:43 pm
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The optics of some here remind me of that guy on QT who thought he was poor - he was on £70K or so.


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 10:43 pm
peteza, doris5000, scotroutes and 13 people reacted
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Free to those that can afford it, very expensive to everyone else.


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 10:51 pm
peteza and peteza reacted
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I mean Hyundai is literally the non-luxury arm of HMG, yet their base spec family car is only £100 under the ‘luxury’ tax level. It’s not a luxury car, it just isn’t.

Hyundai Bayon - RRP from £21,480.

Hyundai i30 Wagon - RRP from £21,720

Hyundai Kona - RRP from £24,990

Hyundai Tucson - RRP from £30,540


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 11:05 pm
davros, doris5000, kelvin and 3 people reacted
 5lab
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The £10k thing is nonsense. This only applies for the 5 years of a cars life, even really heavily depreciating EVs (which are exempt for now anyway) are unlikely to drop 75% of their value in 5 years


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 11:09 pm
doris5000, kelvin, doris5000 and 1 people reacted
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scotroutesFull Member
I mean Hyundai is literally the non-luxury arm of HMG, yet their base spec family car is only £100 under the ‘luxury’ tax level. It’s not a luxury car, it just isn’t.
Hyundai Bayon – RRP from £21,480.

Hyundai i30 Wagon – RRP from £21,720

Hyundai Kona – RRP from £24,990

Hyundai Tucson – RRP from £30,540

Yes, you've listed a load of different (mostly quite a lot smaller) Hyundais with petrol engines? Obviously they're cheaper, it doesn't change the fact that a base spec Ioniq 5 is not a luxury car.

I'm not sure how I can make it much simpler than this:

Passat wagon price in 2020 = £27K  Luxury threshold = £40K

Passat wagon price in 2024 = £40K  Luxury threshold = still £40K


 
Posted : 23/11/2024 11:37 pm
bikesandboots, andy4d, ianpv and 5 people reacted
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Posted : 23/11/2024 11:47 pm
peteza, davros, scotroutes and 3 people reacted
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Fiscal drag. £40k car isn’t quite the luxury it used to be.

Plenty of people will be happy about it though as they don’t like others having nice things. Either because they can’t afford them, or because they don’t want others having what they can afford.

I always thought the point was to try and nudge manufacturers towards keeping their cars affordable for us plebs, i.e. you'll shift more units to the great unwashed if you keep the list price under £39,999 and your customers can avoid an annual penalty. Only people with a bit of surplus wealth won't be put off by what essentially just amounts to 'VED for high rollers' if you want to believe it's a 'jealousy tax' or simply the treasury trying to slap people buying toys a bit above their station fine, I guess in the grand scheme of things it's actually a nice problem to have. But then also:

I knew this at time of purchase and as I really wanted the car went ahead anyway...

If you were always going to whine about a tax you knew you had to pay but were just too impulsive to be trusted with your own money OP, then I don't really think you can expect much sympathy can you?

While some on here seem to think £30k for a car is pocket change, to a lot of people it's a substantial spend (I doubt the OP saw it as nothing). Basically if you don't want to get hit with a luxury tax, stop buying things labelled as luxuries dumbass. But I suspect the status a pricey big boy car infers was part of the attraction though.

Passat wagon price in 2020 = £27K  Luxury threshold = £40K

Passat wagon price in 2024 = £40K  Luxury threshold = still £40K

Superb Estate starting price 2024: £36,175 (according to 2 mins on Google) pretty much the same car, slightly less fancy doodads and a different badge. If you really need people to know you're doing a bit better than them it's an extra £4k up front, plus a rolling £400 p/a subscription to be in a club that very few are impressed by ( and that's coming from someone with an STW membership).


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 12:21 am
davros, scotroutes, endoverend and 11 people reacted
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I don't understand how so many people on a left leaning website are seemingly unaware that keeping a tax threshold stationary over a period that we've had high inflation means that the tax system is being made less progressive.

Same thing with the personal allowance.

cookeaa

Superb Estate starting price 2024: £36,175 (according to 2 mins on Google) pretty much the same car, slightly less fancy doodads and a different badge. If you really need people to know you’re doing a bit better than them it’s an extra £4k up front, plus a rolling £400 p/a subscription to be in a club that very few are impressed by ( and that’s coming from someone with an STW membership).

But if they keep the threshold at £40K, it won't be long until the Superb has to pay it also? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 12:40 am
irc and irc reacted
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I don’t understand how so many people on a left leaning website are seemingly unaware that keeping a tax threshold stationary over a period that we’ve had high inflation means that the tax system is being made less progressive.

Some may say that it was set way too high in the first place and now it's about right?


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 2:13 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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These may not be "luxury cars" but they are luxuries and they are cars so no issues with the tax applying.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 7:45 am
davros, endoverend, nuke and 9 people reacted
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The (far from) 'basic' Passat wagon is £39,610 so just under the threshold and comes with heated massage seats. It's described as 'business class'. A 5s scan of the spec list shows it's a luxury!

I understand perfectly what keeping a threshold stationary does and don't see that as a bad thing. Many state run agencies are in a mess and/or underfunded. Add in inflation making their costs higher and an electorate that is very anti paying it's no suprise that none headline grabbing methods like this are used to raise more funds. And let's be fair those buying 40k value cars, even after a few years of depreciation, have the funds to spend....


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:07 am
davros, doris5000, scotroutes and 5 people reacted
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This thread really does demonstrate how people are so willing to spend massive amounts on cars for no reason at all because they have bought the marketing hype and want the status of the latest and greatest rep mobile so they can waft along in comfort. If you can afford it fine crack on but if you are drawn to complaining about £600 a year maybe you should not have spent so much on a car.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:13 am
b33k34, doris5000, slackboy and 17 people reacted
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I don’t understand how so many people on a left leaning website

Its hardly left leaning 🙂


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:18 am
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40k is less of a luxury car than it used to be. It's sufficiently luxury that it's fairly easy to avoid for anyone who prefers not to pay it (without having to slum it in a poverty-wagon), but low enough that people who want to prove how rich they are can probably find a way to pay it 🙂

My EV was under the threshold at list price (I know it's exempt) and seems pretty luxurious to me. Heated seats, adaptive cruise control, stuffed with sensors for everything, reversing camera, good hifi, blah blah. Goes like shit off a shovel too. The only annoyance is it doesn't remember seat position for the different keys. - Certainly better than any other car anyone in my family has ever owned.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:27 am
pisco, kelvin, pisco and 1 people reacted
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Its hardly left leaning ?

More often fallen over (thankfully less since upgrade).


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:28 am
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without having to slum it in a poverty-wagon

See the use of this term all over place highlights how out of touch so many are and also how high a pedestal they put  cars on


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 9:05 am
wheelsonfire1, davros, doris5000 and 13 people reacted
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It's really unpleasant when it gets all chippy Wolfie Smith on here. We have the same nonsense on the Hank 'I live in a big house in the Cotswolds' thread.

It doesn't sound informed or inclusive, just envious and spiteful.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 9:46 am
multi21, crossed, bikesandboots and 11 people reacted
 rsl1
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Applying it to EVs might be a bit premature. The ZEV mandate is already hammering manufacturers with EV sales not yet being strong enough. The gov needs to show it is investing in charging infrastructure to increase buyers confidence in EVs, otherwise introducing an extra tax is going to be all stick and no carrot. We're going to start seeing very restricted model ranges from manufacturers soon, if EV sales don't pick up further.

That said, the R5 EV is "only" going to be £23k so there's lots of headroom up to the £40k in some cases


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 9:51 am
pisco, kelvin, pisco and 1 people reacted
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But if they keep the threshold at £40K, it won’t be long until the Superb has to pay it also? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Then don't buy it at that point. I don't really understand why you think Mid-sized VAG estates are 'cars of the people'...

I did a wee bit more curious googling last night, turns out the Ford Puma was the most popular new car in 2024 (who knew) and the ford fiesta was the most popular used car (by virtue of sheer numbers I assume).

We were a nation of affordable hatchback buyers for decades, nowadays it seems we collectively like them jacked up as SUVs or 'crossovers' (but they're basically the same thing) those of us with the desire to drive an estate are outliers, it seems most people are able to find vehicles to spunk money on that sit below that 'luxury' price point.

Raising the threshold for luxury vehicles is probably not a priority for the government right now, and much of the population aren't in a position to be affected by a luxury vehicle tax, having more basic financial issues to deal with.  Those living a more comfortable existence could do with a smidgen more humility before they start complaining about the terrible problems having more income bring...


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:04 am
doomanic, davros, scotroutes and 7 people reacted
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Ford Puma was the most popular new car in 2024 (who knew)

And how many of them were pre registered by Ford to make their sales look better then they actually are then flood the nearly new  market with pre registered cars to make them more  "affordable"


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:12 am
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envious and spiteful

If you’ve grown up in a working class family, and earn a normal wage, then you’ve been used to people using this language about you all your life. Water off a duck’s back.

Pay your taxes and enjoy your working country you live in. It’s probably time for those that can to pay more, so it can work better.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:19 am
doomanic, tjagain, wheelsonfire1 and 13 people reacted
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'Heated Massage seats' - in a Passat... my point exactly. Who needs heated massage seats in their run around? If you need a massage go to one of them fancy parlours. I just want something that goes, and goes around corners nicely, and does so in as minimal way as possible... I'd also rather have the driving ability left down to me, rather than have 167 beeping nannying comfort devices that reinforce to the driver that they are in fact an incapable moron who can't be trusted to stay in lane, parallel park, turn on their own headlights, and needs assistance to shut the tailgate. The only major advancement in a recent decades is those special vented Merc seats that can capture farts, now those have their usage...


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:29 am
b33k34, kelvin, Simon and 3 people reacted
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These may not be “luxury cars” but they are luxuries and they are cars so no issues with the tax applying.

It could be argued that the vast majority of cars now are luxurious compared to the stuff from the 70, 80s, and even the 90s we drove around in until very recently.

Also, I recall very few people actually owning new, or nearly new cars until recently. That in itself is a luxury.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:30 am
Cougar2, geeh, TomB and 5 people reacted
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If you were always going to whine about a tax you knew you had to pay but were just too impulsive to be trusted with your own money OP, then I don’t really think you can expect much sympathy can you?

I'm driving an almost brand new car that I love, and I have a other equally great car on my driveway for when the suns shining. So I'm not seeking any sympathy whatsoever. Least not from folks who drive cars that would make me question my life choices if I had to drive them every day

Believe it or not starting a thread about something I feel is a poorly implemented tax, on a miserable weekend when I have nothing better to do, doesn't mean I sit wringing my hands about it. I feel it's an interesting topic of discussion that I knew would illicit conflicting responses, especially on here. Perhaps a better question would have been, why should I pay an expensive car tax on a car I bought for 28k, when my neighbour paid 35k for theirs and doesn't? Again I'm yet to hear a reasonably argument for that one (other than the tax one).

Luckily I can afford the tax (not the same as thinking it's a fairly implemented one). Anyway, sun's coming out so I'm off out for a ride on my 12k sworks road bike. Now just wait until you hear my thoughts on how much that is overpriced...;-) I hope your tiny violins are at the ready...


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:36 am
crossed, wheelsonfire1, crossed and 1 people reacted
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Least not from folks who drive cars that would make me question my life choices if I had to drive them every day

Hmm…


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:41 am
doomanic, davros, doris5000 and 7 people reacted
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It’s probably time for those that can to pay more, so it can work better.

They have been, tax burden on upper earners has been increasing for decades, if nothing else through freezing of personal allowances and seen universal benefits like child benefit disappear. Not saying I disagree with that but the suggestion that higher earners haven't already seen significant increases in their contribution is lazy and rude. The super rich on the other hand.......

FWIW my car slipped into the luxury tax bracket by accident, list price was just below the threshold when I ordered the car, took nine months to arrive due to post covid and Ukraine disruption during which time the manufacturer put up the list price and that's what used to determine what your tax is. Annoying but not exactly world ending.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:54 am
 5lab
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did a wee bit more curious googling last night, turns out the Ford Puma was the most popular new car in 2024 (who knew) and the ford fiesta was the most popular used car (by virtue of sheer numbers I assume).

We were a nation of affordable hatchback buyers for decades, nowadays it seems we collectively like them jacked up as SUVs or ‘crossovers’ (but they’re basically the same thing) those of us with the desire to drive an estate are outliers, it seems most people are able to find vehicles to spunk money on that sit below that ‘luxury’ price point.

The puma is a whopping 2.5cm taller than the last fiesta, which is close to how much cars grow over generations anyway. The "SUV" factor is pure marketing/styling (same as the juke/Clio combo)


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:54 am
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So basically OP what you're trying to express is:

Enjoy your ride...

The puma is a whopping 2.5cm taller than the last fiesta, which is close to how much cars grow over generations anyway. The “SUV” factor is pure marketing/styling (same as the juke/Clio combo)

Fascinating.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:54 am
davros, kelvin, davros and 1 people reacted
 StuF
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The simple anwser is to buy a car that's over 5 years old - it will easily last another 5. Running older cars is not the headache it used to be 20 years ago.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:55 am
Cougar2, kelvin, Cougar2 and 1 people reacted
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I always thought the point was to try and nudge manufacturers towards keeping their cars affordable for us plebs,

I asked on the first page why the tories introduced the tax. We seem to be keen to imagine all sorts of motives about what it might encourage, or discourage, or punish, many of which seem to be values at odds with the government that introduced the scheme.  But nobody is all that keen to know what that actual rationale might be

It seems the only 'point' was simply bit of progressive taxation

From gov.uk:

"General description of the measure
Since April 2017, cars with a list price exceeding £40,000 pay an additional supplement as well as paying the standard rate, which means those who can afford the most expensive cars pay more than the standard rate imposed on other drivers."

So it's a simple affordability based tax. If you're paying it then celebrate the fact that you're one of life's winners.

While the threshold has effectively shifted over time its an entirely avoidable tax as nothing is forcing you to pay it.

Thats why the this particular  additional VED only applies for the first few years of the vehicle's life. Other VED measures that relate to levels of emission etc are designed to influence the actions of  all road users and therefore run for the lifetime of the vehicle and influence the actions/choices of all drivers


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:55 am
davros, kelvin, davros and 1 people reacted
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+1 for the 'issue' here being fiscal drag. 40k doesn't buy you a luxury car. I'd view that threshold being a well specced german car (5 series, A5 etc). And when the tax was introduced it was around that mark.

But the tax is needed on second hand cars else you open it up to avoidance, just swap it into your partners name the day after you bought it and boom its a second hand car.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 10:55 am
pisco and pisco reacted
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Hmm…

To clarify that comment. Nowt wrong with driving cheap, unexciting cars, if you dont care about cars and just see them as a mode of transport from A-B. But as someone who likes nice cars (cheap or expensive) I'm definitely not that person. Just like I'd find it thoroughly depressing to have to go out every day for a ride on the cheapest road bike I could find that worked...

Folks spend their hard earned on things they enjoy and value in life. I'm sure some folks on here find value in purchases I would find utterly pointless.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:00 am
sirromj and sirromj reacted
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"Perhaps a better question would have been, why should I pay an expensive car tax on a car I bought for 28k, when my neighbour paid 35k for theirs and doesn’t? Again I’m yet to hear a reasonably argument for that one (other than the tax one)."

The tax would be open to fraud and much more complex to collect if based on used values.

And if you're looking to increase motoring taxes then this seems a good way of taxing those who can afford it a bit more.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:02 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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It could be argued that the vast majority of cars now are luxurious compared to the stuff from the 70, 80s, and even the 90s we drove around in until very recently.

Also, I recall very few people actually owning new, or nearly new cars until recently. That in itself is a luxury.

This is all very true. Cars have got bigger, faster with more bells and whistles. Partly because of consumer greed but mostly company 'upselling' and flattering our collective egos as to where normal 'need' ends and luxury 'wants' begins - as aptly demonstrated on this thread. As a society we could have just upped the efficiency and safety and made and bought cars that did everything we needed for a smaller percentage of annual income, but we chose the other path.

However, the biggest aspect of car progress for me has been reliability. A 6 year old car is every bit as reliable as a 3 year old car used to be. A 10 year old car has less corrosion issues now than a 5 year old car used to. You could argue both of those are wildly pessimistic now - modern cars are even better than that. With that in mind the habit of a section of the market buying new and getting shot after 3 years or less is very distasteful to my mind.  Sure it means people like me get to pick up the scraps of nearly new 3 year old cars at knock down prices but we should be encouraging everyone to drive cars for longer. Worse, a lot of the least reliable features strapped on to cars are the extra extra bells and whistles that make the original purchaser go weak at the knees but then need to be 'managed' by future owners. If cars went through hands slower with folk holding on to them longer at each step, not least the original purchaser, this would be less of a problem.

One of the benefits of this tax is that cars under 5 years old are less attractive on the 2nd hand market. The original owner will more likely have to take a bit more of a hit or keep on driving it. It'll also encourage people to keep their 2nd hand cars longer before they chop it in for their next nearly new 2nd hand car.

If I had my way I'd also consider a tax where if you sell a car you bought new (and I'd add delivery milage cars into that to close that loophole - anything less than a year old with less that 5K miles on clock counts as new) within the first 5 years of ownership you pay a 10% levy of it's original purchase price. That would encourage new buyers to look after cars better, favour reliability over bells and whistles and look for brands with longer warranties. I'd probably end up buying older cars because it but as I say, a 5 year old car now is every bit as good as a 2-3 year old car 15-20 years ago.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:11 am
endoverend, jimw, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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So it’s a simple affordability based tax. If you’re paying it then celebrate the fact that you’re one of life’s winners.

Which I'd be all for. But the way it works means it's not a simple affordability tax. I'm not questioning a tax on expensive cars. And I don't particularly care if the threshold is 20, 30, 40 or 50k. But I do care that it's not based on the value of the car at time of purchase. That is the element I think is nonsense


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:12 am
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Simple solution , as you pay the additional tax from second year onwards, just chop it in and get a new one just before its birthday!!

peasants 😉


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:16 am
doris5000, kelvin, doris5000 and 1 people reacted
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So I’m not seeking any sympathy whatsoever. Least not from folks who drive cars that would make me question my life choices if I had to drive them every day

It was that attitude that I began to see in myself and my acquaintances that turned me right off being "into cars".

Median uk salary seems to be under £40k so spending more than that on a runabout appears to be the perfect definition of a luxury.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:19 am
supernova, doomanic, scotroutes and 17 people reacted
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The tax would be open to fraud and much more complex to collect if based on used values.

This is the only argument I can agree with. And just like everything else in this country, I find it highly annoying that tax dodgers and fraudsters push up the costs and taxs for everyone else.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:19 am
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My car was well over the limit at list price. But it’s a 2015 diesel which bought at 7 years old and for which I pay £255 I think.  I’d make the tax based on list price, since this data is in a readily accessible database, and I’d reduce it year on year at standard depreciation rate as per the bike to work scheme.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:24 am
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That would make sense. And start it at a higher rate to maintain the level of tax collected.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:27 am
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But I do care that it’s not based on the value of the car at time of purchase.

But it is, just not the time you purchased it. As you were well aware.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:30 am
geeh, davros, jimmy748 and 9 people reacted
 jimw
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A 10 year old car has less corrosion issues now than a 5 year old car used to.

Certainly than one 20 or thirty years ago. My partner’s 10 year old VW Polo has no visible corrosion on the body either on top or underneath ( although  evidence of surface rust on suspension components). The first Alfa Romeo GT Junior that I bought in 1986 was 10 years old and had been resprayed twice and had numerous patches underneath around the spare wheel well etc.

There are anomalies in the VED system. I have had two near Identical VW Golf’s one 2015, the other 2018. The former  £255 the latter £190 because it was less than £40k new


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:31 am
convert and convert reacted
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Which I’d be all for. But the way it works means it’s not a simple affordability tax. I’m not questioning a tax on expensive cars. And I don’t particularly care if the threshold is 20, 30, 40 or 50k. But I do care that it’s not based on the value of the car at time of purchase. That is the element I think is nonsense

So at what point does a used luxury car cease to be luxurious then?

The treasury reckons after about 5 years, which seems about right, there's plenty of 19 plate cars I'd not turn my nose up at, and plenty of 18 plate cars that are pretty much the same. You wanted something blingy from the 20s so you pay the extra for that choice.

Basically for every £40k+ car sold the state gets £2k extra over the course of half a decade, they tell buyers in advance so they can factor that into the purchasing decision, they don't really care who pays it so long as it gets paid.

It seems about as fair as it can be, in that the person who owns the car at any given point during that 5 years pays their annual bit extra. You might think it should be a tapering tax or calculated based on the residual value of your nearly new toy, but then that's extra admin and faff for public servants to do (also not free) in order to accommodate a discretionary purchase you made.

Of course I'm sure the NHS thanks you for the extra funding, as do we all, thanks you doing your bit for trickle down economics... 😉

I thought your were off out for a ride?


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:33 am
davros, convert, kelvin and 5 people reacted
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It’s just another way to tax cars. It’s quite tricky to buy a new electric car for much under £40k but then I guess no one does, they just lease them and pay the monthly fee


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:36 am
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 folks who drive cars that would make me question my life choices if I had to drive them every day

Et tu.

That's 1880 hours of work to pay for it ?. Stick it in a stocks and shares ISA at 30 and it's nearer 4 years off your retirement at 60.

Life choices eh?


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:50 am
pisco, davros, cookeaa and 7 people reacted
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It’s really unpleasant when it gets all chippy Wolfie Smith on here. We have the same nonsense on the Hank ‘I live in a big house in the Cotswolds’ thread.

Really? I think its fairly unpleasant the way some people moan about "poverty spec cars"...as if being in poverty is driving a Dacia or whatever. I think that's much more unpleasant.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:51 am
tjagain, davros, doris5000 and 7 people reacted
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Many state run agencies are in a mess and/or underfunded. Add in inflation making their costs higher and an electorate that is very anti paying it’s no suprise that none headline grabbing methods like this are used to raise more funds.

you have to ask why they are all so badly underfunded and in critical need of investment. It’s because the last lot in government spanked billions of our pounds on the stupid Rwanda scheme to appeal to the knuckle dragging element of society. The same scumbag demographic that voted for the other major bit of social and economic vandalism that is and was Brexit.

if the govt are wanting to raise more tax, you can raise it from the scumbags that caused this mess ; targeted taxes & / total removal of benefits from those that voted for Brexit.

I didn’t vote for Brexit and I am certainly not going to be willing to increase the amount of tax I pay to repair the damage! They can clear up their own mess.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 11:58 am
tjagain, endoverend, stumpyjon and 3 people reacted
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"But I do care that it’s not based on the value of the car at time of purchase. That is the element I think is nonsense"

If they wanted to raise the same amount of money based on current/used value they'd have to either put the threshold down a lot or the amount charged (per year) up by a factor of 5. Because otherwise everyone could just swap their nearly-new car for someone else's of the same vintage, and dodge the tax from year 2 onwards...


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 12:16 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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 folks who drive cars that would make me question my life choices if I had to drive them every day

Et tu.

That's 1880 hours of work to pay for it ?. Stick it in a stocks and shares ISA at 30 and it's nearer 4 years off your retirement at 60.

Life choices eh?


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 12:28 pm
tjagain and tjagain reacted
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That’s 1880 hours of work to pay for it ?. Stick it in a stocks and shares ISA at 30 and it’s nearer 4 years off your retirement at 60.

Life choices eh?

For sure. Likewise you could say the same about any purchase you make that is 'non essential'. That includes any bike used for recreational purposes over about 250 quid, any house that provides more than four walls, a roof and basic utilities. Holidays etc etc. Stick what you save in the bank and you could retire early

Or you could enjoy life now whilst you are still young (ish). All life choices as you say.

I thought your were off out for a ride?

45 min in scottish wind was enough for anyone.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 12:53 pm
crossed and crossed reacted
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For sure. Likewise you could say the same about any purchase you make that is ‘non essential’. That includes any bike used for recreational purposes over about 250 quid...

Unlike cars, more people on bikes would make the world a better place for everybody. I consider myself a petrol head, with a toy car I pay a decent chunk of tax on, and a 'daily' (which in reality is used rarely*), but we have an utterly toxic car culture that has a massive impact on our environment in numerous ways as well as an economic cost. We also have a trend for ridiculously unnecessary and impractical (usually luxurious) vehicles (particularly in urban environments), and anything discouraging that I don't see as a bad thing.

I do agree we could have a more progressive tax, but until then, this one serves a purpose in a relatively fair way.

*I own 2 cars because it's stupidly cheap and convenient, especially compared to other transport options.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 1:15 pm
tjagain, endoverend, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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Unlike cars, more people on bikes would make the world a better place for everybody

Whilst I agree, that's not really relevant to my point that was a response to the statement that if you didn't spend money on cars you could retire early! (Also a point I agree is correct btw!)

To your point about cars being bad for environment, there should be a larger tax on emissions and car size surely. Expensive cars aren't necessarily bad, although I suspect most expensive cars are worse for the environment than newer cheaper ones.

It's a bit ridiculous that my non ulez compliant boxster costs a 3rd of the amount to tax as my new car. (Although in my defence I barely drive it so the environmental impact is probably quite low)


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 1:32 pm
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To your point about cars being bad for environment, there should be a larger tax on emissions and car size surely.

Don't disagree at all, and it's disappointing they haven't implemented it, yet.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 1:40 pm
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For sure. Likewise you could say the same about any purchase you make that is ‘non essential’. That includes any bike used for recreational purposes over about 250 quid, any house that provides more than four walls, a roof and basic utilities. Holidays etc etc. Stick what you save in the bank and you could retire early

Well, except one is a £250 bike and the other is a £30k car, and the rest are relatively ongoing expenses rather than a one off.

My point was that, £30k as a lump sum with no other investments, costs or anything else, compounding at 7% for 30 years is an inflation adjusted fourfold increase.

I just find cars as some sort of financial status symbol that allows people to "question people's life choices" bonkers. However nice their seats are it's not as comfy as spending your 50s somewhere sunny riding bikes and putting your feet up rather than still being on the career treadmill.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 2:01 pm
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Imo there's an increasing number of very fancy cars being driven around in increasingly run down towns and cities.

Something's gone wrong somewhere.

Or maybe it's supposed to be like that to encourage us all to work harder.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 3:40 pm
butcher and butcher reacted
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A few years back I asked about this tax - I was considering a car that was 5.5 years old and probably low 40’s original list price

I wanted to know if I’d have to pay the full annual rate, pro rata, or nothing as previous owner had paid the lot.

The level of vitriol (and/or insinuations that I was a multimillionaire performatively claiming poverty) from people with no reading comprehension whatsoever was quite something.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 3:50 pm
walowiz, bigdugsbaws, thepurist and 5 people reacted
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Either the 10K depreciation in one year reflects the extra tax, or you've overpaid for a SH car.

Put it this way, since you knew about the tax beforehand, effectively you were paying the price plus 1600 quid. If you think the car isn't worth that, then you overpaid. If it is, you're all good.

Imo there’s an increasing number of very fancy cars being driven around in increasingly run down towns and cities.

Leases are a way for people with a modest income to make themselves look richer.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 4:02 pm
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Yeah.. But you have a diesel volvo, so ultimately the jokes very much on you..;-)

No one who has motorbikes is jealous of sporty cars 🙂


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 4:35 pm
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Imo there’s an increasing number of very fancy cars being driven around in increasingly run down towns and cities.

Something’s gone wrong somewhere.

Or maybe it’s supposed to be like that to encourage us all to work harder.

Well there's lots of newer cars on the roads, 73/74 plate, dunno how fancy they are.

Cards on the table, I'm one of them now in a 74 plate Octavia, having dipped my toe in the leasing game for the first time. And having done that, like you I'm noticing just how many other people are probably doing the same.

Basically for about the same monthly outlay I could have financed a 3-5 year old equivalent (probably getting diddled with interest in the process), we'd have 'owned' it after a few years then as well. But then what? We'd carry all the costs for servicing/MOT/VED (I took the bolt on maintenance and tyres package) on a thoroughly depreciated asset. We could have raided our savings to buy a new or used car outright, and again ended up carrying similar costs on a depreciating asset...

At the end of the day a car is just a tool, one that has to suit our needs for a handful of years and then move on for someone else to own or lease and make use of. Our circumstances are such that we can't be sure what we will need in a couple of years time, but most probably we won't need an estate.

Don't get me wrong I know I'm just paying the depreciation on VFS's asset, but compared to what it would cost me to 'own' the same thing, or indeed an older equivalent, I'm getting a reasonable deal TBH.  I think I've broken the back of my inherited notions about "owning" a car, it's the old adage innit: "the things you own, end up owning you".

I drive a nice enough car now (after years of paying over the odds for rotting shitboxes), I don't own it, and I really don't want to, because nobody makes money on cars apart from car companies and car dealers. I want to use it (for a fair agreed price) and then hand it back.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 4:36 pm
walowiz, olddog, walowiz and 1 people reacted
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The level of vitriol (and/or insinuations that I was a multimillionaire performatively claiming poverty) from people with no reading comprehension whatsoever was quite something.

On STW? Surely not


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 4:44 pm
walowiz and walowiz reacted
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This argument whether a £40k car is luxury or not (it definitely isn’t BTW) completely misses the point that an Audi A4, Ferrari or Bentley get additionally taxed at exactly same level (£310 PA) under the expensive car levy.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 4:55 pm
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Edit..

Actually can't be assed!


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 5:50 pm
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Even our own chief socialist TJ has (i believe) a custom built bike costing more than a few grand. For what is basically a toy. But good on him if that’s what he wants to spend his cash on

I'm a green not a socialist.  Ive never owned a car apart from one I was given that I had for a few weeks in the 70s.  The bike was for special reasons.  Its "Julies Bahookie" 🙂  and will last the rest of my cycling life.   My bikes are not just toys.  They replace cars 🙂

What I have saved over my lifetime buying ( mainly) secondhand bicycles rather than expensive cars has meant I now have lots of capital and a decent retirement at 60.  I don't find my worth in material goods.  I find it in friendships and experiences.  I feel sorry for those who need to buy stuff to prove their own value


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 6:03 pm
andy4d, integra, endoverend and 9 people reacted
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I don’t find my worth in material goods. I find it in friendships and experiences. I feel sorry for those who need to buy stuff to prove their own value

How about sometimes some people buy nice stuff because they enjoy using it?

It doesn't ALWAYS have to come down to materialism.

You don't always come across as being that fulfilled with joy from your life as a monk tbh


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 6:23 pm
crossed and crossed reacted
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How about sometimes some people buy nice stuff because they enjoy using it?

It doesn’t ALWAYS have to come down to materialism.

Indeed. You think me buying a 2nd hand 'mid range' car is so people can say 'wow look at him, he must be doing well for himself'? Every second car on my St is as expensive, it doesn't impress anyone. I bought it because I liked it.

And given I've reached the age of 48 without ever having spent more than 10k on a car before I'm fairly comfortable in the fact that I'm now in a position to treat myself to the most expensive thing I've ever bought in my life.

Jeeez..


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 6:38 pm
andy4d, TiRed, hot_fiat and 5 people reacted
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Get back to your tractor factory.

if you put your name down now you might be awarded a discretionary benefit in 5 year’s time.

IMG_1320


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 6:59 pm
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How about sometimes some people buy nice stuff because they enjoy using it?

Oh dear, that's not going to go down well with some on here.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 6:59 pm
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Why do some people think that others buy expensive cars to show off and make people think they are rich ?
I find it interesting that when people talk to me about my id Buzz , they really love the car and are enthusiastic about it and how they would love to buy one. That’s a £72k list price car.
Yet on the other thread where the OP is asking about a £50-60k defender ( could be more / less depending on spec of course), he gets flamed by some for his ostentatious choices.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 7:01 pm
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I think it’s naive to think that there isn’t at least some % of the population that is buying cars that are more expensive than they would ‘normally’ be able to afford on PCP because of a desire to keep up with the joneses. That said, it obviously isn’t everyone.

Judging people’s spending (or ability to spend) is basically a British pastime and I’m 100% confident people judge what I choose to spend my money on and that’s fine. As for the Defender thread it’s not even the ostentatious nature of it, if he chose to drop £50k on a watch (for example) then I’d roll my eyes at the choice because it doesn’t match my personal values but that’d be the end of it.

The extra special thing about the Defender (or indeed, any heavy, large internal combustion powered luxury vehicle bought for ‘toy’ purposes) is that the general switch to cars like that comes at the expense of the safety and air quality of everyone else. Yeah that’s some hand wringing lefty/green crap sure, but those are my values so that’s what you get from me.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 7:21 pm
davros, kelvin, HoratioHufnagel and 5 people reacted
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Reading through this the thing that gets me is that it’s really easy to figure out if your “luxury” car is more highly taxed, like finding out the tax of any new/older car. A 40k car (whether cash/pcp/lease) is a purely discretionary purchase. Buy a £39,999 car if you are bothered by the extra tax. Oh and £40k car is very nice thing that most of the population would be extremely happy with.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 7:59 pm
doomanic, kelvin, kelvin and 1 people reacted
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There’s a few on our school run who’ve definitely picked up a vehicle purely to show off to the neighbours. One’s a brand new defender 110 in stormtrooper white with white panniers, wheels and ladders. The others an e-tron of some sort. Both driven by the sort of person who can’t walk more than 1m to the school gates. I guarantee that both will get adorned with the cheapest LandSail ditchfinders when they discover the cost of tyres. Bought purely as a status symbol. They are rare though.

I bought my own extravagance as I knew it was that last of its kind, the absolute end of an era and I wanted to be a part of it. Most people haven’t a clue what it is, and that’s just fine with me. Occasionally you’ll get someone who knows come up to me and meekly say “is that a qua, quadric, quatroformagio?” (Sic)

And I go “why yes, yes it is” and smile knowingly.

And that’s usually where it ends.  It’s a thing for me and me alone, to enjoy, cosset and drool over. I couldn’t give a fig what other people think. It’s lush, and I’m very lucky to have been in the position to get one. I don’t mind paying the VED. What I do mind is the fact that it bears no relation to the impact the vehicle has. A flat figure is the wrong figure, set arbitrarily for no other reason than we count in base-10. Realistically it should be more and directly linked to its George Best-like thirst.

I’ve done the cashpoint car thing.  The 10pm bid on eBay on  some unseen £1500 shitbox to tide me over (for 3 years in one instance), combined with a constant worry over whether a card will get declined when you chuck a tenner in. Thankfully I’m not there any more, but you never know what twists and turns life might present.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:03 pm
kelvin, HoratioHufnagel, HoratioHufnagel and 1 people reacted
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Leases are a way for people with a modest income to make themselves look richer.

Really ? I think leases are financially savvy way of getting to drive a nice car.

Oh and £40k car is very nice thing that most of the population would be extremely happy with.

That’s the point, they are not. Car companies are charging £40k + for really dull , horrible cars.

Nice cars are now £70/£80k +


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:11 pm
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That’s the point, they are not. Car companies are charging £40k + for really dull , horrible cars.

Nice cars are now £70/£80k +

I don't agree with that tbh. My cars list price was 42k. It's a nice place to sit with performance that wasnt far off super car territory 20 odd years ago. The difference is that it can carry a bike and 2 dogs!

I don't think we should confuse a nice car with a luxury car. There are plenty of very nice cars about for considerably less than 70k!


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:26 pm
weeksy and weeksy reacted
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Every second car on my St is as expensive,

Gold


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:32 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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Why do some people think that others buy expensive cars to show off and make people think they are rich ?

because the first thing they do is make an internet post to humblebrag about how unfair the Expensive Car Supplement is?


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:33 pm
doomanic, scotroutes, Simon and 3 people reacted
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I don’t think we should confuse a nice car with a luxury car. There are plenty of very nice cars about for considerably less than 70k!

Agree on that. They should rename the existing tax to ‘nice car’ tax and then add a more expensive tier at say, £70k and call that the luxury car tax.


 
Posted : 24/11/2024 8:37 pm
Simon and Simon reacted
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