Guide to VAT on Motoring Expenses: What UK Businesses Need to Know and Claim Correctly
When it comes to running a business in the UK, every penny counts—especially when you can claim some of it back from HMRC through VAT. If your business involves vehicles for work purposes, there’s a good chance you’re shelling out money on fuel, maintenance, parking, and maybe even leasing or buying a car. But here’s the key question: are you correctly reclaiming VAT on your motoring expenses?
In this guide, we’ll walk you through which vehicle-related expenses you can claim VAT on, which ones you can’t, and how to do it right. You’ll also get some practical tips to avoid common mistakes that could cost your business money in the long run.
Let’s Start With the Basics: What Is VAT?
VAT, short for Value Added Tax, is a tax charged on most business transactions in the UK. If you’re VAT-registered, you can reclaim VAT on purchases that are used for business purposes—including some vehicle costs. But because motoring use often overlaps between business and personal use, it can get complicated.
So, think of this guide as your trusty roadmap through the twists and turns of VAT rules for motoring expenses.
Which Vehicles Are We Talking About?
First off, it matters what kind of vehicle you’re using. Is it a car or something else like a van, lorry or motorcycle?
- Cars used for private and business purposes: Special rules apply, especially when reclaiming VAT on purchase and lease payments.
- Commercial vehicles (vans, lorries, etc.): Usually easier for VAT recovery as they’re mainly used for business.
Can You Reclaim VAT on a Car Purchase?
Here’s the tricky part. HMRC is very strict about reclaiming VAT on cars. If your business buys a car, you can only reclaim VAT if the car is used 100% for business purposes.
That means:
- You don’t use it even once for personal errands or commuting.
- It’s not available for private use (e.g., locked up during non-working hours).
Let’s be honest—that’s hardly ever the case, so most companies can’t reclaim VAT on car purchases. However, it’s a different story if you’re buying a van, taxi, or driving school vehicle. These are treated differently since their usage is clearly business-related.
Leasing or Renting a Car? Here’s the Deal
If your company is leasing a vehicle rather than buying it, the VAT rules are a bit more lenient. In most cases, you can reclaim 50% of the VAT on the lease payments—even if the car is used partly for personal purposes.
If it’s 100% for business use? Congrats! You might be able to reclaim all of the VAT. Just make sure you have proof to back it up.
Fuel Costs: Full VAT, Partial VAT, or Flat Rate?
Fuel is one area where many businesses miss out. You can reclaim VAT on fuel costs, but how you do that depends on how the vehicle is used.
Here are your options:
- Claim 100% VAT: If the fuel is strictly for business use (which, again, is rare).
- Claim a portion: You can use detailed mileage logs to work out the business use vs personal use ratio and reclaim VAT on the business part.
- Apply the fuel scale charge: This is a fixed amount based on your car’s CO2 emissions. It simplifies the process but means paying a set VAT amount each period.
Pro tip: If you don’t reclaim any VAT on fuel, you don’t have to use the scale charge.
Maintenance, Repairs, and Running Costs
Here’s some good news. You can usually reclaim 100% VAT on maintenance and repair costs, even if the vehicle is used for both business and personal use. That includes oil changes, new tires, and general servicing.
But—and it’s a big but—you can’t reclaim VAT on repairs if insurance covers the cost.
What About Toll Roads, Parking, and Congestion Charges?
These smaller, often overlooked expenses can still include VAT—and yes, they’re claimable for business trips.
- Parking charges: VAT reclaimable when charged by a VAT-registered car park. No VAT on on-street council parking.
- Toll roads and bridges: VAT can often be reclaimed, including the Dartford Crossing.
- Congestion charges: Typically no VAT charged, so nothing to reclaim here.
Mileage Allowance for Employees: Can You Reclaim VAT?
If you reimburse employees for business mileage in their own vehicles, you can still reclaim some VAT. To do this:
- Use HMRC’s approved mileage rates (like 45p per mile for the first 10,000 miles).
- Keep fuel VAT invoices from employees.
- Use HMRC’s advisory fuel rates as a guide for calculating the fuel portion of the mileage.
It’s a bit admin-heavy, but worth it in the long run.
Private Use vs Business Use—Document Everything
One of the most important things to understand is that VAT is only reclaimable on the business portion of expenses. So if you’re sharing the car for commuting or taking weekend trips, you can’t reclaim VAT on that part.
That’s why it’s essential to track usage. Use logbooks, apps, or mileage trackers. The more accurate you are, the more confidence you’ll have in a VAT inspection.
Record Keeping: Your VAT Lifeline
Want to avoid VAT headaches? Then keep your records squeaky clean. HMRC may ask for:
- Invoices with VAT clearly listed
- Details on vehicle usage (personal vs business)
- Fuel receipts and mileage logs
- Lease agreements or purchase documents
No docs? No reclaim. That’s the golden rule.
Common VAT Mistakes on Motoring Expenses
Let’s avoid the common traps that many businesses fall into:
- Reclaiming VAT on a car with private use without applying the scale charge
- Forgetting to exclude VAT-exempt costs like parking fines and congestion charges
- Failing to distinguish between employee mileage vs business fuel use
- Not retaining proper documentation or invoices
These may seem small, but they can lead to costly penalties if HMRC pays you a visit.
Quick Recap: What You Can and Can’t Claim
Here’s a simplified breakdown to make it stick:
- Car purchase: Only if 100% for business
- Lease payments: Usually 50% VAT reclaimable
- Fuel: Reclaim with scale charges or mileage logs
- Repairs and maintenance: Reclaimable, even with private use
- Tolls and parking: Mostly reclaimable
- Congestion charge & fines: No VAT to reclaim
Final Thoughts: Make VAT Work for Your Wheels
Understanding VAT on motoring expenses doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Just think of it like this—the clearer your paperwork and the more accurate your reporting, the more VAT you can reclaim. Don’t leave money on the table.
Take a little time each month to review expenses, log mileage, and file those receipts. And when in doubt, talk to an accountant or tax professional familiar with your industry.
Doing VAT right means less stress now—and fewer surprises later.
Want to dive deeper? Read the full official HMRC notice here: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/vat-on-motoring-expenses-notice-70064