Currently reading: EVs will have to pay London's Congestion Charge from January

Electric cars will be charged £13.50 and electric vans £9; cost for ICE vehicles will also increase

EV drivers will have to pay inner London’s Congestion Charge as part of a push to lower the number of vehicles driving into the capital.

Announced on Thursday by London mayor Sadiq Khan, prices have been set at £13.50 for electric cars and £9 for electric vans.

Previously, all EVs (including those powered by a hydrogen fuel cell) were exempt from the charges under the Cleaner Vehicle Discount. 

Khan said that without this change, it's predicted that 2200 more vehicles would have entered the zone each day from 2026. 

He added adding that 20% of vehicles that enter the zone currently are electric – and that congestion cost London firms £3.85 billion last year.

“Keeping London moving by reducing congestion is vital for our city and for our economy,” he said. “While the Congestion Charge has been a huge success since its introduction [in 2003], we must ensure it stays fit for purpose.”

As part of the changes, which will come into force on 2 January 2026, the charge for ICE vehicles will increase from £15 to £18, Transport for London (TfL) confirmed earlier this year.

Discounts of up to 90% will continue to be given for residents who live within the zone. Those who move to the zone after 1 March 2027 (and are not on any type of benefit) will get the discount only for an EV.

This news comes a week after the UK government announced plans for a new pay-per-mile road taxing system for EVs

This move has been criticised by automotive industry bosses as a way of putting off EV ownership at a time when car makers are being legally forced to increase EV sales by the ZEV mandate.

Critics of Khan’s new EV charges argue the same. AA president Edmund King, for instance, called it “a backward step which sadly will backfire on air quality in London”. 

He said: “Many drivers are not quite ready to make the switch to electric vehicles, so incentives are still needed to help them over the line.

"The mayor needs to reconsider to continue to help more essential van and car journeys in the capital go electric."

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Will Rimell

Will Rimell Autocar
Title: News editor

Will is Autocar's news editor.​ His focus is on setting Autocar's news agenda, interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

As part of his role, he also manages Autocar Business – the brand's B2B platform – and Haymarket's aftermarket publication CAT.

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Bob Cat Brian 14 November 2025

'this came a week after the government announced plans for a pay per mile road taxing system for EVs'

No they havent (yet?...). Accuracy is important. Please report what is, not what is rumoured.

dandmonty25 13 November 2025
Really no surprise. The plan was always surely "get the people buying EVs, tax later".
Peter Cavellini 13 November 2025

The busier a City becomes the more congested it gets, nobody yet has come up with a transport system that alleviates this because it can't suit everyone,putting up charges to try and discourage vehicle use in the City is the basic option,and, having a go at Khan because he has to use a Government vehicle albeit a limousine doesn't matter if he's not paying and probably just like all the other ministerial transport it will be budgeted for anyway, no, it's a suck it up scenario,we don't like it but what are we going t9 do about?