The UK’s New Electric Car Grant: Bargain or Bureaucracy?

The UK’s New Electric Car Grant: Bargain or Bureaucracy?

Electric cars just got a little more affordable in the UK—at least on paper. The government has unveiled its new Electric Car Grant (ECG), dangling discounts of up to £3,750 on qualifying zero-emissions cars. But as with any incentive scheme, the devil is in the details, and this one is already proving complicated enough to make even seasoned EV shoppers scratch their heads.

A Two-Tier System

The ECG is split into two bands. Cars that pass the government’s strictest environmental tests qualify for the full £3,750, while those that just about meet the mark get £1,500. Roughly a third of models under the £37,000 price cap won’t see a penny. That leaves the majority of sub-£37k EVs in play, but not without caveats.

Crucially, it’s not just the sticker price that determines eligibility. The grant leans heavily on the “green credentials” of both the manufacturer and the vehicle. That means:

  • The brand must have signed up to Science-Based Targets (SBT) for carbon reductions.
  • Each model is assessed on where it was built, where the battery was assembled, and the carbon intensity of those countries’ electricity grids.

In short: your car’s passport matters almost as much as its price tag.

Winners and Losers

Some familiar names are in luck. Auto Express’s 2025 Car of the Year, the Skoda Elroq, starts at £31,510 and qualifies, even in higher trims, thanks to how the government scores powertrain variants. But jump too high—into the Elroq vRS, for instance—and you’re out.

Volkswagen’s ID.3 Pro also squeezes in under the £37,000 threshold. But option it like a press car—every bell, every whistle—and you’ll blast past the £42,000 ceiling the government has set for fully specced models. Cross that line, and the discount vanishes.

Interestingly, even pricier cars like the Skoda Enyaq can qualify—despite a £39,010 starting price—because the entry-level “60” powertrain also lives in cheaper models. Meanwhile, Britain’s best-selling EV, the Tesla Model Y, is completely excluded because its base price sits above the limit.

China in the Crosshairs

The ECG also has geopolitical undertones. By tying eligibility to the carbon intensity of manufacturing nations, the scheme all but sidelines Chinese-built EVs, given China’s reliance on coal power. Some exceptions exist—like the Citroën e-C3, which manages to snag the smaller £1,500 grant—but brands like BYD have already walked away, instead dangling perks like five years of free maintenance or boosted battery warranties.

Industry Fallout

Predictably, the industry is reacting. Brands like Volvo, Fiat, Hyundai, MG, and Skoda have cut prices, while Kia has fattened its deposit contributions to mimic the grant. Manufacturers are nervous that buyers will stall purchases while waiting to see which models qualify, so they’re stepping in with their own carrots.

The ECG is funded to the tune of £650 million, enough for about 173,000 cars at the maximum subsidy. That’s half of last year’s UK EV registrations. In practice, though, the complicated tier system will stretch that pot further by keeping a chunk of buyers out of the top band.

Abuse and Oversight

One concern is that manufacturers or leasing companies might game the system by pre-registering cars or misallocating grants. The Department for Transport insists it’s on watch, requiring leasing firms to provide proof of a real end customer and reserving the right to claw back money from manufacturers caught playing fast and loose.

The Bottom Line

If you’re in the market for an EV under £37k, the Electric Car Grant could save you real money. But the scheme is complicated, exclusionary, and—as critics point out—designed as much to shape the market as to support buyers. By rewarding manufacturers with robust sustainability commitments and penalizing cars from carbon-heavy supply chains, the ECG is both carrot and stick.

In other words, it’s not the free-for-all discount that the old Plug-in Car Grant once was. Instead, it’s a sharp reminder that the UK wants its EV market not just bigger, but greener.

Source: Auto Express