" I travel over 350 miles at least twice a year and 4-12 miles a week in between."
That's neither 800 nor 8,000 miles a year, but still very low. With a budget of £25,000 you could get a new or nearly-new small car, say a Yaris Hybrid, and hire a bigger diesel car if you need to for the long trips. You'd still be in pocket and pay a lot less to the Government in both VED and fuel duty.
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" I travel over 350 miles at least twice a year and 4-12 miles a week in between."
That's neither 800 nor 8,000 miles a year, but still very low. With a budget of £25,000 you could get a new or nearly-new small car, say a Yaris Hybrid, and hire a bigger diesel car if you need to for the long trips. You'd still be in pocket and pay a lot less to the Government in both VED and fuel duty.
I wouldn't get too hung up on the OP's annual mileage. It's obviously extremely low.
Personally I wouldn't consider a hybrid for this use. I've seen it reported on here that hybrids which get little use can have the main vehicle battery go flat through lack of use (even if the hybrid battery is charged). If the main battery is flat the vehicle won't go. I would go for a petrol engine.
I don't see a hybrid would be of any benefit with the 350+ miles longer trips. In any case as the annual mileage is so low the MPG is pretty much irrelevant.
In response to the OP's previous replies, I do understand that you need a car and you want one car that can do everything, without dealing with hire cars for your longer trips. Personally I would be looking at less premium cars, as they are cheaper to buy, repair and have lower VED.
From your replies though, you want a premium brand. That's fine, it's your money and at the end of the day, you should buy something you like.
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Don't jump from pan to fire - BMW is still thought of as 'BigMoneyWorries by some'. I also do a low annual mileage and for the last thirty years have run well researched old Audis (100 2.0E; A6 2.8SE; A8 W12), none of which generated any big repair bills and were simply serviced by me. If I were you I would consider a well cared for Audi A6 Avant or All-road if your expeditions take into rough territory. If you are lucky, you might find a cheap old good example registered before March 2006 - the VED is only £325 for the largest gas guzzler. They are galvanised (and the A8 is all aluminium) so unlike old bimmers & MBs, they last well.
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Buy a car for £25k - 10 years later you will have lost £20k + in depreciation - £2k pa. Add on insurance, servicing, a few repairs/replacements and it will be £3k +.pa.
Very low mileage is as damaging to a car as high mileage - albeit for different reasons.
If you are unconcerned by this, then a £25k Merc, BMW, Audi etc is just an indulgence, not a rational purchase. So why worry about VED??
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Sorry, I have clearly either not explained myself properly or fail to understand how the new VED rates work.
Take the example of my current E-Class. List price almost 10 years ago was around £32,000. In 2019, the equivalent model had a list price of £39,000, being increased to over £40k in 2020. I had made the assumption that if I sourced a car with a MY where the list price in that production year was less than £40k, I would pay £165pa in VED, rather than £475.
With the example of the BMW 520d M Sport Touring, I was told the original list price of the 19/69 plate car was £44k, even although it was for sale for only £25k. I was trying to ask on here which year would have had an original price tag of just under £40k e.g. 19-plate, 18-plate or 17-plate, and therefore qualify for a lower rate of VED.
I am now having doubts! Are all makes/models since April 2017 charged at the higher VED rate if the CURRENT list price for the LATEST model of the SAME car is over £40k??
bazomis
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Sorry, I have clearly either not explained myself properly or fail to understand how the new VED rates work.
Take the example of my current E-Class. List price almost 10 years ago was around £32,000. In 2019, the equivalent model had a list price of £39,000, being increased to over £40k in 2020. I had made the assumption that if I sourced a car with a MY where the list price in that production year was less than £40k, I would pay £165pa in VED, rather than £475.
With the example of the BMW 520d M Sport Touring, I was told the original list price of the 19/69 plate car was £44k, even although it was for sale for only £25k. I was trying to ask on here which year would have had an original price tag of just under £40k e.g. 19-plate, 18-plate or 17-plate, and therefore qualify for a lower rate of VED.
I am now having doubts! Are all makes/models since April 2017 charged at the higher VED rate if the CURRENT list price for the LATEST model of the SAME car is over £40k??
bazomis
No - if you're buying a 2017 car, it depends whether the list price in 2017 was above/below £40,000 - bear in mind that a specific car may have been under £40,000 list price but may have been optioned up above £40,000 so will pay the higher VED for the full 5 years.
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So, back to my original question then - which year was a basic BMW 520d M Sport Touring (with metallic paint) last list priced at just under £40k?
And is there a known list available anywhere of all makes/models/variants/MYs and their original list prices?
bazomis
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So, back to my original question then - which year was a basic BMW 520d M Sport Touring (with metallic paint) last list priced at just under £40k?
And is there a known list available anywhere of all makes/models/variants/MYs and their original list prices?
bazomis
That may not be too helpful as virtually all premium cars are sold with some options, even those bought from "stock".
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I am now having doubts! Are all makes/models since April 2017 charged at the higher VED rate if the CURRENT list price for the LATEST model of the SAME car is over £40k??
No it is not blanket. It is car specific at the time of first registration, so logically the further you go back to 2017 the cheaper the basic list price. You will just have to search out likely purchases and ask. If you were to move away from diesel you may well find that the list prices start lower and give you more option to find a later car. Some 520i petrols may be a good bet. If you are used to large executive cars then stay with them
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If you find a car you like simply go to www.vehicleenquiry.service.gov.uk and put the registration number in.
It will tell you when the additional rate applies to (if, indeed, it applies at all).
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Thanks very much. That's useful to know for future reference. I'll try it as soon as the DVLA get the site running again...
Sorry, there is a problem with the service
The DVLA service that you are trying to access is currently unavailable, please try again later.
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Try this one:
www.gov.uk/get-vehicle-information-from-dvla
Both links working now but to see the tax rates, you need to have the ref number from the V5 so unless the garage is willing to give you that over the phone (unlikely) then you are back to square one. FWIW, I believe your garage is wrong, it is the original list price of that particular car when it was purchased that the VED is based on, not the price now.
The govt screwed up by giving cars with low CO2 emissions low/zero VED for years (some of which, i.e.VW, didn't even genuinely have low emissions) and they are now trying to claw some of that back with what is effectively a premium car tax. I am having the same dilemma as I am looking at Volvo V60s and V90s. The V90 has a better spec and seems better used value, but they were often over £40k list price when new.
I think your options are:
- Just suck it up and add it to the overall cost of running a large, premium car. Setup a direct debit to pay it automatically and shred the letter straight away when it comes in, whilst still grumbling about it!
- Buy a pre-2017 model
- Go for a cheaper marque
- Lease (i.e. actual lease, not PCP) where the VED is included in the lease cost. You always have a car that is in warranty and doesn't need an MOT. However, it will probably cost you more in the long run than stumping up the extra VED for a few years.
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If you enter a post-2017 car which is subject to the new tax rates it has a line which says when the higher rate applies until which you do not need to enter the V5 to get.
It is pretty simply on post-2017 cars - it can only be one of two rates so you don't really need the V5 to tell you what it is.
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If you enter a post-2017 car which is subject to the new tax rates it has a line which says when the higher rate applies until which you do not need to enter the V5 to get.
It is pretty simply on post-2017 cars - it can only be one of two rates so you don't really need the V5 to tell you what it is.
Aha, good spot, thanks, I admit I just skimmed over the vehicle details as I was looking for something with a pound sign! Just checked on a 2018 V90 and it appears as pasted below. So that would be an extra £1300 in VED over those 4 years. Not an insignificant sum, but viewed in the context of the overall cost then it doesn't seem worth getting too bothered about.
"Additional Rate applicable until31 July 2024"
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Just tried both links again. First still didn't work for me but second did and can identify premium VED cars with just the registration number because of this data response when I entered a 19-plate car
Additional Rate applicable until
31 October 2024
Many thanks
Bazomis
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Spent a large part of my morning plugging possible suitable vehicles for sale registration numbers in to this site, only to find that all of you on here were correct - you cannot realistically buy any 'premium' vehicle that isn't older than 2017 MY without the additional VED rate applying.
Might keep mine for another 10 years and spend an extra £300 a year on repairs instead of coughing up the extra tax!
bazomis
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