Tax
Company Car Tax (Benefit in Kind) Guide — BIK Rates Explained
How company car tax works in the UK, BIK rates for 2025/26 and 2026/27, how to calculate your tax bill, and whether a company car or car allowance saves you more.
A company car is a taxable benefit. Here’s how the tax is calculated, the latest BIK rates, and how to work out whether a company car or car allowance is better for you.
How Company Car Tax Works
| Step |
Detail |
| 1 |
Find the P11D value of the car (list price + options, minus first-year registration fee and road tax) |
| 2 |
Find the BIK percentage based on the car’s CO2 emissions |
| 3 |
Calculate the taxable benefit: P11D value × BIK % |
| 4 |
Apply your income tax rate to the taxable benefit |
| 5 |
That’s your annual company car tax bill |
Annual tax = P11D value × BIK % × Your tax rate
BIK Percentage Rates — Electric and Low Emission
| CO2 emissions (g/km) |
Electric range |
2024/25 |
2025/26 |
2026/27 |
2027/28 |
| 0 (pure electric) |
N/A |
2% |
3% |
4% |
5% |
| 1–50 |
130+ miles |
2% |
3% |
4% |
5% |
| 1–50 |
70–129 miles |
5% |
5% |
7% |
8% |
| 1–50 |
40–69 miles |
8% |
8% |
10% |
11% |
| 1–50 |
30–39 miles |
12% |
12% |
14% |
15% |
| 1–50 |
Under 30 miles |
14% |
14% |
16% |
17% |
BIK Rates — Petrol and Diesel
| CO2 emissions (g/km) |
2025/26 BIK % |
2026/27 BIK % |
| 51–54 |
15% |
17% |
| 55–59 |
16% |
18% |
| 60–64 |
17% |
19% |
| 65–69 |
18% |
20% |
| 70–74 |
19% |
21% |
| 75–79 |
20% |
22% |
| 80–84 |
21% |
23% |
| 85–89 |
22% |
24% |
| 90–94 |
23% |
25% |
| 95–99 |
24% |
26% |
| 100–104 |
25% |
27% |
| 105–109 |
26% |
28% |
| 110–114 |
27% |
29% |
| 115–119 |
28% |
30% |
| 120–124 |
29% |
31% |
| 125–129 |
30% |
32% |
| 130–134 |
31% |
33% |
| 135–139 |
32% |
34% |
| 140–144 |
33% |
35% |
| 145–149 |
34% |
36% |
| 150+ |
37% |
37% |
Diesel supplement: Most diesel cars that don’t meet RDE2 testing standards have a 4% surcharge added (still capped at 37%).
Tax Calculation Examples
Example 1: Electric Car
| Detail |
Amount |
| Car |
Tesla Model 3 |
| P11D value |
£42,000 |
| CO2 emissions |
0 g/km |
| BIK rate (2026/27) |
4% |
| Taxable benefit |
£42,000 × 4% = £1,680 |
| Tax (20% taxpayer) |
£1,680 × 20% = £336/year (£28/month) |
| Tax (40% taxpayer) |
£1,680 × 40% = £672/year (£56/month) |
Example 2: Petrol Car
| Detail |
Amount |
| Car |
BMW 3 Series (petrol) |
| P11D value |
£38,000 |
| CO2 emissions |
135 g/km |
| BIK rate (2026/27) |
34% |
| Taxable benefit |
£38,000 × 34% = £12,920 |
| Tax (20% taxpayer) |
£12,920 × 20% = £2,584/year (£215/month) |
| Tax (40% taxpayer) |
£12,920 × 40% = £5,168/year (£431/month) |
Example 3: Plug-in Hybrid
| Detail |
Amount |
| Car |
BMW 330e (PHEV) |
| P11D value |
£43,000 |
| CO2 emissions |
32 g/km |
| Electric range |
60 miles |
| BIK rate (2026/27) |
10% |
| Taxable benefit |
£43,000 × 10% = £4,300 |
| Tax (20% taxpayer) |
£4,300 × 20% = £860/year (£72/month) |
| Tax (40% taxpayer) |
£4,300 × 40% = £1,720/year (£143/month) |
Company Car vs Car Allowance
| Factor |
Company car |
Car allowance |
| Tax payable |
BIK tax (can be very low for EVs) |
Taxed as income (20/40/45%) |
| National Insurance |
No employee NIC on BIK |
Employee NIC payable on allowance |
| Insurance |
Usually provided by employer |
You arrange and pay |
| Maintenance/servicing |
Usually provided |
You pay |
| Fuel |
Often a fuel card (taxable benefit) or you pay |
You pay |
| Choice of car |
Limited to company fleet/approved list |
Any car you want |
| Mileage |
Business mileage often covered separately |
Claim mileage at approved rates (45p/mile first 10,000) |
Comparison Example
| Element |
Company car (EV, £40,000) |
£6,000 car allowance |
| BIK tax (40% taxpayer) |
£40,000 × 4% × 40% = £640/year |
N/A |
| Income tax on allowance |
N/A |
£6,000 × 40% = £2,400/year |
| Employee NIC on allowance |
N/A |
£6,000 × 2% = £120/year |
| Insurance |
Employer pays |
~£600/year |
| Servicing |
Employer pays |
~£500/year |
| Net cost to you |
£640/year |
~£3,620/year |
For electric vehicles, the company car is dramatically cheaper.
Salary Sacrifice for Electric Vehicles
| Feature |
Detail |
| How it works |
You give up (sacrifice) part of your gross salary in exchange for an electric company car |
| Tax saving |
You pay BIK at just 4% (2026/27) instead of income tax + NIC on the sacrificed salary |
| Who benefits |
Both you and your employer save on NIC |
| Example |
Sacrifice £500/month gross → car costs you ~£335/month net (after tax/NIC savings) |
| Risk |
If you sacrifice below the NMW threshold, the arrangement may not be permitted |
Company Fuel Benefit
If your employer provides free fuel for private use:
| Detail |
2025/26 |
2026/27 |
| Fuel benefit charge (multiplier) |
£27,800 |
TBC |
| Tax calculation |
£27,800 × BIK % × tax rate |
|
| Example: 28% BIK, 40% taxpayer |
£27,800 × 28% × 40% = £3,114/year |
|
Tip: Unless you do significant private mileage, the fuel benefit is often not worth it — consider opting out and paying for your own fuel.
Your P11D
| Detail |
Information |
| What it is |
A form your employer submits to HMRC listing your benefits in kind |
| When |
By 6 July after the end of the tax year |
| What it shows |
P11D value of your car, BIK percentage, fuel benefit, and other benefits |
| Impact |
HMRC adjusts your tax code to collect the extra tax through PAYE |
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