Road Tax Calculator UK 2017
Estimate UK Vehicle Excise Duty (VED) based on 2017 tax rules for cars registered before and after 1 April 2017.
This tool is an estimate for standard passenger cars and does not cover every edge case (commercial vehicles, historic classifications, or legal exemptions).
Expert Guide: How the UK Road Tax Calculator 2017 Works
The phrase “road tax” is still widely used in the UK, but the official name is Vehicle Excise Duty (VED). If you are trying to calculate road tax under the UK 2017 rules, the most important point is this: there are effectively two systems you need to understand. Cars first registered before 1 April 2017 largely follow CO2 emissions bands throughout their tax life. Cars first registered on or after 1 April 2017 follow a split model with a first-year rate based on CO2 and then a flat standard annual rate from year 2, plus a premium supplement for expensive cars in applicable years.
This distinction matters because many drivers accidentally apply the wrong tax structure. For example, a car with 120 g/km CO2 emissions can have very different annual VED depending on whether it was registered in March 2017 or April 2017. That is why this calculator asks for registration period first. It is the most important input in the process.
Why 2017 Was a Major Turning Point
In the years before April 2017, VED was strongly linked to emissions bands for most passenger cars. Lower CO2 generally meant lower tax, and very low emissions could mean no annual tax in some bands. The post-April 2017 system changed that model for new registrations. It still uses emissions in year one, but it moves most vehicles to a standard annual payment after the first year. This was designed to simplify the system and stabilise tax revenue as newer engines became cleaner.
In practice, buyers and owners needed to understand four key variables:
- When the vehicle was first registered.
- The car’s official CO2 figure in g/km.
- The fuel category (petrol, diesel, alternative fuel, or zero-emission electric).
- Whether list price crosses the £40,000 expensive-car threshold.
Post-1 April 2017 Cars: First-Year Rate and Standard Rate
For cars registered on or after 1 April 2017, the first year tax rate is based on CO2 bands. From year 2 onward, most cars move to a standard annual rate, with a discounted standard rate for qualifying alternative fuel vehicles and a zero standard rate for zero-emission cars. Expensive cars pay an additional supplement in applicable years.
| CO2 Emissions (g/km) | 2017 First-Year VED Rate |
|---|---|
| 0 | £0 |
| 1 to 50 | £10 |
| 51 to 75 | £25 |
| 76 to 90 | £100 |
| 91 to 100 | £120 |
| 101 to 110 | £140 |
| 111 to 130 | £160 |
| 131 to 150 | £200 |
| 151 to 170 | £500 |
| 171 to 190 | £800 |
| 191 to 225 | £1,200 |
| 226 to 255 | £1,700 |
| Over 255 | £2,000 |
For year 2 onward under the 2017 rules, a common baseline was £140 standard rate for petrol or diesel and £130 for alternative fuel vehicles, with zero-emission cars at £0 standard rate. If the list price was over £40,000, an additional supplement applied in applicable years, significantly changing medium-term ownership costs.
Pre-1 April 2017 Cars: CO2 Band Driven Annual VED
For cars registered before 1 April 2017, annual tax was generally determined by the emissions band each year. That means the tax remains tied to the car’s CO2 class rather than switching to a broad flat rate model for later years.
| Band | CO2 Emissions (g/km) | Typical 2017 Annual VED |
|---|---|---|
| A | Up to 100 | £0 |
| B | 101 to 110 | £20 |
| C | 111 to 120 | £30 |
| D | 121 to 130 | £110 |
| E | 131 to 140 | £130 |
| F | 141 to 150 | £140 |
| G | 151 to 165 | £180 |
| H | 166 to 175 | £220 |
| I | 176 to 185 | £260 |
| J | 186 to 200 | £300 |
| K | 201 to 225 | £325 |
| L | 226 to 255 | £555 |
| M | Over 255 | £570 |
How to Use a Road Tax Calculator Properly
Good tax estimates come from good input data. Before calculating, gather your V5C details or manufacturer specs. The most important figure is official CO2 emissions in g/km. Guessing this value can move the estimate by hundreds of pounds in first-year post-2017 cases.
Step-by-Step Process
- Select whether the vehicle is pre-April 2017 or post-April 2017 first registration.
- Enter exact CO2 emissions.
- Select fuel type accurately, especially if it is alternative fuel or fully electric.
- For post-2017 cars, decide whether you are calculating first-year or standard annual payment.
- Enter list price and identify if expensive-car supplement applies.
- Review the breakdown and not just the final number.
Common User Mistakes That Cause Wrong Results
- Using purchase year instead of first registration year.
- Applying first-year rates to used vehicles already beyond year one.
- Ignoring the expensive-car supplement when list price exceeds £40,000.
- Confusing mild-hybrid or self-charging hybrid cars with zero-emission electric cars.
- Using unofficial CO2 estimates from sales adverts instead of official data.
Worked Examples for Real-World Planning
Example 1: 2018 Petrol Hatchback, 119 g/km, £24,000 List Price
Because registration is after 1 April 2017, first year is based on emissions. At 119 g/km, first-year tax falls in the 111 to 130 bracket, giving a £160 first-year rate. In standard years, the car typically moves to £140 annual rate if petrol. No expensive supplement applies because list price is below £40,000.
Example 2: 2016 Diesel Saloon, 129 g/km
This is pre-2017 registration, so annual VED is band-based. At 129 g/km, the vehicle falls in band D (121 to 130), typically around £110 annual tax under 2017 schedules. It does not switch into the post-2017 flat standard model.
Example 3: 2019 Hybrid SUV, 149 g/km, £45,000 List Price
Registration is post-2017. First year at 149 g/km is in the 131 to 150 bracket, creating £200 first-year VED. In standard years, qualifying alternative fuel cars had a reduced standard figure relative to petrol and diesel. Because list price exceeds £40,000, expensive-car supplement applies in the relevant period, which significantly increases effective annual tax during those years.
Budgeting Beyond Road Tax: Why VED Is Only One Part of Cost
VED is important, but it is one of several ownership costs. For buyers comparing cars from 2016 to 2019, it helps to combine tax with fuel spend, insurance grouping, servicing schedules, and depreciation. A car with lower VED may still cost more overall if fuel economy is poor or if insurance risk is high.
As a practical approach, keep a simple annual running-cost model:
- VED estimate from this calculator.
- Fuel spend based on realistic annual mileage.
- Insurance quote using your actual postcode and no-claims profile.
- Maintenance reserve for wear-and-tear items.
- Expected depreciation over your ownership period.
Official Sources You Should Check Before Paying
Always validate your estimate against official UK government information. Rates can change over time, and special cases exist. Use these authoritative references:
- GOV.UK: Tax your vehicle
- GOV.UK: Vehicle tax rate tables
- UK Legislation: Vehicle Excise and Registration Act framework
Why Official Confirmation Matters
Government tables and legal references are the final authority. A calculator gives a planning estimate, but your exact payable amount can depend on registration details, amendments introduced after policy updates, and technical vehicle categorisation held by DVLA records. If you are buying a vehicle and tax cost is central to your budget, check both V5C information and GOV.UK records before completing the transaction.
Final Advice for Drivers and Buyers
If you only remember one rule, remember this: registration date controls the system. For pre-April 2017 vehicles, think “CO2 band annual tax.” For post-April 2017 vehicles, think “CO2-based first year, then standard annual rate, plus expensive-car supplement when relevant.” This mental model prevents most calculation errors.
Use the calculator above as a decision-support tool when comparing used cars, evaluating ownership costs, or checking dealer claims. Keep copies of your assumptions, especially CO2 and list-price data, so you can audit your estimate later. Tax policy can evolve, but structured inputs and official verification will keep your budgeting accurate and reliable.