
UK VAT law imposes strict restrictions on VAT recovery for business cars that also serve private purposes. Generally, businesses cannot claim input tax on buying a car unless the vehicle is exclusively for business use or falls into special categories such as taxis or pool cars.
This article, based on HMRC guidance, explains the conditions for full, partial or no recovery of VAT on purchased and leased cars (mixed use), covers fuel and repair costs, recordkeeping, and disposal adjustments, and answers common questions.
As a rule, input VAT on the purchase of a car is irrecoverable if the car can be used privately. If an owner or employee makes a car available for private use, they cannot claim VAT on its purchase price. The few exceptions are the following:
When claiming VAT on purchased cars under an exception, maintain evidence. For example, a “business-only” car should have a written policy banning private use, be parked on company premises, and be used on verifiable business trips. HMRC’s test focuses on availability for private use.
If a car first qualifies for VAT reclaim and is later used privately, a self-supply adjustment is needed. In that case, output VAT is due on the car’s current value at the change of use.
For information on company car tax bands, read: How Company Car Tax Bands Work and What You Will Pay
Leasing or renting a “qualifying car” incurs a special rule. If a business leases a car which it can also use privately, only 50% of the VAT on each lease or rental invoice can be reclaimed. This 50% block is a proxy for the private use of the vehicle. The business can reclaim the other 50%, subject to normal input tax rules (e.g., partial exemption).
Exceptions for leasing are similar to purchase:
All lease-related charges (rentals, extras, and optional services that aren’t separately invoiced) are subject to the 50% block. If maintenance is charged separately on the lease invoice, its VAT is fully recoverable; only the rental element gets 50% blocked.
If the business pays for vehicle repairs, servicing or parts, the VAT is recoverable as input tax, regardless of the vehicle’s private use. (Exception: a sole trader’s car used solely privately – then no recovery.) VAT on accessories fitted at the time of purchase is blocked if the car purchase was blocked.
When a business buys fuel, it can claim VAT but must account for the private use of that fuel. Two main methods exist:
Alternatively, a business may choose not to reclaim any VAT on fuel; in that case it makes no output adjustment on private fuel use.
Checklist: To maximise VAT recovery, businesses should:
Also Read: VAT on Car Hire in the UK – What Businesses Need to Know
| Vehicle / Expense Type | VAT recovery | Key conditions / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Purchased car (private+business) | 0% | Not recoverable if there’s any private availability. HMRC blocks VAT on mixed-use car purchases. |
| Purchased car (business-only) | 100% | Recoverable only if the car is exclusively for business use (never made available privately). |
| Pool car (shared vehicle) | 100% | Recoverable if kept on the premises, not allocated to an individual or kept at home. |
| Leased car (private use) | 50% | Only 50% of VAT on lease rentals is recoverable; the rest is blocked. |
| Leased car (taxi/hire/instruct.) | 100% | If used mainly for taxi hire, self-drive rental, or driving instruction, the full VAT on the lease can be reclaimed. |
| Road fuel (mixed use) | 100%*† | All fuel VAT can be reclaimed if using HMRC’s flat-rate fuel scale or accurate mileage split (*see note*). |
| Vehicle repairs/maintenance | 100% | It is recoverable as input tax when the business pays, regardless of any private use. |
† Fuel scale charge: Businesses can reclaim all VAT on road fuel and then use HMRC’s CO₂-based scale charge to account for private fuel use.
If your business sells a vehicle with recovered VAT, you must charge VAT on the sale price and issue a tax invoice. If VAT was not recovered on the purchase, the sale is exempt (no VAT). In either case, ensure that the disposal is handled in the tax period of sale.
At Apex Accountants, we guide businesses through complex VAT rules on company cars and fuel. Our services include:
Our team stays up to date with HMRC notices and UK VAT law, ensuring you reclaim every pound you’re entitled to while remaining fully compliant.
YAT recovery on cars and related expenses depends on use and status. Companies should plan vehicle use and keep detailed records to support any claims. Following HMRC’s guidance can prevent common errors and unlock legitimate VAT savings.
No – if the car is available for private use by anyone, the input VAT for its purchase is blocked. Only exclusively business-use cars qualify for full recovery.
When you lease (or hire) a car for mixed use, you can reclaim only 50% of the VAT on each rental payment. This rule assumes the other 50% covers private use. The remaining 50% of VAT is irrecoverable.
VAT on vehicle repairs and servicing is always recoverable if the business pays. For fuel, a business can reclaim VAT on purchases but must adjust for personal use: either use the HMRC fuel scale charge (reclaim all VAT and then pay output VAT on private fuel) or apportion by mileage.
HMRC examines the car’s availability. A business-only car must never be used privately, must remain on business premises, and must not be assigned to one person. Written policies or logs can support these guidelines.
If you’ve reclaimed VAT on the car (say a pool car), you must charge VAT on its selling price and account for output tax. The sale is exempt (no VAT charge) if you did not reclaim VAT at the time of purchase.
In a recent case in Glasgow, two restaurant owners were found guilty of carrying out nearly a £700,000 VAT fraud...
Starbucks UK’s tax credit situation highlights that sales growth does not necessarily lead to tax liabilities. Despite reporting a turnover...
The UK’s new packaging EPR rules (often called the “packaging tax”) took effect on 1 January 2025. Any company with...
Close companies (broadly, those controlled by five or fewer shareholders or participators) and their owners have new reporting requirements under...
UK VAT law imposes strict restrictions on VAT recovery for business cars that also serve private purposes. Generally, businesses cannot...
In the UK, most company cars (and vans) used for private purposes fall under benefit-in-kind taxation. The value is calculated...
What was the HMRC v Colchester institute VAT dispute about? Colchester Institute — a further education college in Essex —...
In the 2025/26 tax year, VCT fundraising in the UK reached a total of £918 million – about 3% more...
In the United Kingdom, “new financial year” can mean two things. The government’s financial year typically runs from 1 April,...
A rise in dividend tax rates for the 2026/27 tax year and the continued freeze on personal allowances have narrowed...