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14 January 26 Press releases

"Wealth divide" shuts poorer households out of EV market

  • Autotrader’s No Driver Left Behind 2026 Report finds affordability pressures shutting out households earning less than £40,000

  • Less than half of lower income households will consider an electric car – compared to 84% earning above £40,000[1]

  • “Two-tier” car market where “driveway divide is no longer clear cut” warning from Autotrader’s Ian Plummer

 

London, January 14: Lower-income households risk being left behind in the UK’s transition to electric vehicles (EVs), which could result in a structural divide in who benefits from cheaper running costs and cleaner local air, according to the latest No Driver Left Behind 2026 Report from Autotrader.

Despite rapid growth in EV adoption and a maturing used EV market, households earning below £40,000 remain significantly less likely to consider an EV than higher-income households. The Report from Autotrader, the UK’s largest automotive marketplace, identifies affordability and lack of awareness as the primary barriers to adoption.

The Report follows a Budget which threatens to make EVs more expensive from 2028, with proposals for a new pay-per-mile road tax adding to running costs as Labour attempts to tackle the reduced fuel duty income. Nearly half of drivers (47%) said they were less likely to go electric following the Budget, compared to one third (34%) unchanged in views.[2]

Headline findings from the Report include an income divide where only 48% of households earning under £40,000 would consider an EV for their next car, compared with 84% among those earning above that threshold.

This, despite the Report also revealing that 70% of lower income households have a driveway,[3]suggesting off-street parking is not the clear-cut indicator of electric consideration, or likelihood to buy, as previously thought. For those who can charge at home, average annual running cost savings could reach £1,500,[4] whilst drivers without this option face structurally high energy prices. Despite these potential savings, the new data shows many buyers with driveways may never get to the test-drive stage due to other factors.

Almost two fifths of lower-income households buy cars priced £5,000 or less, yet just 1% of used EVs fall in that bracket today.[5] Lower-income families are far less likely to know someone who drives an EV or to have driven one themselves, reinforcing perceptions of high cost and inconvenience.

With the UK’s median household income around £36,600 in 2024[6], these barriers are hitting the average family hardest and risk creating a structural divide in who benefits from cheaper running costs and cleaner local air. Lower-income households report limited hands-on exposure to EVs, so their perceptions of barriers like purchase price and charging convenience remain higher.

Research found that certain demographics within the lower household income group were more likely to consider electric, for example younger people and those living in urban environments.[7]

The Report concludes that without targeted action now on affordability, improving charging fairness by cutting VAT on public charging points, and cutting red tape for those without public charging, millions of drivers will remain excluded from the transition.

 

We’re at a pivotal moment for the UK’s EV transition but there is still a lingering wealth divide. This new data also busts the myth that those who can charge at home will definitely switch – the driveway divide is no longer so clear cut. If lower income households can’t access affordable vehicles, we risk creating a two-tier system where the benefits of cleaner, cheaper motoring accrue to those already better off. The path forward is clear: more choice at lower price points, greater transparency on battery health metrics, and practical charging solutions for people without driveways. Do that, and we unlock EVs for everyone - not just the few.

Key spokesperson

Ian Plummer

Chief Customer Officer

CONNECT

“For the majority of people, charging an EV is affordable. But we need to make sure that the cost of public charging is not a blocker for the millions who don’t have the option to charge at home. The EV charging industry is committed to delivering affordable charging for all and constantly introducing new innovative ways to bring prices down, but the sector has been hit by a number of policy decisions that have sent costs soaring. The government has the opportunity to address this in its forthcoming review into the costs of public charging. It should be looking at equalising VAT with home charging, addressing surging charge point standing charges and including EVs in its renewable fuel credit scheme to help making driving an EV the cost-effective option for everyone.” 

Vicky Read, Chief Executive, ChargeUK

[1] Autotrader No Driver Left Behind Report January 2026.

[2] Autotrader research conducted by Find Out Now, nationally representative survey 2,034, December 2025.

[3] Autotrader No Driver Left Behind Research 2025, 2,602 respondents nationally representative survey.

[4] From Electric cars: The Facts, updated January 2026. Source: Department for Transport. 2025.

[5] Autotrader No Driver Left Behind Report January 2026 including Autotrader site data.

[6]https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/personalandhouseholdfinances/incomeandwealth/bulletins/householddisposableincomeandinequality/financialyearending2024 <accessed Nov_25>

[7] 72% of 17-34 year olds with HHI under £40k would consider electric, 73% of HHI under £40k living in urban environments would consider.

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