‘Easier than pensions’: why electric cars are the hot company perk

  • 📰 IrishTimes
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 42 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 23%
  • Publisher: 98%

Electric-Vehicles Nouvelles

Climate-Change

Salary sacrifice schemes provide cheaper access to EVs

Mercedes-Benz's Vision EQXX concept car, an electric vehicle that proposes to drive 745 miles on one charge. UK employers are increasingly allowing staff to lease electric vehicles for their personal use through salary sacrifice schemes, which means they can make big tax and national insurance savings.In decades past, the company car was a symbol of professional status, prized by employees as a visible marker of seniority.

Increasingly popular are leasing and personal contract plan pay-monthly schemes, through which motorists finance the value a vehicle loses over three or so years rather than the total cost of the car. Some of the most popular take-up of salary sacrifice schemes has been in the public sector, particularly the NHS

A salary sacrifice scheme allows an employee to deduct a monthly sum from their gross pay – so before tax and national insurance – to cover the cost of leasing the car. This reduces their taxable salary so cuts the amount of tax and insurance they pay. The UK government introduced a 0 per cent BIK rate for EVs in 2020 to encourage take-up through work schemes for one year. The 2 per cent BIK rate will rise to 3 per cent in April next year, then again by a further percentage point each April until 2028.

Nous avons résumé cette actualité afin que vous puissiez la lire rapidement. Si l'actualité vous intéresse, vous pouvez lire le texte intégral ici. Lire la suite:

 /  🏆 3. in FR
 

Merci pour votre commentaire. Votre commentaire sera publié après examen.

France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités

Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.

Car makers renew investment in hybrids, as EV appetites waneSales of EVs in Ireland have dropped 14.2 per cent in the first three months of the year, even as the new car market increased overall
La source: IrishTimes - 🏆 3. / 98 Lire la suite »