Budget 2020: Fuel duty to remain frozen

Published 11 March 2020

Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, has announced that fuel duty will remain frozen for the tenth consecutive year.

Sunak claims the average motorist saves up to £1200 since 2010 because of the freeze compared to scrapped plans for raising fuel duty. Ahead of the Budget 2020, the Chancellor was reportedly considering a 2p-per-litre tax increase on petrol and diesel.

Over the past few weeks, both petrol and diesel prices have fallen due to the falling price of oil. These wholesale savings are slowly being passed onto customers by supermarkets. Petrol currently sits at 122.2p-per-litre, while diesel is 126.3p-per-litre, according to average fuel prices collated by the RAC Foundation.

The cuts in fuel costs come as the global price of oil has consistently, albeit slowly, been dropping since 6 January 2020 with the price of a barrel slipping under $50 last month for the first time in a year, impacted somewhat by the drop in demand caused by the outbreak of Coronavirus.

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RAC head of policy, Nicholas Lyes, said: “We welcome the Chancellor’s freeze in fuel duty which will be a relief to drivers up and down the country. 

"While the Chancellor might have been tempted to increase duty, the reality is that for millions this would have simply increased their everyday driving costs and done nothing to encourage them to switch to cleaner vehicles."

Due to the fall in fuel prices in recent months, many experts expected to see an rise in fuel duty. However, the freeze comes despite a push by Treasury to hike the tax, which already stands at 58p per litre (a considerable amount of the price you pay at the pumps).

Freezing fuel duty for another full year will cost the Treasury a massive £800 million.

Comments

conman    on 12 March 2020

It's about time they scrapped this stupid fuel duty. It's not been increased since 2010 and they already rob you of 58p. per litre, then tax you on that (VAT) so basically we are paying tax on tax. Combine it into the original tax and lets get away from this big favour the Government does us every year, by not increasing it. .

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