Vehicle tax changes - effective Oct 14

spjmorris

Well-known user
Apr 10, 2012
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2,271
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Updates and advice on abolition of the vehicle tax disc and paying it by Direct Debit.


From 1 October 2014, the paper tax disc will no longer be issued and required to be displayed on a vehicle windscreen. DVLA holds a digital record of taxed and untaxed vehicles. If you have any remaining months left on your current paper tax disc from 1 October 2014, you can either remove the tax disc from your vehicle or display the disc until it expires.

Checking the tax status of a vehicle

You can check the tax status of your vehicle online (including rental vehicles). DVLA will still notify you when your vehicle tax is due for renewal. You will still need to renew your vehicle tax if your vehicle is exempt eg historic tax class.

Buying or selling a vehicle

When buying a used vehicle you will be able to use the V5C/2 - new keeper supplement to pay vehicle tax at a Post Office branch, along with the MOT certificate (if applicable) and fee. From 1 October 2014 you will also be able to pay vehicle tax using the V5C/2 online or by phone . When selling a vehicle to a new vehicle keeper, the vehicle tax will no longer be transferable. Vehicle tax will end when a vehicle is sold and the new keeper will need to get the vehicle taxed immediately before the vehicle can be used.

Paying vehicle tax by Direct Debit

From 1 November 2014 you can pay your vehicle tax online by Direct debit either:
annually
6 monthly
monthly
Whichever option you choose, the payments will continue automatically until you tell DVLA to stop taking them or you cancel the Direct Debit with your bank. If your vehicle needs to be taxed from 1 November 2014, you can set up a Direct Debit when paying online for vehicle tax. DVLA will forward your instructions to your bank. If you have been paying your tax annually or every 6 months, you will get a refund for any full calendar months left on the tax period when you tell DVLA you no longer require tax.

When the Direct Debit scheme can’t be used

Paying by Direct Debit will not be available to:
first registration vehicles
fleet schemes
HGVs (paying the Road User Levy)

Declaring your vehicle is off the road (SORN)

DVLA will automatically stop taking Direct Debit payments from your bank once you declare the vehicle off-road (SORN).

Source: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/vehicle-tax-changes
 
I read that earlier too, Steve.
I couldn't see any mention of having to pay extra if you do it monthly like you do now if you pay it every six months.
 
About bloody time. If they're going to bum motorists over a barrel, at least make it less painful and do it monthly.

Oh wait, that's not right is it? :eek:
 
Interesting paragraph about selling. Having road tax already in place was an incentive when buying a car. Shame to lose it.
 
Interesting paragraph about selling. Having road tax already in place was an incentive when buying a car. Shame to lose it.

Don't think it'll make a huge difference. The tax ending will presumably be triggered by the new V5 being issued so when you buy a car, in terms of the police computers, it will still be taxed. So you will still have a few days leeway to tax it all over again. Unless I've completely misunderstood that is :LOL:
 
But if everything is linked as we are led to beleive, surely that can't happen, or at least it shouldn't be able to?

Shouldn't be able to, no. That was the reason they gave when they brought in that stupid rule of insuring a car you are not even using, and now have to SORN. I was getting royally screwed when I bought the Zetec Fourby and had to insure the green C2 too, even though I wasn't driving the bloody thing and it was lying idle.
 
That's exactly it, as soon as you sell your car you notify DVLA, flags up on their system that the vehicle is untaxed, to renew you need to prove you have mot and insurance.
No escape, this is a good thing surely?
 
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That's exactly it, as soon as you sell your car you notify DVLA, flags up on their system that the vehicle is untaxed, to renew you need to prove you have mot and tax..

No escape, this is a good thing surely?

The legality side of it i agree with, but the government are still royally screwing all motorists of road tax revenue at every change of ownership.
 
Can't believe it's still being reffered to as 'vehicle tax'.

Whatever happens somebody will "p*ss 'n' moan" all day long about it so......

What was the source of this information?