Further to the Charge My Street Limited case, which we considered here HMRC has published Policy Paper Revenue and Customs Brief 4 (2026): VAT liability of supplies of electricity from public electric vehicle charge points.
This paper sets out the VAT treatment of supplies of electricity from public EV charging points.
HMRC’s position remains that charging electric vehicles at public charge points is standard rated for VAT.
Supplies of fuel and power to a domestic premises are subject to the reduced rate of VAT at 5%. HMRC’s long-standing policy is that electric vehicle charge points located in public areas do not qualify as domestic premises and the standard rate of VAT applies to the supply of electricity at these locations.
The First-tier Tribunal found in favour of Charge My Street Limited. It concluded that Note 5(g) of Item 1 of Group 1 of Schedule 7A to the VAT Act 1994 covers supplies of electricity to an identified person at any identifiable premises, provided the total supplied does not exceed 1,000 kWh in a calendar month. The FTT clarified there is no additional requirement for the premises to be owned or controlled by the person receiving the supply, nor do the premises need to be buildings. This means locations such as public car parks may be included. The FTT decided that supplies of EV charging at public charging stations fell within the de minimis limit for supplies of electricity, and so were deemed to be for domestic use and, accordingly, subject to the reduced rate.
HMRC has applied for permission to appeal the First-tier Tribunal’s decision.