- Reforms to the Motability scheme to ensure fairness
for taxpayer, whilst still supporting disabled people's mobility,
come into force today.
- New tax rules on Motability car leases due to save taxpayers
£1 billion by 2030.
- Follows removal of luxury vehicles - including BMW
and Mercedes - from the scheme after the Budget.
Reforms to the Motability scheme come into force today,
saving taxpayers £1 billion by 2030 while protecting disabled
people's access to cars, scooters and powered
wheelchairs.
VAT will now apply to advance payments - the
optional one-off top-up paid by customers who choose a more
expensive vehicle - and Insurance Premium Tax will apply to new
leases.
Both changes were announced at the Autumn Budget
and are part of a wider package of welfare reforms set
to save nearly £2 billion by the end of the
decade.
The scheme was set up to help disabled people stay mobile and
independent, and these changes ensure it continues to do exactly
that, while delivering genuine value for taxpayers.
Disabled people on enhanced mobility benefits will continue to
receive their full award of £77.05 per week and remain eligible
for the scheme, with vehicles still available that require no
advance payment, meaning people can access a car using their
benefit alone.
Work and Pensions Secretary MP said:
"Today's changes are driven by the fairness that underpins this
Government - fairness for the taxpayer, fairness for disabled
people, and fairness for the country.
"We're saving £1 billion of taxpayer money by removing
VAT relief from some new Motability leases, whilst
ensuring the scheme still supports disabled people's mobility and
independence.
"We're building a fair welfare system and an economy that works
for everyone."
The reforms are part of a wider government drive to fix the
broken welfare system it inherited, including:
- Introducing a Right to Try Work Guarantee to give
everyone who can work the chance to do so.
- Investing £3.5 billion in tailored employment support for
sick or disabled people.
- Increasing face to face assessments for health benefits
- Tackling fraud and error in the benefit system, saving £14.6
billion over this parliament
- Rebalancing Universal Credit to tackle the perverse
incentives which push people away from work.
Today's changes follow action taken immediately after the Budget
to remove luxury vehicles - including BMW and Mercedes - from the
scheme, returning Motability to its original purpose of giving
disabled people access to a practical vehicles, and
not subsidising premium extras that go beyond what most
people in this country can afford.
Notes to editors:
- These changes do not apply to Wheelchair Accessible
Vehicles
- The core Motability package remains in place:
eligible disabled people continue to access a
vehicle, scooter or powered wheelchair, with insurance
for up to three drivers, UK breakdown cover and
maintenance.
- There is no change to existing leases and no change to
eligibility for PIP or the Motability scheme.
- The Motability Foundation continues to offer means-tested
grants to support people who would otherwise struggle to afford
an advance payment, adaptations or a
wheelchair-accessible vehicle.