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From Tax Breaks to Roadblocks: The Real Cost of Electric Cars in 2025

Are electric cars losing traction in the Netherlands? Discover the fading tax benefits, EV costs, and why sustainable driving needs renewed incentives.
November 14, 2024 by
From Tax Breaks to Roadblocks: The Real Cost of Electric Cars in 2025
Linda Pavan
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Electric cars aren’t just another alternative—they’re a revolution on wheels, a shot at reshaping our roads and redefining how we move through the world. In the Netherlands, the government once had our backs with tax benefits that turned switching to electric into a no-brainer. But today, those fiscal advantages are vanishing into thin air. With the clock ticking on climate targets and CO₂ reductions, it’s time to ask the real question: are we ready to keep pushing this revolution forward, or will we let it stall?

The Fading Spark of Fiscal Advantages

Once upon a time, going electric was the choice for forward-thinkers. From 2013 to 2018, low or even 0% additional taxes on EVs made it more than affordable—it was visionary. But now? We’re on a countdown to extinction. By 2025, that tax discount drops to a slim 5% for cars under €30,000, and by 2026, it’s game over. This isn’t just about numbers on a tax sheet; it’s a question of commitment to a future that’s not only greener but smarter. Are we ready to pull the rug out from under an innovation that could change everything?

Reality Check: The Cost of Going Green

Electric cars come with a premium price tag, one that many can't ignore. In the past, a lower additional tax made EVs more accessible, drawing in drivers who might otherwise have stuck with fossil fuels. But as that safety net fades, the risk of reverting to outdated, gas-guzzling ways grows. Add to that the impending loss of motor vehicle tax exemptions and the introduction of BPM on new EV purchases in 2025, and we’re looking at an uphill battle for clean driving.

CO₂ and the Bigger Picture

Yes, the batteries powering EVs aren’t emissions-free to produce. But over their entire lifespan, these vehicles still beat out combustion engines, hands down. So why cut off the benefits after just five years? Without long-term incentives, we’re setting up electric cars to gather dust in leasing company lots, leaving the original mission—cleaner air, lower emissions—incomplete. If we want to champion the planet, let’s make it practical, and keep incentives alive beyond a single lease cycle.

A Proposal for the Road Ahead

To make electric driving more than a five-year fling, it’s time for a new tax playbook. How about a steady 12% additional tax for the full lifespan of an EV? Imagine an electric revolution that’s affordable beyond the first lease term, with benefits that make going electric not just doable but desirable. This isn’t just about getting more EVs on the road; it’s about creating a mindset shift, where sustainable mobility is the obvious choice.

Climate Targets and a Future We Can Drive Toward

The Netherlands has committed to cutting transport emissions drastically, and EVs are essential to that vision. Extending tax benefits isn’t just smart policy—it’s a power move. These incentives aren’t just perks for the eco-conscious; they’re the battery charging a new kind of mobility, one that’s quieter, cleaner, and crucial for a future that doesn’t rely on oil.

Our journey toward a sustainable future won’t be driven by half-hearted measures or short-term thinking. It’s about backing long-term changes that make electric driving not just an option, but the choice for anyone who wants to invest in tomorrow. Because the future? It isn’t built by waiting for others to take action; it’s built by paving the way ourselves. 

Let’s keep the wheels of change in motion.

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