Vehicle financing is one of the largest capital decisions UK + Ireland taxi operators make. Leasing vs owning trades capital outlay against depreciation exposure and operational flexibility. This post covers the detailed economics in 2026 — capital outlay differences, depreciation treatment, tax implications, fleet-flexibility tradeoffs.
1. Capital outlay
Owning: full vehicle cost upfront (~£28-£45k per vehicle for 2026 PHV-class). Leasing: typically 10-20% deposit + monthly payment (£300-£550/month for 3-year lease). Owning requires materially more capital but produces an asset on balance sheet.
2. Depreciation exposure
Owned vehicles depreciate at 15-25% per year typical for diesel PHV; EV depreciation tracking improving as EV market matures. Lease structure shifts depreciation risk to the lessor — operator returns vehicle at end of term regardless of market value.
3. Tax treatment
Owned vehicles: capital allowances (Annual Investment Allowance) deduct against corporation tax. EV vehicles: first-year 100% deduction. Leased vehicles: lease payments deduct as operating expense.
4. Fleet flexibility
Owning provides flexibility to dispose of vehicles when fleet shrinks. Leasing locks the operator into the lease term — early termination penalties typically apply. For fleets with growth or contraction risk, leasing reduces the operational flexibility downside.
About the author
Priya Iyer
Head of Product, TaxiCloud
Priya Iyer works with UK and Ireland fleet operators on dispatch strategy, AI Copilot adoption, and migration planning. Reach out at priya@taxicloud.ai.