Tax and VAT considerations shape UK taxi operator economics meaningfully — VAT registration thresholds, driver-classification implications, corporation tax planning, R&D tax credits for operators investing in tech infrastructure. This guide covers the practical considerations UK operators face in 2026 (not legal or tax advice — consult your accountant).
1. VAT registration
UK VAT registration threshold is £90,000 turnover (2026 rate). Operators above threshold register for VAT and charge VAT on PHV bookings. Hackney work has a complex VAT treatment — typically zero-rated under specific conditions but check with your accountant.
2. Driver classification
UK PHV drivers typically classify as self-employed, with the operator paying drivers gross of tax. Driver classification has been challenged in recent court cases (Uber Supreme Court 2021) — operators should review their driver agreements with employment-law counsel.
3. Corporation tax planning
Standard 25% UK corporation tax on profits above £250,000; 19% on profits below £50,000; tapered rate between. Capital allowances on EV vehicles offer first-year 100% deduction (Annual Investment Allowance + EV-specific allowances).
4. R&D tax credits
Operators investing in dispatch software customisation, AI Copilot integration, or proprietary booking-flow development may qualify for HMRC R&D tax credits. Typical claim: 20-25% of qualifying R&D spend back as cash or tax reduction.
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.