Sedans and SUVs plugged into chargers in the back rows, with price tags that have decreased from the early-adopter premium but haven’t yet reached the kind of numbers that make a private buyer’s decision feel automatic, are part of the EV stock that has been steadily increasing in the car yards along Auckland’s Great South Road for a number of years.
By making company-owned gasoline and diesel vehicles significantly more expensive to operate from a tax standpoint while reducing the burden on EVs, the New Zealand government’s 2026 Budget makes a conscious effort to alter the supply side of that equation. Fleet managers will have about a year to consider what they are renewing when the reforms go into effect in April 2027.
The mechanics are simple. The Fringe Benefit Tax for business electric vehicles will decrease to 17% starting in April 2027, while the rate for gasoline and diesel vehicles would rise to 22.8%. At 19.6%, hybrids fall in the middle. The percentage change is directly translated into cash because the FBT is based on the value of the car benefit given to an employee. For a $60,000 vehicle, selecting an EV over a comparable gasoline model saves a company about $1,800 in FBT annually. That’s a significant amount for a fleet, and for companies that rotate their car inventory every three to four years, it offers a real financial incentive that didn’t previously exist in any form.
The government’s downstream reasoning is that companies purchasing EVs today will eventually sell them into the secondary market, generating a pool of used EVs at more affordable prices than the new market presently provides. The availability of used EVs in New Zealand has been limited in part because companies who own company vehicles have not had enough motivation to convert from gasoline, which prevents the used market from receiving the volume required to lower prices for individual consumers.
Depending on fleet renewal cycles, vehicle residual values, and how rapidly EVs become the norm rather than a premium option at the point of purchase, it is actually unclear whether that chain of causality will occur on the timescale the policy suggests. However, the directional reasoning is strong enough to be defended.
The 2026 Budget has left the more complex issue of road user charges mostly unanswered. Plug-in hybrids pay $53 per 1,000 kilometers plus administration costs, whereas battery-electric vehicles are still subject to RUCs of $76 per 1,000 kilometers. These fees, which are still a significant operating expense, were implemented to replace the fuel excise tax that EV owners do not pay at the pump.

The RUC burden largely offsets the tax savings for high-mileage EV drivers, as critics of the FBT amendment have pointed out. This is a valid argument; the net financial benefit of switching relies significantly on the number of kilometers the vehicle travels annually. The economics of a fleet vehicle traveling 30,000 kilometers a year are significantly different from those of one traveling 10,000.
When considering the entire policy package, there is a sense that the government is attempting to influence fleet behavior without completely resolving the cost-of-ownership issue, which would render the nudge meaningless—that is, making EVs affordable enough for business owners to choose them regardless of the tax treatment. Whether the FBT differential is sufficient to encourage fleet changeover at the scale required by the secondhand market is still up for debate. From 2027 onward, one area to keep an eye on is the auto yards on Great South Road.
