UK Petrol and Diesel Price Breakdown
Where Does Your Money Go?
Every time you fill up your car, the price of a litre of petrol or diesel is made up of raw fuel cost, biofuel content, government taxes, and retailer margins. In fact, over 50% of the price is tax.
This guide breaks down the typical cost of a litre of unleaded petrol and diesel in the UK, showing how much you pay for the fuel itself, biofuels, duty, and VAT.
Components of a Litre of Fuel
A litre of fuel in the UK is made up of four main elements:
Product cost (wholesale petrol or diesel) – The refined fuel from oil
Biofuel content – Ethanol in petrol (E10) or biodiesel in diesel (B7)
Fuel duty – A fixed tax per litre
VAT (20%) – Applied on the total price including duty
Current Fuel Price Breakdown (Example)
Here’s a breakdown based on typical UK pump prices in 2025:
Unleaded petrol: £1.35 per litre
Diesel: £1.42 per litre
|
Component |
Petrol (E10) |
Diesel (B7) |
|
Wholesale fuel (excl. biofuels) |
43p |
46p |
|
Biofuel cost |
5.5p |
7p |
|
Transport and margin |
11p |
12p |
|
Fuel duty |
52.95p |
52.95p |
|
VAT (20%) |
25p |
26p |
|
Total |
£1.35 |
£1.42 |
Fuel Duty in Detail
Fuel duty is a fixed government tax per litre of fuel:
Petrol: 52.95p per litre
Diesel: 52.95p per litre
Duty does not change with the oil price, but it makes up around one-third of the pump price.
VAT on Fuel
Fuel is subject to 20% VAT, calculated on the total cost including fuel duty.
Example for petrol at £1.35/litre:
Base fuel + biofuel + duty = £1.12
VAT = 22p (20% of £1.12)
Total = £1.35
This means over 55% of the pump price is tax.
Biofuels in UK Petrol and Diesel
Under the RTFO (Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation), all UK road fuels include a percentage of renewable biofuel:
E10 Petrol: Up to 10% bioethanol (typically from wheat or sugar beet)
B7 Diesel: Up to 7% biodiesel (from waste oils or animal fats)
Biofuels:
Help reduce lifecycle CO₂ emissions
Add a small cost component to each litre (around 3–5p)
Are blended into standard fuels automatically at UK forecourts
What Drives Pump Prices?
The price of fuel at the pump is influenced by:
Global oil prices – The largest factor in the product cost
Exchange rates – Oil is traded in USD
Biofuel market prices – Fluctuate with crop and commodity prices
Government taxes – Fuel duty and VAT
Retailer margins – Typically 8–15p per litre
How Much of Your Fuel Price is Tax?
Taking the £1.35 petrol example:
Fuel duty: 52.95p
VAT: 22p
Total tax: ~75p per litre (~55% of the price)
This means more than half of what you pay goes to the government, not oil companies or fuel retailers.
Key Takeaways for Motorists
- UK petrol and diesel prices are roughly 50-55% tax, 40-45% fuel cost, 5-10% retailer margin.
- Biofuels are a small but growing part of the cost, supporting renewable energy targets.
- VAT on fuel is charged on the whole price, meaning drivers pay tax on tax.
- Global oil prices, biofuel costs, and government taxes are the biggest drivers of pump prices.
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