politics
March 24, 2026
Republicans in Congress add $250 annual federal EV tax to transport bill
Five principles should determine how you fund transport, says Consumer Reports.

TL;DR
- EV sales have declined significantly in early 2025 due to government hostility towards energy efficiency, including cuts to fuel efficiency regulations and consumer tax credits.
- A proposed $250 annual federal tax on EV drivers and a $100 tax on hybrids is being considered in an upcoming bill, spearheaded by House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chair Sam Graves.
- The argument for taxing EVs is that they use roads but do not contribute to federal highway funding through fuel taxes, which haven't been increased since 1993.
- Consumer Reports argues that EV drivers should pay into road funding, but taxing them alone won't solve the broader transportation funding shortfall.
- Alternative funding methods discussed include road tolls, taxes on public EV charging, per-mile charges, and general fund allocations, with fairness, privacy, and collection ease being key considerations.
- Any new tax or fee should be proportional to impact, fair between consumer and commercial vehicles, easy to collect, protect privacy, and ensure stable, flexible revenue.
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