New light commercial vehicle registrations fall -11.8% in May, in the UK

London, June 05, 2025 , (Oilandgaspress) –––UK’s new light commercial vehicle (LCV) market fell by -11.8% in May with 22,796 vans, 4x4s and pick-ups joining the road, according to the latest figures published today by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). The contraction marks the lowest May performance since 2022 and rounds off the sixth consecutive month of decline, as weak business confidence holds back fleet investment

May-25May-24% change
A Pickups2,6903,081-12.7%
B 4x4s71652336.9%
C Vans <=2.0T673730-7.8%
D Vans > 2.0-2.5T4,0654,477-9.2%
E Vans >2.5-3.5T14,65217,042-14.0%
All Vans to 3.5T22,79625,853-11.8%
Rigids > 3.5 -4.25 t (BEV only)7677-1.3%
Rigids > 3.5 – 6.0t (Other)73262018.1%
All rigids80869715.9%
 

Demand shrank for new vans of all sizes, with the largest models down -14.0% to 14,652 units, while deliveries of medium sized vans fell by -9.2% to 4,065 units and the smallest vans by -7.8% to 673. Only the new 4×4 segment saw growth, up 36.9% to 716 units. The pickup segment, meanwhile, declined by -12.7% to 2,690 registrations as April’s introduction of fiscal measures to treat double-cabs as cars for benefit in kind and capital allowance purposes began to bite.

Top models May

Top models 2025

May 
1Ford TRANSIT CUSTOM3,365
2Ford TRANSIT2,449
3Peugeot PARTNER1,216
4Toyota HILUX1,096
5Mercedes-Benz Sprinter1,064
6Ford RANGER1,003
7Citroën BERLINGO688
8Volkswagen Crafter664
9Vauxhall VIVARO 653
10Renault TRAFIC646

The tax change is heaping additional costs on businesses in key sectors – such as farming, construction, utilities and sole trading – which depend on these operationally critical vehicles. Discouraging operators from placing new orders will keep more polluting vehicles on the road for longer and, counterproductively, reduce tax revenues given lower volumes. SMMT continues to urge government to postpone the change for at least one year to give industry and customers more time to prepare, especially given new lower and zero emitting vehicles entering the market.

Manufacturers are making massive investments to decarbonise the market and demand for battery electric vans (BEVs) continues to grow, up 50.0% to 1,731 units in May – the seventh successive month of rising demand.2 Businesses can now choose from almost 40 BEV models that meet a wide range of use cases but, despite this, zero emission vans represented just 7.6% of the overall market in May and 8.2% in the year to date – half the 16% share mandated for 2025.


Information Source: Read More

#FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM
Energy, Automobile, EV, Renewable News
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.