RealCost Guide

True Cost of Owning a Car UK

The true cost of owning a car is much more than fuel, finance or the price you paid. Insurance, tax, maintenance, tyres, repairs, parking and depreciation can all change what the car really costs over time.

This guide breaks down the full cost of ownership so you can understand what a car really costs over 1, 3 and 5 years — and avoid expensive mistakes.

The simple answer

The true cost of owning a car is the total amount you lose or spend while owning it. That includes running costs, repair risk and the value the car loses before you sell it.

A car with a low monthly payment can still be expensive if insurance, depreciation, tyres, servicing or repairs are high. A cheap used car can also become expensive if it needs work soon after purchase.

Calculate the true cost of your car

Use the calculator to estimate your full monthly, yearly and ownership-period cost, including depreciation, fuel or charging, insurance, road tax, maintenance, repairs, parking and other costs.

Use this before buying, keeping, selling or changing a car.

What the true cost of ownership includes

If money leaves your pocket, or the car loses value, it belongs in the calculation.

Purchase price
The starting point, but not the final cost.
Resale value
What you expect to get back when you sell the car.
Depreciation
The difference between what you paid and what the car is worth later.
Fuel or charging
Driven by mileage, efficiency and fuel or electricity price.
Insurance and tax
Often underestimated when comparing cars.
Maintenance and repairs
Servicing, MOT, tyres and repair buffer should all be included.

Depreciation is a real cost

You may not pay it as a bill, but you still lose the money.

Example

If you buy a car for £12,000 and sell it later for £7,000, the car has cost you £5,000 in depreciation before fuel, insurance, tax or repairs are included.

Why it matters

Depreciation can make a newer or more expensive car cost far more than it appears from monthly bills alone.

Useful next step: use the Car Depreciation Calculator UK before comparing cars by fuel or finance alone.

Why drivers underestimate ownership costs

Most people notice fuel and finance, but miss the costs that build up quietly.

Annual bills are not converted into monthly cost
Depreciation is ignored because it is not a regular payment
Repair costs arrive irregularly and feel like surprises
Insurance quotes are guessed instead of checked before buying
Tyres, parking and tolls are left out of the budget
Finance payments make the car look simpler than it is

True cost over 1, 3 and 5 years

A car that looks fine for one month can look very different over several years.

1-year cost

Good for checking short-term affordability, insurance, fuel, tax, servicing, MOT and likely repair risk.

3-year cost

Better for seeing depreciation, tyre replacement, larger maintenance bills and how finance or ownership period affects cost.

5-year cost

Useful for judging long-term value, reliability, repairs, resale value and whether keeping the car spreads costs sensibly.

Finance vs buying with cash

Both can work, but both need the full ownership cost included.

Finance can hide the cost because

  • the monthly payment becomes the focus
  • insurance and maintenance are separate
  • total amount payable may be ignored
  • mileage limits can create extra risk

Cash buying can hide the cost because

  • the car feels “paid for”
  • depreciation still happens
  • repairs still arrive
  • using all savings removes your emergency buffer

Cheap car false economy

A low purchase price is not enough. Condition and running costs decide whether it is truly cheap.

A cheap car may be good value if

  • service history is strong
  • insurance is low
  • parts and tyres are affordable
  • repair risk is manageable
  • it suits your mileage

A cheap car may be expensive if

  • repairs are due soon
  • insurance is high
  • MOT history is poor
  • tyres are costly
  • known faults are being ignored

Biggest hidden ownership costs

These often decide whether a car is affordable long term.

Insurance increases
A real quote matters more than assumptions or averages.
Unexpected repairs
Older, premium or neglected cars need more repair headroom.
Tyres
Large wheels, EVs and performance cars can cost more to re-tyre.
Parking and permits
Easy to forget, especially for commuting or city driving.

How to reduce the true cost of ownership

Do not chase one saving while creating a bigger cost elsewhere.

Check insurance before buying the car
Compare fuel or charging cost per mile
Avoid cars with expensive tyres or known repair traps
Maintain the car properly instead of skipping servicing
Choose a car that fits your mileage and route type
Keep the car longer if it is reliable and cost-effective

Useful next step: use the How to Reduce Car Running Costs UK guide if your true ownership cost is too high.

Is owning a car worth the true cost?

The answer depends on whether the car solves a real problem at a cost you can justify.

Ownership may be worth it if

  • you need flexibility
  • public transport is poor
  • you commute regularly
  • you have family or work commitments
  • the monthly cost fits comfortably

Ownership may not be worth it if

  • you rarely drive
  • parking is expensive
  • insurance is painful
  • alternatives work well
  • the car causes financial stress

Useful ownership cost calculators

Use these to understand the different parts of the true cost.

Full car cost
Open calculator →
Depreciation
Open calculator →
Insurance cost
Open calculator →
Maintenance cost
Open calculator →
Fuel cost per mile
Open calculator →

Related guides

Use these to decide whether the true cost makes sense for you.

Average Cost of Owning a Car Per Month UK

Break ownership costs into monthly categories.

Read guide →

Can I Afford a Car UK?

Check whether ownership fits your real budget.

Read guide →

Is Owning a Car Worth It UK?

Compare ownership cost against convenience and alternatives.

Read guide →

How to Reduce Car Running Costs UK

Reduce the parts of ownership that are costing too much.

Read guide →

True cost of owning a car UK FAQs

What is the true cost of owning a car?

The true cost is the total amount you spend or lose while owning the car, including fuel, insurance, tax, servicing, repairs, tyres, parking and depreciation.

What is the biggest hidden cost of owning a car?

Depreciation is often one of the biggest hidden costs because the car loses value over time, even though it is not paid as a monthly bill.

Why do people underestimate car ownership costs?

People often focus on fuel, purchase price or finance payments while forgetting repairs, tyres, insurance increases, parking, depreciation and annual bills.

Is a cheap car always cheaper to own?

No. A cheap car can become expensive if it needs repairs, has high insurance, poor fuel economy, expensive tyres or weak service history.

Should I include depreciation in car cost?

Yes. Depreciation is a real cost because it reduces the amount you get back when selling or trading in the car.

How can I reduce the true cost of ownership?

Choose a car with sensible insurance, good reliability, affordable tyres, realistic fuel or charging costs, manageable depreciation and maintenance risk.

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