Published: 21 April 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
A “perfect storm” of new tax legislation, licensing hikes, and centralized enforcement has pushed the UK’s private hire industry to what drivers are calling a “breaking point.” As of this week, representative bodies for thousands of minicab and app-based drivers have issued a stark warning to the government: the current trajectory of regulatory reform will “permanently damage” the trade, driving small operators out of business and leading to a surge in illegal, uninsured “ghost” taxis.
The outcry is centered on three major pillars of change that have converged in April 2026: the implementation of the so-called “Taxi Tax” (VAT), a radical shift toward National Licensing Standards, and local council fee hikes that drivers have branded as “pure greed.”
The most immediate blow came earlier this year with the removal of the Tour Operators’ Margin Scheme (TOMS). As of January 2, 2026, all VAT-registered private hire operators acting as “principals” must charge a flat 20% VAT on the full fare.
| Journey Type | Pre-2026 Price | April 2026 Price (Inc. VAT) | Change |
| Airport Transfer | £50.00 | £60.00 | +£10.00 |
| Local Night Trip | £15.00 | £18.00 | +£3.00 |
| Hospital Run | £20.00 | £24.00 | +£4.00 |
Surveys suggest that 70% of passengers plan to reduce their use of private hire vehicles (PHVs) due to these price hikes. Drivers warn that this “tax on the working class” is particularly devastating in rural areas where public transport is non-existent, effectively “pricing the vulnerable out of mobility.”
Under the new Devolution Bill amendments, the “wild west” of out-of-area licensing is being reined in. For years, drivers could obtain a license from an authority with lower standards (like Wolverhampton) and work hundreds of miles away (like London or Manchester).
The new rules, finalized this week, grant enforcement officers nationwide powers to suspend licenses on the spot, regardless of which council issued them. While the government frames this as a “safer streets” initiative to protect women and girls, drivers argue it removes the flexibility needed to earn a living during the “low rumbling” of the current economic crisis.
Adding to the pressure, local authorities across the UK—most recently West Northamptonshire Council—have approved significant hikes in licensing fees. Drivers in the Midlands protested outside committee meetings last week, claiming that between rising insurance premiums, 190p-per-litre fuel costs, and increased council fees, the profession is becoming “financially unviable.”
“They are taking advantage of the working class,” one driver told the Chronicle. “The council provides zero support for road conditions that damage our cars, yet they want more money every year. It’s pure greed.”
Industry experts warn that the unintended consequence of these “crushing” regulations will be a boom in unlicensed activity. With fares up 20% and driver earnings squeezed by overheads, there are fears that both passengers and drivers will move toward “off-app” cash deals and social media-based “lifts”—none of which carry the required Hire and Reward insurance or background checks.
“We are creating a two-tier system,” says a spokesperson for the Licensed Private Hire Car Association (LPHCA). “One tier that follows the rules but can’t afford to stay in business, and a second ‘shadow’ tier that is dangerous and unregulated. This isn’t safety; it’s a recipe for disaster.”

























































































