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Tips & advice

London Congestion Charge: map, times, exemptions and full details

Driving into London? Here’s everything you need to know about the city’s congestion charge

London Congestion Charge road marking

​If you plan on taking your car into central London, then you might need to pay the London Congestion Charge. This is a £15 daily fee, which applies when you drive into certain parts of London, but not all car drivers have to pay. Below we outline everything you need to know about the London Congestion Charge, how much it costs and how to pay, where the charge operates and the penalties for not paying it.

Before we go any further, it’s important to note that the London Congestion Charge is separate to the London Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ), which has its own rules, charges and penalties. Here we explain everything you need to know about the C-Charge.

Where does the London Congestion Charge zone operate?

The London Congestion Charge zone covers eight square miles in the centre of the city, bounded by Euston Road and Marylebone Road in the north, Tower Bridge Road and Commercial Street in the east, Elephant and Castle and New Kent Road in the south, and Park Lane and Edgware Road in the west.

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The Congestion Charge scheme is enforced by Transport for London (TfL), and is separate to the ULEZ (Ultra-Low Emission Zone) which currently operates across all London boroughs within the M25. The roads within the Congestion Charge zone are monitored by a network of Automatic Numberplate Recognition (ANPR) cameras.

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Below is a map of the congestion charge zone. You can find out if a specific address is in the congestion charge zone by inputting the postcode on the TfL website.

London Congestion Charge and ULEZ map

When does the London Congestion Charge apply?

The London Congestion Charge applies to all vehicles that enter the zone between 7am and 6pm from Monday to Friday, and 12pm to 6pm on weekends and Bank Holidays. The charge does not apply between Christmas Day and New Year’s Day.

How much does the London Congestion Charge cost?

Motorists who drive into the London Congestion Charge Zone must pay £15 daily if they enter the zone during the times stated above. 

The £15 fee applies to those who pay the charge in advance, or by midnight on the day they enter the zone. If you haven’t paid by this time, you will have until midnight on the third day after you travelled in the zone, but the fee will rise to £17.50.

Transport for London has revealed proposals to increase the daily Congestion Charge to £18, although this new higher price won’t come into effect until January 2026 if it goes ahead.

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Some drivers and vehicles are eligible for exemptions or discounts, which we explain in detail further down this page.

How do I pay the London Congestion Charge?

If you plan on driving into the London Congestion Charge zone, there are a few different ways you can pay. These include via an Auto Pay account, online, over the phone or in person at paypoints and blue and red self-service machines. You can pay the Congestion Charge up to 90 days in advance of entering the zone.

London Congestion Charge 'Have you paid?' roadsign

Paying the London Congestion Charge via an Auto Pay account

If you regularly drive into central London during the Congestion Charge’s hours of operation, you can set up an Auto Pay account via TfL’s website. Using this service will also allow you to pay the Ultra-Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) charge as well as for the Blackwall or Silvertown tunnels at the same time if applicable.

Paying the London Congestion Charge online 

You can also manually pay the Congestion Charge on the TfL website, or by using TfL’s official ‘Pay to drive in London’ app. Simply enter your vehicle's registration number, search for your vehicle and select the zones which apply. 

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There are some third-party websites that claim to assist with payments, however these are not recommended due to a large number of fakes and scams.

Paying the London Congestion Charge over the phone

If you don’t want to set up an Auto Pay account or don’t feel comfortable paying the Congestion Charge online, you can pay over the phone by calling 0343 222 2222. Drivers with impaired hearing can call 020 7649 9123.

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Phone lines are open between 8am and 8pm, Monday to Friday, excluding bank holidays. 

Paying the London Congestion Charge in person

It’s possible to pay the Congestion Charge at newsagents and petrol stations that can process payments. These shops usually have the red ‘C’ logo in the window. There are also red and blue self-service machines dotted around the Congestion Charge zone.

Which vehicles have to pay the London Congestion Charge?

If you drive a combustion-engined car, including hybrids and plug-in hybrids, you will have to pay the Congestion Charge if you drive into central London during its hours of operation.

All alternatively fuelled vehicles used to be exempt from the Congestion Charge but, since 25 October 2021, only zero-emission vehicles – such as electric cars and hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles – have been exempt from the Congestion Charge. 

From 25 December 2025, however, even drivers of zero-emission cars will be required to pay the £15 daily charge.

London Congestion Charge: exemptions and discounts

There are a number of exemptions and discounts on the Congestion Charge that are available to a selection of different vehicles and drivers.

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Residents’ discount 

Those who live within the Congestion Charge Zone are eligible for a 90 per cent discount if they can provide proof of their permanent address and are on an appropriate local electoral register. Permitted vehicles can be owned, leased or company cars. Rental and car-share scheme vehicles are also allowed if they are occasionally used. Simply apply online and provide TfL with a relevant utility bill and a copy of your V5C logbook.

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Vehicles with nine seats or more 

If your vehicle has nine seats or more then it is eligible for a 100 per cent discount, but it must not be licensed for use as a bus. You will need to show TfL several documents, including the V5C vehicle log book and MoT certificate, in order to register the vehicle. 

Cleaner vehicle discount

Until 25 December 2025, fully electric and fuel cell vehicles are eligible for the cleaner vehicle discount. After this date the discount will be discontinued, but for now these vehicles don’t need to pay the Congestion Charge once they are registered with TfL. You will need to show the car’s V5C document, which must state that the car is battery or hydrogen fuel-cell powered. 

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Blue Badge holders 

Anyone who holds a Blue Badge in the European Economic Area is eligible for a 100 per cent Congestion Charge discount, even if they don’t drive or own a vehicle. Up to two vehicles can be registered for one person, provided that they are normally used by that person to travel within the zone. Along with a valid Blue Badge, one other document must be provided to prove your identity, such as a passport or recent DSS benefit entitlement letter.

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Other Congestion Charge discounts 

Other vehicles that are eligible for discounts include accredited breakdown vehicles, roadside recovery vehicles and motor tricycles.

Congestion Charge exemptions 

You don’t have to pay the London Congestion Charge if the vehicle is registered with the DVLA as one of the following:

  • Tax-exempt vehicles used by disabled people, including vehicles for more than one disabled person (Dial-A-Ride, for example).
  • A motorbike or moped, including those with a sidecar.
  • Tax-exempt NHS vehicles, emergency service vehicles including HM Coastguard and Royal Parks Agency. Vehicles used by the Armed Forces are also exempt.
  • Licensed taxis and buses, provided they meet the necessary criteria.
London directional road sign

What is the penalty for not paying the London Congestion Charge?

If you haven’t paid the Congestion Charge by midnight on the third day after travelling in the zone, you will receive a Penalty Charge Notice (PCN)

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If you are issued with a PCN, this will be for £180. However, TfL will reduce the charge to £90 if it is paid within 14 days of the date of issue. 

If you fail to pay or appeal the PCN within 28 days, you will then be sent a £270 Charge Certificate. If you then fail to pay the Charge Certificate within 14 days, or make a Statutory Declaration, you will be faced with an Order for Recovery.

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An Order for Recovery is different from a County Court Judgement (CCJ) and it won’t affect your credit score, but it will be classed as an unpaid debt. This means it will incur additional fees. You will have 21 days to pay the total amount.

If you still haven’t paid after the Order for Recovery’s payment window closes, TfL will then bring in enforcement agents or bailiffs to recover all outstanding debt.

If you wish to pay or appeal a Congestion Charge fine, you can do this via the TfL website or send it in writing. More information can be found on TfL’s enforcement process web page.

If you’re buying a used vehicle and you want to check to see if it has outstanding Congestion Charge fines you can email TfL at OutstandingCCPenaltyCharges@TfL.gov.uk.

London Congestion Charge history: the key dates

  • 2003 – Congestion Charge introduced by Mayor Ken Livingstone with a fee of £5 for car drivers. In 2013, he admitted: “It turned out better than I expected.”
  • 2007 – The C-charge zone was extended further into west London. This was subsequently scrapped by then-Mayor Boris Johnson in 2011.
  • 2017 – A supplementary Toxicity Charge was introduced with an additional charge for higher-polluting vehicles. This became the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) in 2019.
  • 2020-2021 – As Covid-related lockdowns hit, the C-Charge was initially suspended to help key workers, before being reintroduced, with extended hours and higher prices, as TfL tried to recoup lost revenues.
  • 2025 – Electric cars will no longer be exempt from the Congestion Charge as of 25 December.

Has the London Congestion Charge been a success?

17 ​February 2003 was a pivotal day for motorists in the UK, marking the first time they were asked to pay for the privilege of driving into the centre of one of our major cities.

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London’s Congestion Charge divided opinion at the time, and over two decades later, it remains hugely polarising. Advocates claim the scheme plays a key role in trying to shift attitudes towards transport in our capital city. Critics, of which there are many, argue it is little more than an unfair tax on motorists that has delivered few tangible benefits.

Christina Calderato, director of transport strategy and policy at Transport for London, which is responsible for the charge, is unequivocal that it has been a success. “When it was originally implemented, you saw the impacts of it happening overnight and then those impacts embedded,” she says. “So immediately, we saw a 15 per cent reduction in circulating traffic and a 30 per cent reduction in congestion. Over time that has been maintained.”

She acknowledges a central aim is to “disincentivise” people from driving, but dismisses the accusation that revenue raising lies at the heart of the C-charge. “It’s a policy-based scheme,” Calderato continues. “The current MTS [Mayor’s Transport Strategy] sets an objective of 80 per cent ‘sustainable transport mode share’ by 2041. 

“To achieve that London-wide, you really do need as many people as possible in central London using sustainable forms of transport. We can’t have car-based growth in London. We don’t have the road space for it.” 

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A rise in cycling of 137 per cent between 2000 and 2019 is highlighted as one positive outcome. But opposition to the C-Charge remains strong. Roger Lawson of the Freedom for Drivers Foundation (FfDF), formed in south-east London to promote the interests of motorists, disputes TfL’s claim it has been a success and argues: “No proper analysis has been provided giving real data in recent years, but we all know congestion has got worse.” 

Definitive figures are hard to come by, because different studies use different metrics. However, analytics software company INRIX’s 2022 Global Traffic Scorecard suggests Lawson has a point, with Londoners losing 156 hours to traffic a year – making it the most congested city in the world. But Calderato counters: “We know that it would be worse if we weren’t doing what we are doing.”

London 'Congestion Charging information' roadsign

How the money is spent is another bone of contention. TfL’s most recent annual statement of accounts showed C-charge revenues for the full year increased from £316million in 2020/21 to £423m in 2021/22. These are intended to be reinvested in transport in London, but critics such as the FfDF argue that the high operational costs of the C-charge mean there are few significant benefits.

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The fact that emissions have always been taken into account has been a constant source of irritation to some, who argue that this is not relevant to its principal aim, which is reducing traffic, particularly when a separate charging scheme, the ULEZ (Ultra-Low Emission Zone) is also in place. 

Calderato argues they are very different, explaining: “If you do have to be there in central London during charging hours, we want it to be in as clean a vehicle as possible. For ULEZ, you don’t need to be in the greenest vehicle possible. You just need to be in one that meets the emission standards, which most vehicles do.” 

She admits they are likely to be more intertwined when the C-charge marks its 40th anniversary in 2043. “In the very long term,” she says, "what we are looking at is having some kind of more sophisticated road-user charging rather than having a Congestion Charge, an Ultra-Low Emission Zone and a Low-Emission Zone [a scheme for large diesel vehicles across Greater London currently in operation]. We recognise that this kind of landscape is becoming increasingly complex.” 

Consultations are already under way as to how this might work and what should be taken into account; distance driven, type of vehicle, time of day and other elements are all being considered. However the C-charge evolves, one thing that will not change is the feeling entertained by many motorists that they are being “discriminated against”, as the FfDF puts it. After over 20 years, squaring that particular circle remains as far away as ever. 

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Content editor

Ryan is responsible for looking after the day-to-day running of the Auto Express website and social media channels. Prior to joining Auto Express in 2023, he worked at a global OEM automotive manufacturer, as well as a specialist automotive PR and marketing agency.

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