The Hidden Costs of Running a Fleet
The visible costs of running a fleet – fuel, insurance, the vehicles themselves – are well understood. The hidden ones aren’t. Most UK fleet operators underestimate their true total cost of ownership by 20-40%, because the costs that hurt most never arrive as a single invoice.
- →Depreciation: The largest fixed cost in fleet ownership – often 40-50% of TCO – and the one that rarely appears in a budget because no invoice ever arrives for it
- →Downtime: Indirect costs – lost revenue, replacement hire, overtime, rescheduling – typically run to 2-3x the repair bill for commercially active vehicles
- →Insurance renewal drift: Auto-renewing without comparing costs 20-30% more than the market rate. Insurers price renewals knowing most businesses won’t shop around
- →Admin overhead: Manual expense processing costs approximately £23 per report in absorbed staff time – multiply that across a fleet and a year and the total is material
Key Takeaways
- →Downtime is consistently underestimated. The repair bill is just the invoice. The real cost includes the vehicle off the road, productivity lost, jobs delayed, overtime to catch up, and in some cases a replacement hire vehicle on top. For a commercial van doing revenue-generating work, a single day off the road can cost far more than the repair itself
- →Small, frequent claims are more damaging than one big one. Three claims at £1,500 each will typically push your fleet premium up more at renewal than a single claim at £5,000. Frequency tells underwriters there’s a systemic problem. Severity alone might just be bad luck. Fleets with three or more claims in a year often see premium increases of 35-60% at the next renewal
- →Auto-renewing is one of the most expensive fleet habits there is. Insurers price renewals knowing most businesses won’t shop around. A fleet that’s had a clean year is often worth considerably less to insure than the renewal quote suggests. The spread between brokers quoting on the same fleet can be 20-30%
- →Depreciation is the biggest fixed cost in fleet ownership and the one most commonly ignored in annual budgets. Vehicles lose value continuously. If you’re not tracking when the depreciation curve steepens – typically from years three to five – you’re replacing vehicles too late and paying too much in maintenance to keep ageing assets running
- →Admin costs are real costs – they just don’t appear on any invoice. Driver licence checks, fuel reconciliation, compliance paperwork, MOT reminders, mileage logging. Processing a single manual expense report costs around £23, according to industry data. Multiply that across a fleet and across a year and the total is material
💬 From the MMC Fleet Insurance Team | FCA Reg. 916241
“The business owners who come to us with the biggest shock at renewal are almost always the ones who’ve been auto-renewing for years and had a few claims they thought were minor. Three small claims – a scrape here, a windscreen there, a third-party bump – and suddenly the renewal quote is 40% higher than last year. The insurer isn’t being unreasonable. They’re pricing what the claims record is actually telling them. The problem is most businesses have no visibility of how their loss ratio looks to an underwriter until they open that renewal email.”
Ask most fleet operators what their vehicles cost and they’ll quote you fuel spend and insurance premium. Maybe servicing if they’re thorough. Rarely depreciation. Almost never downtime. Virtually never admin.
Those gaps matter. Research consistently shows that businesses underestimate their true total cost of ownership by 20% to 40%. For a fleet of ten vehicles, that’s a meaningful amount of money leaving the business without anyone quite knowing where it went.
Here’s where the costs that don’t get budgeted actually come from.
1. Depreciation – the cost that never appears on an invoice
Depreciation is the largest fixed cost in fleet ownership. It’s also the one that most businesses never explicitly budget for, because no invoice ever arrives for it. The vehicle simply becomes worth less every year – and if you’re not tracking it, you won’t know when it starts costing more to keep than to replace.
A van bought for £30,000 might retain around 60% of its value after two years, dropping to perhaps 40% after four. By year six or seven, you’re dealing with a vehicle worth less than £10,000 that’s costing increasing amounts in maintenance, repairs, and unplanned downtime. The point at which it makes financial sense to replace a vehicle – the “optimal replacement point” – passes silently without most fleet managers realising.
The common mistake is replacing vehicles too late. Maintenance costs are spread across dozens of small invoices that never get aggregated. Depreciation is invisible. So the ageing vehicle looks cheap to keep until you add up the servicing, tyre costs, MOT failures, and lost time over 12 months and compare it to what a replacement would cost.
Electric vehicles add a new dimension here. Battery replacement costs can range from £8,000 to more than £15,000 depending on the model. Even minor physical damage to a battery casing can write off an otherwise repairable vehicle. Used EV depreciation is also steeper than equivalent diesel vehicles at present, which affects the residual value calculation significantly when the time comes to dispose.
The SMR (Service, Maintenance and Repair) cost profile for EVs also shifts in ways many fleet buyers don’t anticipate. While EVs avoid engine-related maintenance – no oil changes, no timing belts, fewer brake wear costs due to regenerative braking – the cost savings are partly offset by higher-cost items specific to electric drivetrains. Specialist tyres that carry the additional battery weight wear faster than standard equivalents. Thermal management systems require attention. Calibration of ADAS sensors after even minor bodywork damage adds significantly to repair costs in ways that are identical to comparable diesel vehicles. The “EV is cheaper to run” assumption holds broadly on fuel and routine servicing, but fleet operators who haven’t modelled the full SMR profile for their specific EV models often find the real-world numbers closer to diesel than the headline saving suggested.
2. Downtime – what the repair bill doesn’t show
A vehicle off the road for three days costs your business the repair bill, yes. It also costs you the revenue that vehicle would have generated, the staff time managing the situation, any overtime required to cover the gap, and potentially the cost of hiring a replacement vehicle while yours is in a workshop. None of those appear on the garage invoice.
For a van doing revenue-generating work – deliveries, site visits, service calls – the indirect downtime cost routinely exceeds the direct repair cost. A £400 repair that takes three days and costs two job cancellations could represent £1,500 or more in real financial impact.
What downtime actually costs – the full picture
Direct costs
Repair or replacement parts, labour, towing, workshop fees
Operational costs
Replacement hire vehicle, rescheduling deliveries or appointments, overtime for staff
Indirect costs
Lost revenue, missed contracts, customer service impact, management time
Most businesses budget only for the direct costs. The operational and indirect costs are rarely tracked but often represent 2-3x the direct repair cost for commercially active vehicles.
Reactive maintenance – fixing things when they break – is consistently more expensive than proactive servicing. Vehicles that are maintained on schedule tend to have fewer unplanned failures. The servicing costs more in the short term. The downtime costs less. Over a five-year ownership period, the proactive approach almost always wins financially.
3. The insurance renewal trap – and what it actually costs
Fleet insurance is one of the largest line items in a fleet budget. It’s also one of the most commonly mismanaged. Not because businesses ignore it – they tend to notice the premium – but because of how they handle renewal.
Auto-renewal is the default for many businesses. The renewal notice arrives, someone approves it, and another year begins. The problem: insurers price renewals knowing most clients won’t shop around. A fleet with a clean claims year is often worth considerably less to insure than the renewal quote reflects. The spread between brokers quoting on the same fleet can be 20-30% for identical cover.
The other side of this is claims frequency. It surprises most businesses to learn that three small claims in a year – a cracked windscreen, a car park scrape, a minor third-party bump – will often push renewal premiums up more than a single £5,000 incident. Underwriters read frequency as a signal about the business’s risk culture. A single large claim might be bad luck. Three small ones suggests something systemic isn’t being managed well.
| Claims scenario | What underwriters see | Typical premium impact |
|---|---|---|
| 0 claims in 12 months | Well-managed fleet, low risk | Potential reduction or flat renewal |
| 1 large claim (£5,000+) | Isolated incident, possibly bad luck | 10-25% increase, depending on circumstances |
| 3 small claims (under £1,500 each) | Frequency signal – possible systemic risk | 35-60% increase at renewal typical |
| 5+ claims in 12 months | High loss ratio, active risk concern | Policy decline or very significant loading |
The implication: a small claim that would cost £800 to settle might be better absorbed by the business than claimed, if the premium impact over the following three years would cost significantly more. There’s no universal answer – it depends on your loss ratio, your excess, and your specific claims history – but it’s a calculation worth making rather than defaulting to “we’re insured, so we claim.”
For a closer look at what drives fleet premiums and how to manage them, our guide to what affects fleet insurance premiums covers this in detail.
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4. Administration – the cost that’s measured in hours, not invoices
Fleet admin is invisible in most cost calculations because it doesn’t produce an invoice. Nobody sends you a bill for the time spent chasing driving licence checks, processing fuel receipts, booking MOTs, managing DVLA documentation, and keeping compliance records up to date. But the time is real, and it belongs to someone whose time has a cost.
Processing a single manual expense report costs around £23 in staff time, according to industry data on fleet administration. For a fleet running 20 vehicles with drivers submitting weekly, annual fuel and expenses reconciliation alone can run to several thousand pounds in absorbed staff cost. Add MOT scheduling, licence checking every quarter or six months (which the DVSA and HSE both recommend), insurance documentation, and driver induction admin, and the total is significant.
The compliance angle matters too. A driver whose licence has expired or who has accumulated penalty points that affect insurability is a risk that costs nothing until it costs everything. An undetected endorsement that invalidates cover on a vehicle involved in a serious incident can create liability exposure that dwarfs the cost of quarterly licence checks.
5. Fuel – the visible cost with invisible leakage
Fuel is one of the few fleet costs that does appear on an invoice. The problem is that the invoice reflects what was spent, not what needed to be spent. The gap between the two is where the hidden cost lives.
Inefficient routing adds unnecessary miles. Aggressive driving styles – hard braking, heavy acceleration – burn fuel that smoother driving wouldn’t. Unauthorised fuel purchases (premium unleaded where regular is fine, personal vehicle fill-ups charged to the company card) are harder to spot without visibility into individual transactions. Idling, which costs roughly the same in fuel as moving at low speed, often goes entirely unnoticed.
Businesses that introduce fuel cards with per-transaction data typically find immediate inefficiencies they didn’t know existed. Not because anyone was deliberately abusing the system, but because without visibility, nobody was managing it.
6. Grey fleet – the fleet you don’t know you’re running
Definition: Grey fleet occurs when employees use their own personal vehicles for business travel and claim mileage reimbursement. It creates a hidden cost through high mileage reimbursement and significant vicarious liability for the employer if those drivers lack the correct business use insurance cover.
Grey fleet is common across UK businesses and widely undermanaged. Many operators have a vague sense it exists without knowing its actual scale, cost, or compliance status.
The financial side: employees driving personal vehicles for business must hold business use cover on their own insurance. Many don’t. If an employee has an accident while driving their own car on company business and their policy doesn’t cover business use, the claim fails – and liability can fall back to the employer. The HSE is clear that employers have a duty of care for employees driving for work, regardless of whether the vehicle is owned by the company or the individual.
The cost side: HMRC’s advisory mileage rates (currently 45p per mile for the first 10,000 miles in a personal car) are designed to cover fuel and wear. For newer, lower-emission vehicles, the actual cost per mile is often higher than the rate covers – meaning the business is either underpaying the employee or the employee is absorbing a genuine cost. Neither is ideal.
Grey fleet is one of those areas where many businesses have a vague sense it exists without any clear visibility of its actual scale, cost, or compliance status. The first step is usually just finding out how many employees are using personal vehicles for business and what the actual mileage volume looks like.
7. Compliance failures – the costs that arrive all at once
Most hidden fleet costs erode the budget gradually. Compliance failures tend to arrive as a single, large, unexpected bill.
An operator licence infringement can result in the licence being suspended or revoked, taking a fleet off the road and stopping the business’s operations. A vehicle used commercially without the correct use class declared on the insurance policy is effectively uninsured, regardless of whether a premium is being paid. A driver found to have penalty points that should have been disclosed – but weren’t, because nobody checked – can invalidate the policy on their vehicle entirely.
These aren’t edge cases. The DVSA carries out roadside checks regularly, and commercial vehicles attract disproportionate attention. An operator that can’t immediately produce a valid MOT certificate, evidence of insurance, or a drivers hours record faces immediate prohibition – meaning the vehicle can’t be used until the defect is resolved.
The compliance costs that don’t happen, because the processes were in place to prevent them, are often the most valuable investments a fleet manager makes. They just don’t show up anywhere as a saving.
8. Wrong replacement cycles – keeping vehicles too long (or not long enough)
Keeping a vehicle past its optimal replacement point costs money in increasing maintenance, falling reliability, and reduced residual value. Replacing too early means not extracting full value from the asset. Getting the timing wrong in either direction adds to total cost of ownership without generating any corresponding benefit.
The typical cost pattern follows a curve. Early years are dominated by depreciation and finance costs. Middle years – roughly years three to four – tend to be the lowest total cost period. Late years see maintenance costs rise sharply as components reach the end of their service life, breakdowns become more frequent, and the vehicle’s reliability creates operational risk.
Most fleets replace too late. The reason is straightforward: replacement CapEx is visible and has to be justified. Maintenance costs come in as dozens of small invoices that never get aggregated into a single number. If nobody is tracking the lifetime maintenance spend per vehicle, the case for replacement is never as compelling on paper as it is in practice.
What to actually do about it – a practical starting point
You don’t need to solve everything at once. The highest-return steps for most small and medium fleets tend to be:
📊 Track cost per vehicle
Aggregate servicing, repairs, tyres, and downtime per vehicle per year. This single habit reveals which vehicles are costing disproportionately and when the replacement case becomes clear. Without it, you’re making decisions without the data that matters most.
🛡️ Shop the insurance every year
Auto-renewal is a cost you don’t have to pay. The spread between brokers on the same fleet can be 20-30%. A clean claims year especially deserves a competitive process – your loss ratio has improved and the renewal quote rarely reflects that. Our fleet insurance renewal checklist walks through this step by step.
📋 Manage small claims actively
Before claiming on every minor incident, weigh the premium impact against the claim value. Three claims at £800 each might cost you far more than £2,400 in premium increases over the next three years. Some small repairs are better absorbed by the business than claimed.
📋 Check driver licences regularly
Quarterly or six-monthly DVLA checks catch endorsements, disqualifications, and licence expiries before they become a compliance or insurance problem. Quarterly checks via the DVLA’s online licence checking service are the industry standard for risk mitigation – founding your compliance on verified data, not trust. An undisclosed endorsement that voids a policy at claim time costs considerably more than the admin to prevent it.
⚡ Audit grey fleet
Find out how many employees are claiming mileage for personal vehicle use and whether they hold business use cover. This is a liability the business carries without usually knowing its scale. A simple policy requiring evidence of business use cover before mileage is reimbursed addresses most of the risk.
🔧 Plan maintenance, don’t react to it
Planned servicing costs more in the short term than running vehicles until something breaks. It costs considerably less in unplanned downtime, emergency repairs, and vehicle lifecycles cut short by avoidable mechanical failures. The maths is straightforward once you’re tracking it.
For the insurance dimension specifically, our guide to reducing fleet insurance premiums covers 15 proven strategies in detail, including telematics, driver training, claims handling, and how to present your risk to brokers effectively at renewal.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only. Fleet running costs, insurance terms, and compliance obligations vary significantly depending on vehicle type, fleet size, sector, and individual business circumstances. Always seek advice from an FCA-regulated insurance broker or qualified fleet management specialist for guidance specific to your operation. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), registration number 916241.
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