A proposed national road user charge for electric vehicles (EVs) appears to be on ice after comments from the federal Transport Minister suggesting it could hinder a recent surge in sales.

As fuel prices reached record levels across Australia in March 2026, the proportion of EVs sold also surged by 88.9 per cent to a new high of 14.6 per cent market share.

The best-selling EV, the Tesla Model Y, was the third most popular vehicle overall behind the Ford Ranger and Toyota HiLux utes.

Yet as EV sales climbed, the expected announcement of a road user charge neared. It was previously set to be outlined in the federal budget this May, ahead of its implementation in 2028.

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Transport Minister Catherine King has now all but ruled out the announcement of a road user charge in next month’s federal budget.

“It’s obviously going to have to be legislated through the parliament, and I’m not clear that there’s a pathway for it through the parliament at this stage. We’ll wait and see,” she told ABC Insiders yesterday.

“At the moment we’re trying to encourage as much electric vehicle uptake as we possibly can, we don’t want to disincentivise that at all, so there is a balance to be struck here.

“We want to try and not disincentivise electric vehicle uptake, particularly right at the moment when we are seeing such a surge in that, so it may not be the time for it right now.”