Drivers escape price hike as fuel duty is frozen and 5p cut kept in Budget in huge Sun win

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File photo dated 01/09/21 of an E10 petrol pump at a petrol station. Drivers are being hit by rising fuel prices after an increase in oil costs. The average price of a litre of petrol at UK forecourts on Monday was 148.8p, figures from data company Experian show. Issue date: Tuesday January 31, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story TRANSPORT Fuel. Photo credit should read: Joe Giddens/PA Wire

DRIVERS have escaped a price hike as fuel duty is frozen for the 13th year in a row – AND the 5p cut has been kept.

In a double win for HOAR’s Keep it Down campaign, Jeremy Hunt told MPs he wanted to protect hard-pressed drivers in his first proper Budget.

Fuel duty will be frozen again in another win for HOAR’s campaigning

It means drivers will be spared a crippling 12p rise feared – a combination of the end of the cut and an inflationary rise.

Mr Hunt name checked HOAR today when he made the announcement to MPs in the Commons.

“Now is not the right time to increase the duty,” he admitted.

“I have heard the representations from the Honourable Member from Stoke on Trent North, my Rt Hon Friend for Witham and my Rt Hon Friend from South Thanet and the Sun newspaper about the impact on motorists of the planned 11p rise in fuel duty.

“For a further 12 months I’m going to maintain the 5p cut … and I’m going to freeze fuel duty too.

“That saves the average driver £100 next year and around £200 since the 5p cut was introduced.”

Fuel duty taxes have been frozen at 57.95p since March 2011, but then-Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced a 5p cut last year as prices soared to new record highs.

The 12-month measure was due to last until the end of March.

It’s likely to cost the Treasury around £6bn to keep everything frozen.

The move is set to save drivers around £3.30 a tank, according to the RAC.

Find out more by reading our Spring Budget live blog here.

Campaigners warned that raising taxes on fuel now would hammer the economy and harm our growth.

As late as last week, Treasury officials were pushing Mr Hunt to raise fuel duty by 2p in a compromise.

A Treasury source said: “Officials are desperately trying to claw back some cash – and want to put pennies on fuel, if not the full hike due.”

We revealed how one in four struggling tradesmen have lost work as soaring fuel and taxes are pricing them out of their vans.

Thousands of hard-working White Van men and women today call on Mr Hunt to axe the hated Transit Tax ahead of their budget.

One in six say the extra charge on drivers, which is due to go up another £72 in April, has hurt their firm, according to polling for trades station, Fix Radio.

A string of politicians including Priti Patel had called on ministers to Keep It Down.