Kwik Fit has revealed the 20 most expensive cities to own a car in the UK.
The research was carried out for the automotive servicing and repair company by Consumer Intelligence among 1,186 UK car owners in January 2020.
It looked at the variance in the most common items of motoring expenditure in 20 locations across the country, using parking costs for residents taken from each council website during January 2020 and basing average insurance costs on research previously conducted by Go Compare.
Birmingham was found to be the UK’s costliest place to own a car, a position largely driven by the fact that the most expensive resident’s parking permit in the city is £785 per year.
When combined with items such as annual fuel costs, insurance, and parking away from home, the study found that total costs to Birmingham motorists beat those of Manchester and London into second and third place respectively.
The top five is completed by Belfast and Preston, where the study found that low parking permit costs are offset by high average annual fuel bills.
The fact that motorists in Leeds, Liverpool and Nottingham do not have to pay for a resident’s permit helps to keep overall costs down for drivers in those cities.
However, in many cases, the research found that savings in one area are offset by other items, particularly insurance.
Based on the average car insurance premium for different postcodes, annual cover varied by 156% from the cheapest location to the most expensive.
Exeter was found to be the place with the lowest insurance costs, while London has the most expensive, more than 2.5 times the equivalent cost in the Devon city.
While Liverpool car owners may not have to pay for residents parking, they incur the second highest insurance costs in the UK, behind only London for a comparable vehicle and driver.
This helps place Liverpool in seventh place in the top 20 most expensive cities.
Conversely, Edinburgh’s lower insurance costs are the main reason why the city appears in 16th place of Kwik Fit’s list.
Despite having the UK’s fifth highest residents’ permit cost at £254, the fact that the Scottish capital has the second lowest insurance cost in the country, at 7% more than Exeter, is a major factor in it being positioned in the bottom quarter.
A summary table of the costs and full details of the study are available here