Vehicle types guides to help you understand the differences between petrol, diesel, hybrid, plug-in hybrid (PHEV) and electric cars in the UK. We explain how each type typically performs in real-world driving, what to check when buying or owning one, and when it might make sense to keep or sell based on your mileage, driving routine, and running costs.
Start here: the most useful vehicle type guides
If you’re comparing car types, start with the guides below. They cover the questions that usually decide what suits your driving and budget.
- Hybrid cars explained (and whether you should sell your hybrid)
- Plug-in hybrid (PHEV) vs hybrid: what’s the difference?
- Electric cars explained: range, charging and running costs (UK)
- Petrol vs diesel: which is better for your mileage?
- What is mild hybrid (MHEV) and is it worth it?
- Best vehicle type for city driving vs motorway driving
- What to check when buying a hybrid or electric car
- Do vehicle types affect ULEZ/CAZ charges?
Petrol, diesel, hybrid or electric: which type suits you?
Start with your mileage and where you drive most. If most of your week is short trips, you’ll usually benefit more from a petrol, hybrid or electric setup than a diesel that never reaches full operating temperature. If you regularly do longer motorway journeys, comfort, stability, and fuel efficiency at speed become more important.
Next, think about charging and restrictions. If you’re considering electric or plug-in hybrid, be realistic about whether you can charge consistently. If you drive into restricted city areas, check how your vehicle type and emissions standard interact with ULEZ and Clean Air Zone rules.
Latest vehicle type guides
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Should I Sell My Hybrid Car? A UK Guide to Timing, Value and Your Next Steps

If you’re asking “should I sell my hybrid car?”, you’re usually weighing two things: future running costs versus what you could get for it today. In the UK, hybrids sit in a “middle ground” between petrol/diesel and fully electric, and the best time to sell depends on your mileage, your battery condition, local clean-air rules,
Related guides you may want next
Vehicle type decisions often overlap with buying checks, running costs, and emissions rules. You may find these hubs useful next.
Vehicle types FAQs
It depends on your mileage and charging access. Electric can be cheapest if you can charge conveniently, while hybrids can be cost-effective for stop-start driving.
For some high-mileage motorway drivers, diesel can still work, but you should consider emissions restrictions and where you drive most.
A hybrid charges itself while driving. A plug-in hybrid has a larger battery designed to be charged externally and can do more miles on electric when charged regularly.
Standard hybrids generally do not. Plug-in hybrids do, and they work best when you charge them consistently.
Many are, but real-world range, charging speed, and how often you do long trips matters. Your routine should guide your choice.
Battery health indicators, service history, warning lights, smooth operation, and whether any recalls or manufacturer updates have been handled.
Often yes, but the deciding factor is usually emissions standard and vehicle records, not just fuel type. Always check your specific vehicle.
Thinking of switching vehicle type?
If you’re considering changing from petrol to hybrid, diesel to petrol, or moving to an electric car, it helps to start with your current car’s value. You can request a quick valuation and we’ll come back to you with a fair offer based on your car’s details and condition.
Explore other BuySellDrive guides
Browse our other guide hubs for selling, buying, valuations, ownership and emissions advice.
