Car-sharing giant Zipcar to exit UK market by end of 2025
Zipcar will suspend new UK bookings from December 31 while it consults on closing its British operations
The global car-sharing company Zipcar has announced it will withdraw from the United Kingdom, suspending all new bookings after December 31, 2025, as it begins a formal consultation with its UK staff over the proposed shutdown.
Existing hire bookings can be honoured through the end of the year, and customer accounts will remain active until a final decision is taken.
Zipcar UK serves more than 650,000 members and operates a fleet spanning approximately 3,000 vehicles nationally — including over 1,000 electric cars in London alone.
The closure follows a period of heavy financial losses: the UK arm reported an operating loss of £4 million last year and deeper losses totalling £11.7 million in 2024. Rising costs, including electricity and insurance, and the looming imposition of a new London congestion charge on electric vehicles from January 2026, put further pressure on the company’s operating model.
A spokesperson for Zipcar’s parent company confirmed that the exit affects only the UK market; operations in other countries, including the United States and Canada, will continue unaffected.
Zipcar had significantly reduced its UK workforce in recent years — from 92 employees in 2023 to 71 in 2024.
The move delivers a sharp blow to supporters of shared mobility and urban sustainability, who argue that car-sharing offers a flexible, low-emissions alternative to private car ownership.
Critics of the decision highlight the UK’s comparatively weak policy support for car clubs: only around 0.7 shared cars per 10,000 people, far behind levels in countries such as Germany or Switzerland.
Users with ongoing subscriptions extending into 2026 are expected to receive pro-rated refunds.
The company has encouraged members to seek alternative car-sharing services, pointing to a national shared-mobility organisation for guidance.
For now, the future of many Londoners’ convenient, low-commitment access to cars — especially electric vehicles — hangs in the balance unless new operators step in.