Fuel consumption is now the number one priority for UK car buyers with 57% declaring it as one of their most important factors when considering their next vehicle purchase a new study has revealed. The survey commissioned by used car marketplace CarGurus found that owners are using their current cars less prioritising fuel-efficient models more heavily when shopping for a new car and contemplating purchasing EVs in greater numbers than before. Fuel consumption (57%) relegates reliability (55%) to second on the list of buyers concerns ahead of road tax (25%) which has climbed from sixth to become Brits third most significant consideration as the cost of living continues to increase. Design/style and passenger/luggage capacity have slipped from third and fourth to fifth and sixth respectively. When contemplating which factors would be most likely to push them toward a more eco-friendly or fuel-efficient car nearly half (43%) cited increased fuel prices with almost a third (31%) referencing the fight against climate change. Just 57% of respondents said they would still have bought the car they own had fuel prices been the same today. Almost a quarter (23%) would have chosen a model that was cheaper to run and nearly one in ten (8%) said they would have either purchased an EV or nothing at all. Respondents also reported that increased fuel prices have caused them to shift how they use their cars. Nearly half (47%) said they were avoiding unnecessary car journeys with 37% choosing to walk more often 18% using public transport and 12% cycling. In total CarGurus survey found UK car owners to be driving an average of 17.8 miles fewer per week than they were prior to the fuel price rises the equivalent of removing 564 million miles-worth of journeys or 86 809 cars from the UK s roads. When it came to swapping their combustion-powered car for an EV nearly a quarter of respondents (22%) said that they had started considering purchasing an electric vehicle since the recent fuel price rises. With over half (51%) of UK drivers now contemplating the switch in total factors such as cost (68%) lack of public charging infrastructure (45%) lack of domestic charging infrastructure (40%) and range anxiety (39%) remained key in dissuading them that the time was right to do so. Over three quarters (67%) of those who are considering purchasing an EV said that fuel price rises had brought forward the date by which they thought they d own an electric vehicle with nearly a fifth (18%) saying they now saw themselves driving an EV up to three years sooner than they otherwise might have done.