Although tax horsepower was computed on a similar basis in several other European countries during the two or three decades before
World War II, continental cylinder dimensions were quoted in millimetres. As a result of rounding when converting the formula between the two measurement systems, a British tax horse-power unit ended up being worth 1.014 continental (i.e. French) tax horse-power units. where: : P = puissance administrative, : K = constant of 0.00015, : n = number of cylinders, : D = bore in centimetres, : L = stroke in centimetres, : \omega = speed of rotation in revolutions per second The result is multiplied by 0.7 for a four-stroke,
diesel engine (also for
wood gas-powered vehicles or those running on
CNG). Since \omega and K are both constants while n, D, and L combine to form the engine's displacement, a commission simplified the formula to: : P ={C \times K} where: : P = puissance administrative, : C = displacement in litres (1 L = ), : K = constant of 5.7294 for petrol engines and 4.0106 for diesel engines
1978 formula A new system was announced on 23 December 1977 to come into force on 1 January 1978 calculated by the following formula: : P = m \left(0.0458\ \frac{C}{K}\right)^{1.48} where: : P = puissance administrative, : m = coefficient of 1 for petrol or 0.7 for diesel, : C = engine capacity in cubic centimetres, : K = parameter calculated from a weighted arithmetic average speed in kilometres per hour theoretically reached by the vehicle at an engine speed of 1000 revolutions per minute in each gearbox ratio (see dropdown table to the right for more details).
1998 formula From 1998 until January 2020, the fiscal tax depended on a standardised value of carbon dioxide emissions in grams per kilometre (g/km) and the maximum engine power in kilowatts (kW). If C is the amount of released and P the engine power, then: : P_A = \frac{C}{45} + \left( \frac{P}{40} \right)^{1.6} P_A is expressed in horsepower, rounded to the nearest integer. The official emission rate of included in the calculation is taken from the European certificate of conformity.
Germany Tax horse-power (
Steuer-PS) was introduced in Germany on 3 June 1906 however in contrast to many regions, i.e. British and French tax horsepower formulae above, it was calculated based on the overall
engine displacement from its implementation. The German formula applied a higher tax horse-power factor to
two stroke engine cars than to four-stroke engined cars based on the fact each cylinder in a two-stroke engine fires (has a
power stroke) every revolution whereas an
Otto cycle or four-stroke cylinder only fires every second revolution . The formulae for calculating units of tax horsepower (
Steuer-PS) were as follows: four-stroke engined cars = 0.30\times i\times d ^2\times s two-stroke engined cars = 0.45\times i\times d ^2\times s where: : i = the number of cylinders : d = the diameter (or bore) of each cylinder : s = the stroke length of each cylinder Incomplete fractions were rounded up to the nearest whole number so a four-stroke engined car of would end up designated as a 4 PS (or four horsepower) car for car tax purposes. After April 1928, recognizing the logic of the linear relationship between tax horsepower and engine capacity, the authorities simply set car tax rates according to engine size for passenger cars. (For commercial vehicles vehicle tax became a function of vehicle weight.) Attempts to correlate new tax horsepower values with old ones result in small differences due to roundings used in the new formula which are, for most purposes, unimportant. In 1933 the Hitler government came into power and identified the promotion of the auto industry as key to economic recovery: new cars purchased after April 1933 were no longer burdened by an annual car tax charge and German passenger car production surged from 41,727 in 1932 to 276,804 in 1938. Thereafter war and military defeat led to a change in car tax policy and after 1945 tax horse-power returned in West Germany, applying the 1928 formula, as a determinant of annual car tax on new cars purchased in or after 1945. However, the introduction of tax on road fuel in 1951 and progressive increases in fuel tax thereafter reduced the importance of annual car tax so that today far more of the tax on car ownership is collected via fuel taxes than via annual car tax.
Italy Fiscal horsepower is still used in Italy for insurance purposes; it was formerly used also for car property taxation and it is based on engine displacement. Following the
1973 oil crisis up until the 1990s, it was heavily imposed on vehicles with engines larger than 2,000 cc, prompting Italian car makers to fit
turbochargers for extra power without enlarging the displacement.
Spain Fiscal horsepower also lives on in Spain, but is defined simply in terms of overall engine capacity. It therefore encourages small engines, but does not influence the ratio of cylinder bore to stroke. The current Spanish definition does, however, add a factor that varies in order to favour four-stroke engines over two-stroke engines. :P_f = T \left({0.785 \cdot D^{2} \cdot R}\right)^{0.6} \cdot n where: : P_f = Tax Horsepower (
Potencia fiscal), : T = 0.08 for four-stroke engines, 0.11 for two-stroke engines, : D = cylinder bore in centimetres, : R = stroke length in centimetres, : n = Number of cylinders For vehicles where the above formula cannot be applied (e.g. electric vehicles), the tax horsepower is derived from the effective engine power (which is defined by law as the maximum power that the engine can provide after being used at full power from 30 minutes, which is normally lower than the rated engine power). Until 1998 the nominal power of the engine was used instead of the effective power. :P_f = \frac P {5.152} where: : P_f = Tax Horsepower (
Potencia fiscal), : P = effective power in kW
Switzerland The
26 cantons of Switzerland used (and use) a variety of different taxation methods. Originally, all of Switzerland used the tax horsepower, calculated as follows: : \text{CV/PS}=0.4\times i\times d^2\times S where: : i = the number of cylinders, : d = the diameter (or bore) of the cylinder in cm, : S = the piston stroke in cm or times
engine displacement in cc The limits between the horsepower denominations were drawn at either 0.49, 0.50, or 0.51 in different cantons. Thus, the eight horsepower category would cover cars of about 7.5–8.5 CV. In 1973 Berne switched to a taxation system based on vehicle weight, and a few other cantons followed. In 1986
Ticino switched to a system based on a calculation including engine size and weight. The plethora of different taxation systems has contributed to there always being an uncommonly wide variety of different cars marketed in Switzerland. ==Japan==