Take-home vehicle

A company car is a vehicle which companies or organizations lease or own and which employees use for their personal and business travel.[1] A take-home vehicle is a vehicle which can be taken home by company employees. Depending on the company, company cars may be available to all employees or just top-level personnel.[2]

In corporate car sharing, the company shares the vehicles and allows multiple employees (rather than just one) to make use of a company car, at times when they actually need it. The vehicles are made available from a corporate car sharing pool, and shared for a fixed or flexible period of time.[3] One shared car could replace up to 8 non-shared cars. However, car-sharing does involve additional processing and associated costs.[4] Still, it reduces fleet-related costs over the long term and allow employees to save not only on costs but also on time.[5][clarification needed]

  1. ^ Næss-Schmidt, Sigurd; Marcin Winiarczyk (May 2010). "Company car taxation" (PDF). Taxation Papers (22). European Commission: Taxation and Customs Union DG. doi:10.2778/13821. ISBN 9789279158636. ISSN 1725-7557. Retrieved 24 May 2012.
  2. ^ Vermeersch, Laurent (28 August 2014). "Five reasons Belgium has the worst traffic in Europe". the Guardian. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  3. ^ "Corporate Car Sharing". Vimcar Resources. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  4. ^ "Corporate car-sharing requires change in attitude". Fleet Europe. 11 September 2017. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  5. ^ Reed, John (31 May 2017). "Corporate Car Sharing: an innovative solution to save the cost for company employees' car and taxi work travel". Shared Mobility. Retrieved 17 August 2021.

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