Concern about the future of company cars is growing across Belgian boardrooms. For many fleet and HR managers, the mobility budget is rapidly moving from “something to monitor” to “something to act on.” What is still optional today becomes mandatory for most companies by 2027. The question is no longer whether to prepare — it is how well-positioned your organisation will be when the obligation takes effect.
The mobility budget was introduced as a structured alternative to the traditional company car. Rather than receiving a vehicle, employees are allocated a budget they can distribute across three pillars:
In practice, the company car has not disappeared: nearly 20% of mobility budgets are still allocated to Pillar 1. The vehicle remains relevant, but it now sits within a broader, more flexible mobility strategy rather than as the default and only option.
The Belgian government is significantly expanding the scope of the mobility budget obligation. The key milestones are as follows:
This is not merely a fleet change. It requires a fundamental rethink of your organisation’s entire mobility strategy — including budgeting, policy, supplier management, and employee communication.
The mobility budget appears straightforward on paper, but implementation introduces a range of practical challenges that fleet and HR managers frequently underestimate:
For many organisations, these questions quickly combine into a significant administrative and operational burden. Without the right systems and partnerships in place, the mobility budget can generate more complexity than it resolves.
The shift to zero-emission mobility places electric driving at the centre of any credible Pillar 1 offering. This creates a specific operational challenge: how do you ensure that EV charging within the mobility budget remains efficient, controllable, and cost-effective? Without a structured approach, charging costs can accumulate rapidly, eroding the very flexibility the system is designed to provide.
MobilityPlus supports companies not only in implementing the mobility budget correctly, but in leveraging it as a strategic asset. Within Pillar 1, we provide a complete end-to-end EV charging solution:
Our modular approach ensures that every employee receives precisely what they need — without wasting budget or adding administrative overhead.
The mobility budget is not an administrative formality — it is a strategic opportunity. Organisations that invest early in a well-structured combination of electric charging, flexible mobility options, and intelligent cost control will enter 2027 with a distinct competitive advantage: lower fleet costs, higher employee satisfaction, and a mobility policy that is built for the future.
The decisive factor is not whether to act, but how intelligently you approach it.
With MobilityPlus, mobility becomes not a compliance burden, but a seamless, sustainable, and strategically sound solution.