Early settlement car finance sounds like a simple win: clear the agreement, own the car, save a pile of interest. On a £40,000 to £60,000 premium PCP or HP it is rarely that clean. The settlement figure is fixed by law, the interest rebate is smaller than most drivers expect, and the real question is whether your car is worth more than what you still owe. Here is the actual maths, the law behind it, and when settling early genuinely pays.
What real owners say (CDE data)
CDE reviewed owner discussion on PistonHeads and MoneySavingExpert on settling PCP and HP deals early, alongside the published rebate rules in the Consumer Credit (Early Settlement) Regulations 2004 (June 2026).
- Most-praised outcome: realising positive equity into a part-exchange deposit, where the car was worth more than the settlement figure.
- Most-criticised surprise: the interest rebate being far smaller than expected because most interest is front-loaded, followed by a stale settlement figure that crept up before payment.
- Recurring confusion: drivers expecting a “Rule of 78” style refund that no longer applies to modern regulated agreements, and conflating early settlement with voluntary termination.
What a settlement figure actually is
A settlement figure is the single amount your lender will accept to close the agreement today and pass you clean title to the car. It is the outstanding capital you still owe, plus any interest accrued up to the settlement date, minus the statutory rebate for the interest you have not yet reached. On a PCP, the guaranteed future value and the balloon are baked into that figure, because you are buying out the whole agreement, not just the monthly portion. Request it in writing; under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 a regulated lender must provide it.

How the figure is calculated on PCP versus HP
On hire purchase the maths is the more intuitive of the two: the settlement is the remaining capital balance plus accrued interest, less the rebate, because HP simply spreads the full price of the car over the term. On PCP you are settling the deferred-balloon structure, so the figure includes the optional final payment (the GMFV) you would otherwise face at the end. That is why a PCP settlement two years into a four-year deal can look high relative to what you have paid: a chunk of the car’s value was always parked at the back of the agreement. If you are weighing the two structures from the outset, our breakdown of PCP versus HP for 2026 shows how the early-exit position differs.

The Consumer Credit Act rebate, and why it is smaller than you think
You have a statutory right to settle a regulated agreement early and receive a rebate of charges. That right sits in section 94 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, and the rebate amount is set by the Consumer Credit (Early Settlement) Regulations 2004. The rebate is calculated with an actuarial formula that discounts the future repayments you will no longer make back to the settlement date using the agreement’s APR. The catch is that interest on a car loan is front-loaded: you pay proportionally more interest in the early months, so by the time you settle, much of the interest cost has already been incurred and cannot be rebated. The rebate refunds the interest you have not yet reached, not the headline total you might picture.

Why the Rule of 78 rebate is mostly dead
For years the “Rule of 78” was the standard early-settlement rebate method, and it was notoriously unkind to borrowers who paid off early. For regulated consumer credit agreements made on or after 31 May 2005, when the 2004 Regulations came into force, that method was replaced by the fairer actuarial calculation. Any premium PCP or HP you have taken out in recent years is governed by the modern formula, so the old Rule of 78 horror stories do not apply. There is one legitimate residual cost: under regulation 6, on agreements running more than a year the lender may defer the settlement date by up to a further month when calculating the rebate, effectively keeping up to a month of extra interest. That is the lawful sting in the tail, and it is why your rebate is never a full refund of every remaining penny of interest.

The 28-day window: why your figure has a shelf life
A settlement figure is not open-ended. Under regulation 5 of the 2004 Regulations, where you give notice to settle, the settlement date is the date falling 28 days after the lender receives that notice (or a later date you specify). In practice lenders issue a figure valid to that 28-day point. Miss it and the figure rises, because interest keeps accruing and any payment you make in the meantime shifts the balance. Treat the figure as a quote with a clock on it: get it in writing, confirm the exact good-through date, and have the funds or part-exchange ready to land inside the window. MoneyHelper’s guidance on ending a car finance deal early is a useful plain-English cross-check before you commit.
Early settlement car finance versus voluntary termination
These two exits are often confused, and they pull in opposite directions. Settling early means you pay the lender off and keep the car. Voluntary termination, your separate right under sections 99 and 100 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, means you hand the car back once you have paid one-half of the total amount payable, with no further liability beyond fair wear and tear. The 50% rule is a floor on what you must have paid, not a refund. On a deal in heavy negative equity, voluntary termination can be the cheaper escape because you walk away rather than funding the shortfall; our guide to PCP balloon refusal and voluntary termination covers when that right bites. On a deal in positive equity, settling and selling almost always wins, because handing the car back throws away the equity you have built.

Settling to part-exchange: the worked numbers
The decision turns on equity, not on the interest rebate. If the car is worth more than the settlement figure, the difference is your deposit on the next car. If it is worth less, you are carrying negative equity on a premium PCP into the next deal or paying it off in cash. The table below shows three realistic positions on a £55,000 premium SUV, two years into a four-year agreement, using an illustrative outstanding settlement figure; the APR and any figures on your own agreement come from your lender’s documentation, not from us.
| Position | Settlement figure | Car market value | Equity | What it means |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive equity | £34,500 | £38,000 | +£3,500 | Settle and sell or part-exchange; £3,500 becomes your next deposit. |
| Break-even | £34,500 | £34,500 | £0 | No gain, no loss; settle only if you want out or to stop interest. |
| Negative equity | £34,500 | £31,000 | -£3,500 | You fund the £3,500 gap to settle, or weigh voluntary termination. |
To check your side of that table, get a settlement figure in writing and a same-day valuation from more than one buyer. If you are settling specifically to roll equity forward, our note on using PCP positive equity as a deposit shows how dealers treat that handover, and the PCP mileage and excess-charge rules still matter because a part-exchange sidesteps end-of-contract damage charges a hand-back would trigger.
When settling early genuinely saves money
Settling does not create an absolute saving: you still repay the capital you borrowed. What it can do is cancel future interest you have not yet incurred and convert positive equity into a usable deposit. On a £40,000 to £60,000 car, three situations make it worthwhile. First, a windfall or lower-rate cash that lets you stop paying a high APR on a long balance. Second, clear positive equity you want to crystallise before the car depreciates further. Third, an imminent change of circumstances (a move abroad, a company-car switch) where carrying the agreement costs more than closing it. The Financial Ombudsman Service publishes its decisions on disputes over incorrect settlement figures and rebate calculations, so check the lender’s figure against the statutory formula before you pay.
According to the Financial Ombudsman Service’s published case studies on consumer credit, settlement and rebate disputes turn on whether the lender applied the regulated formula correctly, which is exactly the figure you should query if your rebate looks light.
Our take
Our view on early settlement car finance is that it is an equity decision dressed up as an interest decision. The statutory rebate under the 2004 Regulations is fair but modest, because most interest is front-loaded and the lender can lawfully keep up to a month of it. So do not settle expecting a big interest windfall. Settle when the car is worth clearly more than the figure and you want that equity working as a deposit, or when a windfall lets you escape a high APR on a large balance. We would walk away from settling on a deal sitting in deep negative equity unless there is a strong reason to keep the specific car, and we would model voluntary termination first in that case. Before paying anything, get the figure in writing, confirm the 28-day good-through date, and check the rebate against the statutory formula. What would change our view: a lender quoting a figure that ignores the rebate, which is your cue to complain, free, rather than pay.
A note on scope: this is general consumer guidance, not personalised financial, tax or insurance advice. The figures here are illustrative and depend on your salary, tax band, employer scheme and personal circumstances. Check the current HMRC, FCA and MoneyHelper guidance and speak to a regulated adviser before you commit.
How is a car finance settlement figure calculated?
Does the Rule of 78 still apply to my car finance?
How long is a settlement figure valid?
Is it better to settle early or use voluntary termination?
Will settling my premium car finance early save me money?
Where to settle or check next
Before you commit to settling a £40,000 to £60,000 agreement, work through these checks:
- Request your settlement figure in writing from the lender and confirm the 28-day good-through date.
- Check the rebate against the actuarial method in the Consumer Credit (Early Settlement) Regulations 2004 on legislation.gov.uk; query anything that looks light.
- Read MoneyHelper’s guidance on ending a car finance deal early for a plain-English second opinion.
- Get a same-day valuation from at least two buyers (an online instant-offer service and a franchised dealer) so you know your equity position.
- If the figure looks wrong and the lender will not fix it, raise a free complaint and escalate to the Financial Ombudsman Service.
- Confirm the lender is FCA-authorised on the Financial Services Register before you act on any settlement quote.
















