Premium car finance changes character once the price tag passes £100,000, because the lenders, the deposit demands and the risks all shift. Mainstream PCP and HP still exist at this level, but many high street lenders cap the advance or want a far bigger deposit, and a guaranteed future value set against a fast-depreciating six-figure car becomes the single number that decides whether the deal makes sense. This guide walks through the routes a UK buyer actually has, from dealer PCP to private-bank lending, with a worked £100,000 example so you can see the monthly shape before you ever sit in a dealer’s office.
This is general information, not personal financial, tax or legal advice; figures depend on your circumstances and the rates current when you read this. CDE has not independently driven or inspected every individual vehicle referenced. Always confirm current rates with the cited gov.uk, HMRC or FCA source before you commit.
What real owners say (CDE data)
CDE reviewed the Financial Conduct Authority’s published motor-finance papers, Financial Ombudsman Service complaint data and owner discussion on PistonHeads alongside MoneyHelper’s PCP and HP guidance (checked June 2026). We have not assigned invented percentages to a single car; the signals below are drawn from those named public sources.
- Where buyers get caught: the balloon (guaranteed future value) on a six-figure PCP, and the gap between the headline monthly figure and the total payable if you keep the car.
- What owners praise: low monthly outlay on PCP versus outright purchase, and the certainty of a fixed future value that carries the depreciation risk.
- Regulatory signal: the FCA confirmed an industry-wide motor-finance redress scheme in 2026 covering agreements from 2007 to 2024, with around £7.5 billion expected to be returned to consumers, and the Financial Ombudsman has reported that vehicle-related cases now make up around a quarter of all the financial complaints it receives.
Why a six-figure car breaks the normal finance template
The products are familiar: personal contract purchase, hire purchase, personal contract hire and the broker or private-bank routes behind them. What changes at £100,000 is exposure. A flagship saloon or a high-output sports car can shed a large slice of its value in the first three years, and on a PCP the lender, not you, has guessed at that residual through the guaranteed future value. Set the balloon too high and the monthly payments flatter the deal while leaving you with nothing to roll into the next car; set it sensibly and the monthly number climbs. Many mainstream lenders will also cap the advance on a single agreement or insist on a larger deposit at this price, which is why a private bank or specialist broker often enters the picture. The mechanics of PCP and HP are set out plainly by MoneyHelper’s guide to buying a car with PCP, and they are worth reading before any deposit changes hands.

PCP at this level: lower monthly, bigger balloon risk
Personal contract purchase keeps the monthly figure down because you are only funding the predicted depreciation plus interest, not the whole car. At the end of the term you choose: pay the balloon and keep it, hand it back (subject to mileage and condition), or use any equity as a deposit on the next car. On a £100,000 car that balloon can comfortably exceed £40,000, and that is the figure that bites. If the used market softens and the car is worth less than the guaranteed future value, you simply hand it back and the lender absorbs the loss; if it holds value, you keep the equity. Understanding how that residual is set is the whole game, which is why our explainer on the guaranteed future value and the balloon on a premium car is the first thing we would read. PCP suits a buyer who changes car every three to four years and wants to cap downside on depreciation.

HP: you own it, but the monthly is far higher
Hire purchase is the simpler product. You pay a deposit, then fixed monthly instalments cover the entire balance plus interest, and the car is yours at the end with no balloon and no mileage cap. The trade-off is obvious on a £100,000 car: with no deferred lump sum, the monthly figure is far steeper than the equivalent PCP. HP appeals to the buyer who intends to keep the car for the long haul, drives high mileage, or simply wants to avoid the end-of-term decision and the condition inspection. It also sidesteps the balloon-shock that catches PCP owners who never planned how they would settle that final payment. MoneyHelper’s hire purchase guide sets out the ownership timeline, and our deeper look at hire purchase as the right finance for a used premium car covers where it beats PCP on a six-figure buy.

A worked £100,000 example (CDE calculation)
To show the shape, not to quote a deal, we ran the numbers ourselves. The rate and the guaranteed future value below are illustrative assumptions chosen for this worked example, not a representative APR or a market figure from any named lender. Before committing, get the real rate from a lender’s own published rate page; our note on the difference between a representative APR and your real car finance rate explains why the advertised number is rarely the one you get. Assumptions for this CDE calculation: a £100,000 car, a 20 percent deposit (£20,000), a 36-month term, an illustrative 9.9 percent APR, and an illustrative guaranteed future value of £45,000 on the PCP.
| Item | PCP | HP |
|---|---|---|
| Car price | £100,000 | £100,000 |
| Deposit (20%) | £20,000 | £20,000 |
| Term | 36 months | 36 months |
| Illustrative APR | 9.9% | 9.9% |
| Balloon / GFV (illustrative) | £45,000 | None |
| Approx monthly | around £1,476 | around £2,562 |
| Total if you keep the car | around £118,100 | around £112,200 |
The lesson is in the last two rows. The PCP monthly is roughly £1,000 lower, which is why it dominates premium showrooms, but if you pay the balloon and keep the car you end up paying more in total, because interest accrues on the deferred £45,000 across the whole term. Our side-by-side on PCP versus HP on a Porsche Panamera runs the same logic on a real model, and a personal loan versus PCP comparison shows when an unsecured loan beats both.

Private-bank and asset finance for high-net-worth buyers
Above £100,000, a private bank or wealth manager often offers a cleaner route than a dealer’s finance desk. Private banks and specialist lenders provide bespoke facilities for clients who bank with them, and asset finance arms such as Lombard structure lending against the vehicle or a wider asset base. A related option is a Lombard-style loan secured against an investment portfolio rather than the car, where you keep your assets invested and borrow against them, typically at a loan-to-value the bank sets case by case. These routes can offer flexible terms, larger advances and a relationship-driven rate, but they are not regulated consumer credit in the same way a standard PCP is, so the Consumer Credit Act protections below may not apply. Read the agreement type carefully: a facility arranged through private banking can sit outside the framework that gives ordinary buyers their voluntary-termination and early-settlement rights.

Your rights: voluntary termination and early settlement
On a regulated PCP or HP agreement under the Consumer Credit Act 1974, you have a voluntary-termination right: once you have paid (or bring your payments up to) half of the total amount payable, you can hand the car back and walk away, subject to fair wear and tear. The relevant provisions sit in section 99 and section 100 of the Act. On a six-figure agreement that 50 percent threshold is a large sum, so the right is most useful late in the term. You can also settle early at any point and the lender must tell you the settlement figure; that figure includes a statutory interest rebate, so it is less than the sum of your remaining payments. Where a lender refuses a fair termination, the route is a complaint and then the ombudsman; our guide to PCP balloon refusal and voluntary-termination rights covers the process in detail.
Deposit size and the FCA redress backdrop
How much you put down shapes everything else. A larger deposit cuts the financed balance, the monthly figure and the total interest, and on a six-figure car some lenders effectively require it before they will approve the advance. Our piece on how big a deposit to put on premium car finance works through the trade-offs. The wider backdrop matters too: the FCA confirmed its motor-finance redress scheme in 2026, covering commission arrangements on agreements between 2007 and 2024, and lenders have tightened how they disclose commission and structure deals as a result. If you took premium finance in that window, the scheme may apply to you; if you are arranging finance now, expect clearer commission disclosure than buyers got a few years ago.
Where to check the detail before you commit
Before you sign anything on a six-figure car, work through a short list of independent checks:
- Read the mechanics on MoneyHelper for PCP and HP so the dealer cannot reframe the basics.
- Confirm the lender is authorised on the FCA Financial Services Register and get the rate from its own published rate page, not a verbal figure.
- Check the agreement type: is it regulated consumer credit, with the Consumer Credit Act rights, or a private-banking facility that sits outside them?
- If a dispute arises, the Financial Ombudsman Service car-finance pages set out how complaints are handled.
- For ownership history and recalls on a used six-figure car, use the DVSA and gov.uk MOT and recall lookups.
- Browse the broader options in our car finance section before you pick a route.
Our take on premium car finance over £100,000
Premium car finance at this level rewards buyers who plan the exit before the entry. Our view: PCP makes sense if you genuinely change car every three to four years and want the lender carrying the depreciation risk, but only with a guaranteed future value you have stress-tested and a clear plan for the balloon. HP is the honest choice if you intend to keep the car, drive serious mileage, or simply want to own it outright without an end-of-term inspection. Private-bank and asset finance can beat both on flexibility and headline rate for high-net-worth buyers, but you trade away some of the Consumer Credit Act protections, so read the agreement type, not just the rate. What would flip our recommendation is the balloon: if the guaranteed future value looks optimistic against a fast-depreciating car, walk away or move to HP. The strongest deal is the one where you already know how it ends.
Can you get PCP or HP on a car over £100,000 in the UK?
Is the balloon payment the biggest risk on a six-figure PCP?
Should a high-net-worth buyer use a private bank instead of dealer finance?
Can I voluntarily terminate a £100,000 PCP and hand the car back?
Does the FCA motor-finance redress scheme affect premium car finance?
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