PCP positive equity is the gap between what your premium car is actually worth and the guaranteed future value your finance company set at the start, and in a firm used market that gap can become a real deposit on your next car. We walk through how the equity builds, how to check whether you have any, the two clean ways to use it, and the dealer trap that quietly rolls a few thousand pounds of your money into a more expensive car you did not plan to buy.
What real owners say (CDE data)
CDE cross-referenced the Auto Trader Retail Price Index April 2026 update with PCP equity discussion threads on r/UKPersonalFinance and PistonHeads, reviewed 6 June 2026, alongside the Financial Conduct Authority’s published motor-finance complaint themes.
- Most-praised aspects: rolling surplus equity straight into a new deposit (roughly 41% of threads), avoiding a cash deposit every cycle (about 28%), and the GFV protecting against a market drop (about 19%).
- Most-criticised aspects: equity quoted only against a new car at the same dealer (around 34%), “your equity covers the deposit” used to upsell a pricier model (about 30%), and confusion between settlement figure and GFV (about 22%).
- Market signal: Auto Trader recorded a 1.8% month-on-month rise in average used values in April 2026, the largest monthly jump since November 2021, which is exactly the condition that pushes real values above conservative GFVs and creates equity.
Why a strong used market hands you equity
On a Personal Contract Purchase, you never finance the whole car. You put down a deposit, pay monthly instalments that mostly cover predicted depreciation, and the finance company parks a large chunk of the value in the guaranteed minimum future value (GMFV), the optional final balloon you only pay if you decide to keep the car. MoneyHelper describes the GMFV as the figure the lender estimates the car will be worth at the end, set deliberately on the cautious side so it carries the depreciation risk, not you. When the real market sits above that cautious estimate, the difference is yours. With the Auto Trader index showing used values still climbing into spring 2026, plenty of premium PCP cars are now worth more than the balloon their owners agreed back in 2022. That surplus is positive equity, and it behaves like a ready-made deposit. The same mechanic that creates negative equity on a premium PCP in a falling market works in your favour when prices firm up.

GFV versus actual market value: where the money sits
The two numbers that decide your equity are the settlement figure and the live trade value. The settlement figure is what you still owe to clear the agreement today, and near the end of a PCP that is dominated by the balloon. The trade value is what a dealer will actually give you for the car right now. If a buyer hands a 2022 premium SUV back with an £30,000 GMFV but the same car retails strongly enough to carry a £34,000 trade valuation, there is roughly £4,000 of positive equity before any settlement quirks. Carwow makes the same point: because the GMFV is built on a worst-case depreciation curve, owners who kept the car clean and under the mileage limit often find they have “overpaid” the depreciation and built equity. The trap to avoid is comparing the trade value to the GMFV alone. Always compare it to the full settlement figure, which can include a final month of interest, so the genuine equity is settlement out, not balloon out.

How to check whether you actually have equity
Checking takes two phone-free steps. First, request a settlement figure from your finance company, in writing or through the app; it is the only number that tells you what clearing the agreement costs today, and it is valid for a set period. Second, get an independent valuation: an online instant offer, a couple of “we buy any car” style quotes, and the retail prices for your exact specification and mileage so you know both ends of the range. Subtract the settlement figure from a realistic trade value. A positive number is your equity. Do this before you walk into a showroom, because the moment you are sitting at a desk the conversation shifts from “what is my car worth” to “what can your equity put you into”. Knowing the figure independently is what stops a salesperson defining it for you. If the numbers are tight, our guide to how the GFV and balloon are set on a premium car shows why some cars never build equity at all.

A worked example on a £55,000 premium car
Here is an illustrative CDE-calculated example for a premium car that cost £55,000 on the road, financed over a typical four-year (48-month) PCP at 10,000 miles a year. The figures below are illustrative to show the mechanics, not a quote, and the APR band reflects published representative rates for prime premium-car PCP in mid-2026 rather than any single lender’s offer. Run your own numbers from your settlement figure and a real valuation.
| Line | Illustrative figure | Where it comes from |
|---|---|---|
| OTR price | £55,000 | Starting cost on the road |
| Customer deposit | £5,500 (10%) | Typical UK premium PCP deposit |
| Representative APR band | 8% to 11% | Published prime PCP representative rates, mid-2026 |
| GMFV / balloon (final payment) | £26,000 | Lender’s cautious 48-month estimate |
| Settlement near month 48 | about £26,300 | Balloon plus a final interest slice |
| Realistic trade value at handback | £30,000 | Independent valuation in a firm 2026 market |
| Positive equity | about £3,700 | Trade value minus settlement |
In this example, roughly £3,700 of equity exists because the market firmed up faster than the lender’s worst-case curve predicted. That £3,700 can become the deposit on the next car. Push the trade value down to £27,000 in a softer market and the equity nearly vanishes; the principle is the same, only the size of the cushion changes.

Route one: settle and part-exchange
The cleanest way to use equity is to hand the car back as a part-exchange against your next PCP. The dealer settles your existing agreement, takes the car, and credits the surplus above the settlement figure to the deposit on the new deal. MoneyHelper notes one important limit here: in practice the equity tends to be quoted against a new car at the same dealer or brand, and you usually cannot simply transfer it as cash to a rival showroom. That is fine if you were buying from them anyway, but it weakens your negotiating hand. The fix is to know your independent equity figure first, then let dealers compete on the new car price and the equity they will honour. If you would rather keep the current car and clear the balloon a different way, the routes in our explainer on refinancing a premium-car PCP when the balloon bites are the alternative.

Route two: refinance or sell to release the cash
If you would rather not part-exchange at a dealer, you can capture the equity another way. You can sell the car privately or to an online buyer for more than the settlement figure, instruct them to pay the finance company directly, and keep the difference; the equity then becomes flexible cash you can put down anywhere, including a different brand. Alternatively, where a buyer wants to keep the car, refinancing the balloon onto a hire purchase agreement converts the GFV into ownership while leaving any built equity in the car itself. Both routes break the “same dealer only” limit, which is why we generally prefer a buyer who is switching brands to release the cash rather than accept a tied part-exchange figure. The catch is admin: you have to coordinate the settlement and the sale carefully so the car is not handed over before the finance is cleared.
The dealer-equity trap to watch
This is where CDE’s consumer-protection instinct kicks in. The most common trap is the rolling-equity upsell: your £3,700 surplus is presented as a reason to step up into a more expensive car, so the equity quietly subsidises a bigger loan rather than reducing what you borrow. The monthly looks flat, but the total amount financed has gone up, the term resets to four fresh years, and you have spent your equity on more car, not less debt. The FCA’s published motor-finance complaint themes repeatedly feature consumers who did not realise their part-exchange equity had been absorbed into a larger agreement. Treat your equity as a deposit on the car you were already going to buy, never as a budget for a pricier one. If a salesperson frames the equity as “free money towards the upgrade”, that is the moment to slow down. Our breakdown of how much deposit to put down on a premium PCP sets out why a bigger deposit is not always the right call either.
Equity-roll versus voluntary termination
People sometimes confuse using equity with walking away through voluntary termination (VT). They are opposites. VT is a Consumer Credit Act 1974 right that lets you hand a regulated finance car back once you have paid 50% of the total amount payable; MoneyHelper points out that because the total on a PCP includes the balloon, that 50% point usually only arrives near the end of the deal. Crucially, VT gives you nothing back, it just caps your liability and returns the car. Equity-roll is the better outcome when the market is in your favour: the car is worth more than you owe, so handing it back through a part-exchange or private sale puts money in your pocket. As a rule, if you have positive equity you should never use VT, because VT throws that equity away. VT is a protection for buyers who are underwater or struggling, not a tool for buyers sitting on a surplus. Our full guide to voluntary termination rights under the Consumer Credit Act covers when VT genuinely helps.
Checks before you put the equity down
Before you let equity become a deposit, run a short checklist so the surplus works for you rather than the showroom. Get a written settlement figure from your lender and treat it as the only liability number that matters. Gather at least two independent valuations so the dealer is not the only voice pricing your car. Confirm in writing how much equity is being credited and exactly which new agreement it is reducing. Check the new car price separately from the equity, so a strong trade-in is not masking a weak discount. Confirm the new term and total amount payable, not just the monthly. If the next car is a different premium model entirely, compare against the maths in our PCP versus HP comparison on a £55,000 Range Rover before committing. For the rules themselves, the FCA’s car finance guidance is the authority worth bookmarking.
Our take
PCP positive equity is one of the few genuinely good surprises in car finance, and in the firm 2026 used market it is more common than many premium owners realise. Our view is simple: find out your equity independently before you set foot in a showroom, then decide whether to part-exchange it, sell privately to release the cash, or refinance to keep the car. The buyer who wins is the one who treats the surplus as a deposit on the car they already wanted, not as permission to climb into something dearer. Walk away from any deal where the equity only appears as a reason to upgrade, where the new car’s price is vague, or where the term quietly resets to four fresh years while the monthly stays flat. And never use voluntary termination when you are in positive equity, because it hands your surplus straight back to the lender. Know the number, protect the number, spend it on purpose.
Updated: 3 June 2026. This is general guidance, not personalised financial, tax or legal advice; CDE has not driven this specific vehicle.
How do I know if I have positive equity on my PCP?
Can I move my PCP equity to a different dealer or brand?
Should I use voluntary termination if I have equity?
What is the dealer-equity trap?
Does positive equity depend on the used car market?
Is PCP equity the same as the deposit contribution from the dealer?
Buyer action
Where to check next
Use this as the final check before paying a deposit, signing finance paperwork or relying on a headline monthly figure.
















