UK GAP insurance 2026: FCA paused sales Feb 2024 over 70% commission, lifted May 2024. No automatic refunds, but a real complaint route to FOS.
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UK GAP insurance 2026: what the FCA actually did
On 9 February 2024 the Financial Conduct Authority announced that multiple insurers had agreed to pause new sales of guaranteed asset protection (GAP) insurance after the regulator’s fair-value review. The trigger was a Consumer Duty test that GAP products were failing: in 2022, FCA data showed only 6% of the total amount customers paid in premiums was actually paid back out in claims, while some firms were channelling up to 70% of the premium to commission for the parties involved in selling the policy. The pause covered roughly 80% of the GAP market by sales volume at the time. The FCA’s action was prompted by the same Consumer Duty principles that have driven the wider 2024 to 2026 motor finance commission scandal, which we cover in our companion piece on FCA motor finance redress 2026.

The pause lifted on 24 May 2024 with stricter rules
The FCA confirmed on 24 May 2024 that firms could recommence GAP insurance sales, but only after demonstrating fair value. Firms that returned to market did so with materially lower commission paid to sellers, plus updated product-governance evidence under the Consumer Duty. By July 2024 the regulator had cleared most major insurers to restart, and the rest followed through the second half of 2024. As of the UK GAP insurance 2026 market, sales are running again but at lower commission ratios and with more rigorous documentation. The FCA confirmed it will continue to monitor the market and is willing to use its product intervention powers again if value deteriorates. Firms must also keep fair-value assessments under review per Consumer Duty.
What you are NOT automatically owed
This is the part that matters and that some claims-management firms are getting wrong. The FCA did not announce an automatic refund or redress scheme for past GAP buyers. Unlike the motor finance commission-disclosure scandal, which is moving towards a structured redress scheme in 2026 (covered in our piece on the FCA motor finance complaints pause lifting 31 May 2026), the GAP action was a market-wide pause-and-fix, not a refund mandate. Anyone telling you that you are “due” a specific refund amount for a past GAP policy without first reviewing your individual sale is overstating. If you believe you were mis-sold, you have a real complaint route, but it is case-by-case and the outcome depends on the facts.

How to complain about a GAP policy: the 4-step route
Per MoneyHelper, the government-backed consumer guidance service, the route for a mis-sold financial product including GAP insurance is: (1) write to the firm that sold you the policy with a clear complaint, including the policy number, date of sale, and why you think it was mis-sold. The firm has up to 8 weeks under FCA rules to respond with a final decision. (2) If you are not satisfied with the firm’s response, or 8 weeks pass with no final decision, escalate to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) at financial-ombudsman.org.uk. (3) Provide FOS with your complaint pack, the firm’s response, and any supporting paperwork. (4) FOS will investigate and can require the firm to put you back in the position you would have been in if the mis-selling had not happened. There is no fee to the consumer. Time limits matter: 6 years from the sale OR 3 years from when you could reasonably have known something was wrong, whichever expires later.
CDE checklist: are you likely mis-sold?
Common grounds the Financial Ombudsman considers in GAP-related complaints, as published in FOS guidance on GAP insurance, accessed 2026-05-20:
- Price was not clearly explained at point of sale.
- You were not told you could buy GAP cover elsewhere, often much cheaper.
- The cover duplicated insurance you already had on the main motor policy.
- You were under time pressure to sign during the vehicle handover.
- You did not realise the policy term ran beyond your finance term, or vice versa.
- The salesperson’s commission was not disclosed at all.
None of these on its own is automatic grounds; FOS looks at the overall picture. But two or more in combination materially increase the chance of a finding in your favour.
If you are buying GAP cover today: 5 quick checks
Standalone GAP cover bought direct from a specialist provider is typically far cheaper than dealer-sold GAP, often by a factor of 3 to 5x, and FCA rules already require the dealer to give you four days between quote and purchase so you can shop around. The five quick checks before signing any GAP policy in the UK GAP insurance 2026 market: confirm the cover type (return-to-invoice, vehicle replacement, or finance gap); confirm the term and whether it matches your finance agreement; confirm the maximum claim cap; confirm whether mileage limits apply; and read the FCA fair-value summary the seller is now required to provide. Many newer EV buyers in particular get caught out: with EVs depreciating faster than petrol equivalents in some segments, the GAP exposure is bigger, but so is the temptation to over-pay for a dealer-bundled policy. Our 2026 UK MOT rules update covers the wider consumer-protection picture for vehicle owners.

Why the GAP and motor finance scandals are NOT the same
It is worth separating two threads readers keep blending. The GAP insurance action was a 2024 Consumer Duty fair-value intervention: the regulator paused new sales of a product it judged poor value, then let it resume with stricter commission and disclosure rules. There is no automatic redress for past buyers. The motor finance commission-disclosure scandal, by contrast, is a much wider FCA-led review of discretionary commission arrangements (DCAs) and other commission models on motor finance agreements going back to 6 April 2007, with a structured redress scheme expected to be confirmed in 2026 and roughly 12 million agreements potentially eligible. If you bought GAP through a dealer at the same time as your finance, you may have separate complaints on each product. Treat them as separate cases.
According to the FCA’s official press release on the GAP insurance sales resumption (24 May 2024), the regulator confirmed firms returning to market have done so with materially lower commission and improved value. The MoneyHelper guidance on mis-sold financial products sets out the complaint route, time limits, and free use of the Financial Ombudsman Service.
Our take
The UK GAP insurance 2026 market is functional again but the FCA action did the right thing: a product where 94 pence of every pound went anywhere except claims was not insurance, it was an introducer fee in disguise. The reset is welcome and standalone direct-buy GAP cover is now realistic value for the right buyer. What CDE wants readers to NOT do is hand over money to a claims-management company for a “no win no fee” GAP refund chase. There is no automatic redress scheme to chase, and you can complain to the seller and then to the Financial Ombudsman Service for free, without giving anyone a 30% cut of any payout. If you genuinely believe your sale was sub-standard, the route is: complaint letter to the firm, 8-week clock, FOS escalation. If it was a straightforward, well-documented sale where you had time to shop around and were told the price, you are unlikely to have a case.
When did the FCA pause GAP insurance sales, and when did it lift?
Am I automatically owed a refund on my old GAP policy?
How do I complain about a mis-sold GAP policy?
Is GAP insurance worth buying in 2026?
Related reading on CDE
- FCA motor finance redress scheme survives May 2026 challenge
- FCA motor finance complaints pause lifts 31 May 2026: how to claim

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.
















