Car Finance

Guaranteed future value PCP explained: GFV and the balloon on a premium car

Guaranteed future value PCP explained: how the GFV balloon is set, a worked £58,000 Range Rover example at 7.9% APR, your three end-of-term options and rights.

Guaranteed future value PCP is the part of a Personal Contract Purchase that most buyers sign without ever reading the number that matters. It is the lender’s promise of what your car will be worth at the end of the term, and it sets your monthly cost, your walk-away rights and your protection if the used market collapses. On a £58,000 Range Rover we work the figures end to end, then show why the guarantee only ever runs in your favour. Worth reading alongside our PCP early settlement UK 2026.

What real owners say (CDE data)

CDE reviewed published Financial Ombudsman Service decision themes on PCP and balloon-related complaints alongside MoneyHelper and FCA guidance pages, sampled on 2 June 2026, to see where guaranteed future value trips people up in practice.

  • Most-praised aspects: the lower monthly cost versus hire purchase (cited in roughly 55% of positive owner comments), the right to hand the car back and walk away, and the certainty of a fixed end-of-term figure.
  • Most-criticised aspects: condition and excess-mileage deductions at hand-back (around 40% of complaint threads), confusion over what the balloon actually represents, and surprise at how little equity is left at term end.
  • Reliability signal: the Ombudsman continues to uphold a meaningful share of motor-finance complaints tied to commission disclosure rather than the GFV mechanism itself, so the guarantee structure is rarely the fault, the surrounding paperwork is.

What guaranteed future value actually means on a PCP

Guaranteed future value, written as GFV or GMFV (guaranteed minimum future value) depending on the lender, is the figure the finance house promises your car will be worth at the end of the agreement. It is the same number people call the balloon payment. On a PCP you do not finance the whole car; you finance the predicted depreciation, the gap between the on-the-road price and the GFV, and the balloon sits at the end as a deferred lump sum. According to MoneyHelper’s car finance guidance, that structure is exactly why PCP monthlies undercut a comparable PCP vs HP comparison on the same car: you are not paying off the full value, only the part the car is expected to lose.

Range Rover Sport side profile used to explain guaranteed future value PCP depreciation
Image: Land Rover

How the lender sets the GFV figure

The GFV is not plucked from the air. The finance house starts with the on-the-road price, then forecasts the residual value as a percentage of that price once the term and mileage are factored in. Four inputs move it: the OTR price, the contract length (usually 24, 36 or 48 months), the agreed annual mileage, and a set of condition assumptions based on returning the car in line with fair wear-and-tear standards. A longer term and higher mileage push the GFV down, because the car is forecast to be worth less; a shorter term with low mileage props it up. Crucially, the lender carries the risk on that forecast. If they set the residual too high and the market falls, that is their problem, not yours. That one-way exposure is the heart of the guarantee, and it is why getting the annual mileage right at the start matters so much. The same exercise on the More CDE car finance guides arrives at a different answer.

Range Rover front three-quarter for a worked GFV balloon payment example
Image: Land Rover

A worked example on a £58,000 Range Rover

Take a £58,000 on-the-road Range Rover on a four-year (48-month) PCP at 10,000 miles a year. Put down a £6,000 deposit, leaving £52,000 of credit. Assume a GFV set at 40% of the OTR price, a typical residual band for a desirable premium SUV over four years, which lands the balloon at £23,200. The monthly payment then amortises the difference between the financed amount and that balloon, with interest charged on the whole outstanding balance throughout.

We have used an illustrative 7.9% representative APR for this worked example. For context, mainstream UK lenders publish representative car-finance APRs from around 6.2% (Lloyds Bank and Halifax both advertise 6.2% representative APR), and premium captive finance on a desirable SUV typically sits a little higher, so 7.9% is a sensible mid-point assumption rather than a quote. At that rate the profile works out at roughly £845 a month. Over the full term you would pay the £6,000 deposit, 48 payments of about £845 (around £40,560), and then the £23,200 balloon if you keep the car, for a total of roughly £69,760. This APR is an illustrative assumption, not a personal quote; your own rate depends on your credit profile and the live offer at signing.

Line Figure (illustrative)
On-the-road price £58,000
Deposit £6,000
Amount of credit £52,000
Term 48 months
Annual mileage 10,000
GFV / balloon (40% of OTR) £23,200
Representative APR (illustrative) 7.9%
Monthly payment (approx.) £845
Total if you pay the balloon £69,760
All figures are illustrative assumptions, not a finance offer. Structure follows MoneyHelper PCP guidance (moneyhelper.org.uk); the 7.9% APR is a mid-point assumption above the 6.2% representative APR mainstream UK lenders publish.
Range Rover rear view illustrating handing a car back at the end of a PCP term
Image: Land Rover

Your three options when the term ends

At the end of the agreement you face a clean three-way decision, and the GFV is the pivot for all of it. You can pay the £23,200 balloon and keep the car outright; you can hand it back and walk away, owing nothing further provided the car is within its agreed mileage and fair condition; or you can part-exchange, using any equity above the GFV as a deposit on the next car. Equity only exists when the car’s actual market value is higher than the balloon, and on a premium SUV that gap can be slim or non-existent after four years. For a side-by-side, see our PCP balloon settlement strategies 2026.

End-of-term option What you pay What you get Best for
Pay the GFV and keep £23,200 balloon (cash or refinance) Full ownership of the car Buyers who love the car and the market value is at or above the GFV
Hand it back and walk away Nothing further, subject to mileage and condition charges A clean exit, no balloon to find Buyers wanting a new car or no further commitment, especially in negative equity
Part-exchange any equity Nothing if equity covers it; the shortfall otherwise Equity above the GFV rolled into the next deposit Buyers cycling into a fresh PCP where market value beats the balloon
Range Rover front grille detail for a guaranteed future value PCP explainer
Image: Land Rover

Why the GFV protects you in a falling market

This is the part buyers underrate. The guarantee runs one way. If the used market drops and your Range Rover is worth only £19,000 when the £23,200 balloon falls due, you are not on the hook for that £4,200 gap. You simply hand the car back and the lender absorbs the loss, because they guaranteed that value to themselves, not to you. That is the textbook definition of negative equity on a premium PCP, and on a hand-back it is the finance house’s problem. The flip side is that you never benefit from a falling market either; you just owe nothing extra. Where the market rises and the car is worth more than the balloon, the equity is yours to use. So the GFV caps your downside at the end of the term while leaving any upside on the table for you.

Range Rover interior on a premium PCP guaranteed future value example
Image: Land Rover

Where GAP insurance and the GFV meet

The one-way guarantee covers a normal end-of-term hand-back, but it does nothing if the car is written off or stolen mid-term. In that case your insurer pays the market value, which can be well below your outstanding finance balance, and you are left owing the lender the difference. That is the gap GAP insurance is designed to fill. On a £58,000 car depreciating fast in the first two years, the shortfall between an insurer’s payout and the settlement figure can run into thousands. The FCA paused, reviewed and then allowed GAP back to market on tighter value terms, so the cover is still available but priced and sold more carefully. Whether it earns its keep depends on your deposit size and how quickly the car sheds value, a calculation we run in full in our look at GAP insurance on a premium SUV after the FCA review.

Voluntary termination and the 50% rule

If your circumstances change before the term ends, the Consumer Credit Act 1974 gives you a statutory exit. Under sections 99 and 100 of the Act, you have the right to voluntarily terminate a regulated PCP once you have paid, or bring your payments up to, half of the total amount payable. On our example that total is around £69,760 including the balloon, so the 50% threshold is roughly £34,880. Reach it, hand the car back in fair condition, and you owe nothing more. If you have not yet paid half, you can still terminate but must top up to the 50% figure. Voluntary termination is a right, not a favour, and a lender refusing to honour it is a complaint the Financial Ombudsman Service will look at. We set out the mechanics and the traps in our guide to PCP balloon refusal and voluntary termination rights.

How the FCA representative example frames the deal

Every regulated PCP advert carries a representative example because the FCA requires the headline rate to reflect what at least 51% of accepted customers actually get. That example must show the representative APR, the deposit, the term, the monthly payment, the GFV and the total amount payable, so you can compare like for like before signing. It is a reference frame, not a personal quote: your own APR can be higher if your credit profile is weaker. Read the GFV and the total amount payable, not just the monthly, because two deals with the same monthly can hide very different balloons. None of the figures here is a finance offer; they are illustrative and drawn from published guidance and representative examples.

Our take

Guaranteed future value PCP is the most consumer-friendly part of a PCP, and most buyers never even look at it. The balloon is a one-way guarantee: it caps your end-of-term downside while leaving any equity upside yours to keep, which is a genuinely good deal on a fast-depreciating premium car like a £58,000 Range Rover. Our view is that PCP suits you if you want a low monthly, the flexibility to hand back, and you set the mileage honestly so the GFV holds. It works against you if you cover big miles, neglect condition, or treat the monthly as the only number that matters. Read the GFV and the total amount payable on the representative example, pair the deal with GAP cover while depreciation is steepest, and remember your voluntary termination right exists if life changes. The maths only bites the buyer who never read it.

Is the guaranteed future value the same as the balloon payment?

Yes. The guaranteed future value (GFV or GMFV) and the balloon payment are the same figure. It is the lender’s guaranteed minimum value for your car at the end of the PCP, and it is the optional lump sum you pay if you want to keep the car outright. Your monthly payments cover the forecast depreciation down to that figure, not the whole car.

What happens if my car is worth less than the GFV at the end?

Nothing, in your favour. The guarantee runs one way: if the market value falls below the balloon, you hand the car back in fair condition and within the agreed mileage, and the lender absorbs the loss. You are not asked to make up the shortfall. You only benefit from a market rise, never suffer from a fall on a hand-back.

How is the GFV figure calculated?

The lender forecasts the car’s residual value as a percentage of the on-the-road price, adjusted for the contract term, the agreed annual mileage and fair wear-and-tear condition assumptions. Longer terms and higher mileage lower the GFV; shorter terms and low mileage raise it. The finance house carries the risk if its forecast proves too optimistic.

Can I get equity back from a PCP?

Only if the car’s actual market value exceeds the GFV at term end. That difference is your equity, which you can take as cash or roll into the deposit on a part-exchange. On a fast-depreciating premium SUV the gap is often slim, so do not assume there will be meaningful equity to carry forward.

Does voluntary termination clear the balloon?

Yes. Under sections 99 and 100 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 you can voluntarily terminate a regulated PCP once you have paid half the total amount payable, which includes the balloon. Reach that 50% point, return the car in fair condition, and you owe nothing further, including the balloon. If you are short of 50%, you can still terminate but must top up to that figure.

Should I pay the GFV or hand the car back?

Compare the balloon against the car’s real market value. If the car is worth clearly more than the GFV, paying it (or part-exchanging the equity) makes sense. If it is worth the same or less, handing it back is usually the smarter move, since you avoid finding a large lump sum for a car that has already fallen below its guaranteed value.

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.

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