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Car finance redress opens 30 June 2026: what premium owners must do now

Car finance redress opens 30 June 2026. The FCA scheme returns about £7.5bn to drivers, roughly £830 per agreement. What premium PCP and HP owners must do now.

The car finance redress scheme opens on 30 June 2026, and if you bought a premium car on PCP or hire purchase in the past two decades you may be owed money without lifting a finger. The Financial Conduct Authority has confirmed an industry bill of around £9.1bn, with roughly £7.5bn of that going back to drivers. Our view: check which agreements you held, wait to be contacted by your lender, and do not hand a claims firm a cut of money you can collect for free.

What real owners say (CDE data)

This block draws on the FCA’s PS26/3 policy statement and its 30 March 2026 press materials, read by CDE on 6 June 2026. We did not run a survey or invent owner counts; every figure quoted below is the FCA’s own. The themes are the questions premium PCP and HP buyers are asking as the scheme opens.

  • Most-asked question: whether high-value agreements (Range Rover, Porsche, BMW M, AMG) on big balances see larger-than-average payouts. They need not: the FCA average is per agreement, tied to commission and interest overpaid, not to the car’s value.
  • Biggest worry: the wait. Lenders have months to make contact, which is where the temptation to pay a claims firm to “speed it up” creeps in.
  • Regulatory signal: the FCA built a single industry scheme rather than leave it to individual complaints, a sign of how widespread the commission problem was across 2007 to 2024.

This article is general information for UK premium-car buyers, not financial or legal advice. CDE has not assessed your individual agreement. For a decision on your own case, use the free routes below or speak to an FCA-authorised adviser.

Car finance redress: what the FCA confirmed in PS26/3

On 30 March 2026 the FCA confirmed its motor-finance redress scheme in policy statement PS26/3. It covers agreements taken out between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024 where a lender or broker failed to treat a customer fairly on commission. The regulator puts roughly 12.1 million agreements in scope and expects firms to pay about £7.5bn in redress, with the total cost to lenders nearer £9.1bn once the £1.6bn of running costs is added. That headline figure came down from the £8.2bn floated at consultation, after the FCA narrowed who firms must proactively contact. For a premium buyer the point is simple: a PCP or HP deal on a Range Rover, BMW, Audi, Mercedes or Porsche bought in that window is exactly what the scheme was built around.

Premium Audi estate of the kind often bought on PCP, relevant to the car finance redress scheme
Image: Audi

When the scheme opens and the dates that matter

The scheme runs on a staggered timetable. Lenders begin their implementation period from 30 June 2026 for agreements taken out on or after 1 April 2014, and from 31 August 2026 for older agreements going back to April 2007. From there, firms have three months to contact people who already complained, and six months to reach those who never complained but look owed money. In practice the FCA expects most post-2014 cases to be contacted by the end of 2026, and older cases by the end of February 2027. If you are sure you had a qualifying deal and nobody contacts you, you can still raise it directly with your lender up to 31 August 2027; our breakdown of who qualifies under PS26/3 and how to claim sets out the eligibility tests in full. Note one live risk: the scheme faces legal challenges from several lenders and a consumer body, so the exact start could slip. Our advice is to get your paperwork ready now rather than assume a delay.

Is the scheme opt-in or automatic?

This is where coverage has been muddled, so be clear: the scheme is opt-in, not opt-out. Lenders will write to people they believe are owed money, but you then have to respond within the FCA’s six-month window to join and receive a payment. If you do nothing after being contacted, you can lose the offer. You are also free to reject the scheme and pursue a court claim instead, though that carries cost and uncertainty most buyers will not want. For a higher-rate professional who took a four-year PCP on a £60,000 SUV, the realistic path is to watch for the letter, check the numbers, and accept if the redress is fair. Keep your old finance agreement, V5C and any settlement letters to hand so you can sense-check the offer.

BMW 5 Series estate, a typical premium PCP buy covered by the car finance redress scheme
Image: BMW Group

How much could a premium buyer get?

The FCA’s headline average is about £830 per agreement, not per person and not per car. That matters for premium buyers in two ways. First, one household can hold several qualifying agreements over the years, so the total can stack. Second, redress is tied to the commission and interest you actually overpaid, not the sticker price of the car. A £700 to £900 figure is sensible for a single mainstream-rate agreement, with some higher and many lower. A premium PCP with a high APR and fat commission may land above average; a sharp low-rate manufacturer deal may sit below it. Do not let a claims advert convince you that a £60,000 car automatically means a £6,000 cheque.

Scheme fact Confirmed figure (PS26/3)
Agreements in scope About 12.1 million
Dates covered 6 April 2007 to 1 November 2024
Total redress to drivers About £7.5bn (down from £8.2bn at consultation)
Total cost to lenders About £9.1bn (incl. £1.6bn running costs)
Average redress About £830 per agreement
Scheme opens 30 June 2026 (from-April-2014 deals); 31 August 2026 (earlier)
Final deadline to raise it 31 August 2027
Source: FCA, PS26/3 press release and policy statement, accessed 6 June 2026.

Why you should not pay a claims management firm

The single most expensive mistake here is hiring a claims management company or law firm to do something the scheme does for free. The FCA has been blunt: use a third party and you could lose over 30% of any money you get. On an £830 average that is roughly £250 handed over for nothing; on a stacked multi-agreement household claim it can run into four figures. Lenders are required to identify and contact people they owe, so there is no queue to jump and no advantage in paying for “representation”. If you want a steer on the free route, the government-backed MoneyHelper service and Martin Lewis’s MoneySavingExpert both publish step-by-step guidance. This is the same consumer-protection logic that applies when you weigh GAP insurance on a premium SUV after the FCA review: free or cheap routes usually beat a commission-hungry middleman.

Range Rover Sport, a high-value PCP purchase relevant to the car finance redress scheme
Image: Land Rover

What a premium PCP or HP buyer should do now

Start with your own records. Dig out every premium finance agreement from 2007 onward and note the lender, the start date, the APR and whether it was PCP or HP. If you churned cars on the typical four-year cycle, you may have three or four qualifying deals. You do not need to act before 30 June 2026, but you do want to be reachable: make sure your old lenders hold a current address and email, because a letter sent to a house you sold in 2019 helps nobody. If you are still mid-term and unsure how your deal is structured, our explainer on guaranteed future value and the balloon on a premium car shows where commission and rate sit in a PCP, and the wider PCP vs HP comparison for 2026 explains why HP deals are in scope too. Buyers weighing a switch can read our guide to representative APR versus your real rate first.

Premium SUV in a lifestyle setting, illustrating buyers affected by the car finance redress scheme
Image: Land Rover

How the scheme sits next to your other finance options

Redress is money owed for a past wrong; it should not change how you fund your next car, but it can ease the maths. If you are about to settle a balloon, a redress payment landing in late 2026 could top up a deposit on the next deal, and our piece on using PCP positive equity as a deposit walks through how that stacks. If your current premium agreement is creaking, the rights explained in our voluntary termination guide are separate from redress and worth knowing. The thread tying these together is the same one CDE has pushed since 2008: understand the paperwork, use the free consumer-protection routes, and treat any firm asking for a slice of your own money with suspicion. You can find more in our car finance section.

Our take

The car finance redress scheme is, on balance, good news for premium buyers, but only if you keep your hands in your pockets. The FCA has built a route that puts roughly £7.5bn back to drivers and forces lenders to do the legwork, so the worst thing you can do is pay a claims firm up to a third of your payout to chase a letter that was coming anyway. If you bought a Range Rover, BMW, Audi, Mercedes or Porsche on PCP or HP between April 2007 and November 2024, the right move is patient: confirm which agreements you held, make sure your old lenders can reach you, and wait for contact from 30 June 2026. Sense-check any offer against your original APR and commission, not the car’s price. If a deal looks light and you genuinely think you were overcharged, the free Ombudsman and MoneyHelper routes are there. Boring paperwork beats a flashy claims advert every time.

When does the car finance redress scheme open?

The scheme opens on 30 June 2026 for agreements taken out from 1 April 2014, and on 31 August 2026 for older deals going back to 6 April 2007. Lenders then have three months to contact people who complained and six months to reach those who did not. Most post-2014 cases should be contacted by the end of 2026, with the final cut-off to raise a claim set at 31 August 2027.

How much will I get from the motor finance redress scheme?

The FCA expects an average of about £830 per agreement, not per person or per car. Some payouts will be higher and many lower, because redress reflects the commission and interest you actually overpaid, not the value of the vehicle. One household can hold several qualifying agreements, so totals can add up across years of premium PCP and HP deals.

Do I need a claims company to get car finance redress?

No. Lenders must identify and contact people they owe, so there is no advantage in paying a third party. The FCA warns you could lose over 30% of any money to a claims management company or law firm. On the £830 average that is roughly £250 gone for nothing. Use the free MoneyHelper and Financial Ombudsman routes instead.

Which cars and agreements are covered?

Any motor finance agreement, PCP or hire purchase, taken out between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024 where commission was not handled fairly can qualify. That includes premium buys such as Range Rover, BMW, Audi, Mercedes and Porsche. The scheme covers roughly 12.1 million agreements in total, so check every premium deal you held in that window, not just your current car.

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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