UPDATED · News · 19 May 2026 · Car Deal Expert Editorial Team
The FCA motor finance redress scheme survives the 1 May 2026 lender legal challenge. What UK PCP and HP customers should do before the 31 May deadline.
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What the FCA motor finance redress scheme actually covers
Policy Statement PS26/3, published by the Financial Conduct Authority in March 2026, sets out the rules of the FCA motor finance redress scheme. It applies to regulated motor finance agreements arranged through a dealer or broker between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024, covering personal contract purchase (PCP) and hire purchase (HP) deals. Personal contract hire (PCH) and pure leasing sit outside it. The scheme exists because the regulator concluded, after a multi-year investigation, that commission arrangements between lenders and dealers were widespread enough and opaque enough to have caused systemic consumer harm.
According to the FCA PS26/3 policy statement (as of 2026-05-23), total expected payouts across the scheme sit at £7.5 billion. The FCA’s central estimate is around £800 per affected agreement. Some customers will get materially more, particularly those with multiple agreements across the 17-year window.

The 1 May 2026 legal challenge, and why it does not pause the scheme
On 1 May 2026, three lenders, Mercedes-Benz Financial Services, Volkswagen Financial Services and Credit Agricole Personal Finance, filed a judicial review challenging the scheme. They argue the FCA has overreached on the scope and methodology of the calculations. The regulator’s response, published the same week, said it would defend the FCA motor finance redress scheme as lawful and as the best way to resolve a widespread, long-running and complex issue (FCA statement, 2026-05-21).
Substantive court hearings are unlikely before October 2026. The FCA has confirmed the timetable for firms continues to run during the challenge, so lenders have to keep building the operational machinery (complaints handling, calculation engines, communications) to deliver payouts on schedule. Customers do not need to wait for the case to be heard before lodging a complaint, which is the same line MoneyHelper and Martin Lewis are taking publicly.
Key dates: when complaints handling resumes and payouts start
The pause on motor finance complaints handling, in place since the original Court of Appeal commission ruling in 2024, lifts on 31 May 2026 (FCA statement, as of 2026-05-23). From that date, firms must resume responding to customer complaints inside the standard regulatory timeframes. The implementation period runs until 30 June 2026 for loans taken out from 1 April 2014, with a longer window for pre-2014 agreements due to data-recovery issues.
The FCA expects most payouts to land by the end of 2027, a function of scale: more than 12 million agreements are in scope. The pattern echoes CFPB auto loan complaints in the US, although the legal mechanics differ.

How to check if you are in scope
You are likely in scope of the FCA motor finance redress scheme if all of the following are true (as of 2026-05-23): you took out a PCP or HP agreement on a car, van or motorcycle through a dealer or broker; the agreement started between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024; and the lender was FCA-authorised. Straight personal contract hire (leases) and bank-direct finance without a dealer or broker fall outside.
The most important thing is do not let this put you off putting a complaint in. If you had PCP or HP motor vehicle finance from April 2007 to November 2024, putting a complaint in likely means an easier and quicker payout, and you do not need to pay anyone to do it.
Martin Lewis, founder of MoneySavingExpert, on the FCA confirmation of the redress scheme (as of 2026-05-23).
What to do this week, before 31 May
Three concrete steps. First, gather your paperwork: the original agreement, the dealer invoice, any commission disclosure paragraph in the small print, and statements showing what you actually paid. Second, write a single short complaint letter to the lender (not the dealer), stating the agreement number, the date range, and that you believe undisclosed commission may have inflated your APR. Third, keep it free: claims management companies will offer to handle this for 30 to 40 per cent of the payout, and the FCA, MoneyHelper and Martin Lewis are all on the record that you do not need them. If you are also weighing a new agreement on a different car, our notes on first-time car-buyer financing apply on either side of the Atlantic.

What the lenders’ challenge actually argues
The three challengers are not arguing the commission practice was fine. They are arguing the calculation methodology the FCA wants firms to use is wrong, and that the scheme’s design will overpay relative to actual loss. That is a narrow legal point. It does not affect a customer’s right to complain in the meantime, and the FCA is preparing for both outcomes (statement, 2026-05-21).

Our take
The FCA motor finance redress scheme is, in our view, the most consequential consumer-credit intervention in UK car finance since the original PCP boom of the mid-2010s. The legal challenge from Mercedes-Benz, VW and Credit Agricole is a real risk to the methodology but not to the existence of the scheme. The regulator has been explicit that firms must keep building the operational machinery to deliver payouts, and the implementation deadline of 30 June 2026 for post-April-2014 agreements has not moved. Our position is simple: if you had a PCP or HP agreement between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024, file a free complaint with the lender (not a claims management company), keep your paperwork, and wait. Do not pay 30 to 40 per cent of your eventual payout to a middleman for a process the FCA has designed to be straightforward.
Does the legal challenge stop the FCA motor finance redress scheme?
How much could I get from the FCA motor finance scheme?
Do I need a claims management company to complain?
Which agreements are excluded from the scheme?
Related reading on CDE
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.
















