HomeBusiness & EconomyEconomyFCA Warns Law Firms Over Car Finance Compensation Conflicts

FCA Warns Law Firms Over Car Finance Compensation Conflicts

The Financial Conduct Authority cautions firms challenging the car finance redress scheme if they also represent claimants, as Consumer Voice reportedly seeks legal review of the £8.2 billion compensation programme.

The Financial Conduct Authority has issued a stark warning to law firms and claims management companies who find themselves on both sides of the car finance compensation battle.

Any firm challenging the regulator’s £8.2 billion redress scheme while also representing clients making claims under it should “consider their position and that of their clients carefully,” the FCA announced today.

View tweet from @TheFCA

The Legal Challenge Unfolds

Consumer Voice is reportedly applying to the Upper Tribunal for a legal review of the compensation scheme, arguing it sharply underestimates harm to consumers. The organisation claims the FCA’s approach excludes most consumers from full redress they deserve.

This puts legal firms in an awkward spot. They’re caught between potentially lucrative challenges to the scheme itself and representing thousands of individual claimants who could benefit from it.

What’s at Stake

The scheme covers 12.1 million car finance agreements taken between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024, where lenders failed to disclose commission arrangements properly. We’re talking about hire purchase deals, including PCPs, for cars, motorbikes, vans and campervans.

Average compensation sits around £700 per agreement. That includes commission refunds plus estimated losses – 17% of interest from April 2014, and 21% before that date.

But Consumer Voice argues this “hybrid” model short-changes millions by hundreds of pounds each. They want full compensatory interest based on the Supreme Court’s benchmark ruling on discretionary commission arrangements.

The Timeline Ahead

Firms are expected to start contacting potentially eligible customers from 30 June. Most claims should be settled by the end of 2027.

The FCA has already trimmed the scheme from its original estimates – down from 14.2 million eligible agreements to 12.1 million, with total costs falling from £11 billion to £8.2 billion including administration.

Consumers can still opt out and pursue court claims for potentially higher awards. But that comes with legal cost risks that many won’t want to take.

Source: @TheFCA

Key Takeaways

FCA warns law firms of conflicts if they’re both challenging the scheme and representing claimants

Consumer Voice reportedly seeks Upper Tribunal review, claiming the £8.2bn scheme undervalues compensation

12.1 million car finance agreements eligible for average £700 payouts starting from June

What This Means for Kent Residents

Kent residents with affected car finance agreements could see significant payouts averaging £700 each, potentially benefiting tens of thousands across the county given regional vehicle ownership rates. You should complain directly to your lender before the scheme officially starts for faster assessment – there’s no need to use claims management companies and risk paying unnecessary fees. Check your eligibility through FCA guidance, but remember that personal contract hire leases, commonly used for business vans, are excluded from the scheme.

Source: @TheFCA

Published: 23 April 2026

Source: @TheFCA on X. This article has been researched and rewritten with editorial balance by Kent Local News.

Transparency Notice: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed by our editorial team before publication. Kent Local News uses artificial intelligence tools to help deliver fast, accurate local news. For more information, see our Editorial Policy.
Kent Local News Team
Kent Local News Teamhttps://kentlocalnews.co.uk/
The KLN editorial team delivers fast, accurate local news for Kent.
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