Credit & Debt

Car Finance Explained UK — PCP, HP, Loans & Leasing Compared

Complete guide to car finance in the UK. PCP vs HP vs personal loan vs leasing — which option is best for you?

Car finance is how most people buy cars in the UK. Here’s how each type works and which suits your situation.

Types of Car Finance

At a Glance

Type Own the Car? Monthly Cost Flexibility
Cash Yes (immediately) N/A Maximum
Personal loan Yes (immediately) Medium High
HP Yes (at end) Medium-High Medium
PCP Only if you pay balloon Lowest Low
Lease Never Low-Medium Very low

Personal Contract Purchase (PCP)

How PCP Works

Stage What Happens
Start Pay deposit (10-20%)
During Monthly payments for 2-4 years
End Choose: hand back, pay balloon, or part-exchange

What You Pay For

Component Meaning
Deposit Initial payment
Monthly payments Cover depreciation + interest
Balloon payment Optional lump sum to own
APR Interest rate
GMFV Guaranteed value at end

PCP Example

New Car Price £25,000
Deposit £3,000
Monthly payment £289/month
Term 36 months
Total payments £10,404 + £3,000 = £13,404
Balloon payment £10,500
Total if keeping £23,904

You pay £23,904 for a £25,000 car — if you want to keep it.

PCP End Options

Option When It Makes Sense
Hand back Car worth less than balloon
Pay balloon Car worth more, want to keep
Part-exchange Use equity towards next car

PCP Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Lowest monthly payments Don’t own the car
New car regularly Mileage limits
Protected from depreciation Damage charges
GAP insurance available Complex to compare

Hire Purchase (HP)

How HP Works

Stage What Happens
Start Pay deposit (10%+)
During Fixed monthly payments
End Car is yours

HP Example

Used Car Price £15,000
Deposit £1,500
Monthly payment £300/month
Term 48 months
Total paid £14,400 + £1,500 = £15,900
Total interest £900

HP Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Own the car at end Higher monthly payments than PCP
No mileage limits Stuck with car until paid
Simple to understand Depreciation risk is yours
Fixed payments Usually higher rate than bank loan

Personal Loan

How It Works

Stage What Happens
Apply Get loan approval
Buy Pay for car outright
Repay Monthly payments to lender

Personal Loan Example

Car Price £12,000
Loan APR 7%
Term 48 months
Monthly payment £287/month
Total repaid £13,776
Total interest £1,776

Loan Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Own car immediately Need good credit for best rates
Often lower APR than dealer Separate negotiation
Flexible on car choice No manufacturer support
Can sell anytime No hand-back option

Leasing (PCH)

How Leasing Works

Stage What Happens
Start Pay initial rental (3-9 months’ worth)
During Monthly payments
End Hand back, no option to buy

Leasing Example

Car £35,000 value
Initial rental £1,500 (3 × monthly)
Monthly payment £350/month
Term 36 months
Total cost £1,500 + (36 × £350) = £14,100

Leasing Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Fixed monthly cost Never own the car
Includes road tax Mileage limits
New car warranty Damage charges
No depreciation worry Early exit expensive

Comparison: £20,000 Car

Monthly Payment Comparison

Method Deposit Monthly Term Total Cost Own at End?
PCP £2,000 £239 36m £10,604* Pay £8,000 more
HP £2,000 £425 48m £22,400 Yes
Loan (7%) £0 £478 48m £22,944 Yes
Lease £1,200 £350 36m £13,800 No

*PCP total excludes balloon payment.

How to Choose

Decision Guide

Your Priority Best Option
Lowest monthly cost PCP
Own the car outright HP or loan
New car every 3 years PCP or lease
No restrictions Cash or loan
Business use Lease (tax benefits)
Bad credit HP (more accessible)

By Situation

If You Consider
High mileage driver HP or loan (no limits)
Want guaranteed costs Lease
Like changing cars PCP
Keep cars long-term Loan or HP
Have cash but want liquidity Low-rate loan

Understanding APR

What Affects Your Rate

Factor Impact
Credit score Higher = better rate
Deposit size Larger = better rate
New vs used New often cheaper
Term length Varies
Dealer vs bank Bank often cheaper

Typical APR Ranges

Product Typical APR
Manufacturer 0% PCP 0% (subsidised)
Good credit PCP 6-9%
Average credit PCP 9-15%
HP 7-12%
Personal loan 4-8%
Poor credit 15%+

Hidden Costs to Watch

PCP/Lease Charges

Fee Typical Amount
Excess mileage 6-15p per mile
Damage charge Variable
Early termination Remaining payments
Option fee £100-300 to own

Example: Mileage Overage

Annual limit 10,000 miles
Your driving 12,000 miles/year
Overage in 3 years 6,000 miles
Charge at 10p/mile £600

Your Rights

Voluntary Termination

After You Can
50% of total payable Return the car, owe nothing more
Less than 50% Pay up to 50%, then return

This includes any balloon payment value.

Cooling Off

Period Rights
14 days Can cancel credit agreement
Return car Within 30 days
May pay For usage if driven

Tips for Best Deal

Before Signing

Action Why
Know the total cost Not just monthly payment
Check APR vs bank Dealer may not be cheapest
Calculate your mileage Be realistic
Inspect car carefully Note any existing damage
Read the contract Understand all charges

Getting Better Rates

Strategy How
Improve credit score Before applying
Larger deposit Reduces rate
Check 0% deals Manufacturers subsidise
Negotiate cash price Then finance separately
Compare banks Often beat dealers

Key Takeaways

  1. PCP = low payments, don’t own — good for regularly changing cars
  2. HP = own at end — higher payments but simpler
  3. Personal loan often cheapest — if good credit
  4. Watch mileage limits — PCP/lease charges add up
  5. Know total cost — not just monthly payment
  6. Voluntary termination — your right after 50%

For related content, see our car finance guide, car affordability calculator, and credit score guide.