Credit & Debt

PCP vs HP vs Personal Loan — Best Way to Finance a Car in the UK

Comparing PCP, HP, and personal loans for buying a car. How each works, total costs, pros and cons, and which is best for your situation.

Buying a car is the second biggest purchase most people make after a home. Most buyers use some form of finance, but the options can be confusing. This guide compares the three main ways to finance a car in the UK — PCP, HP, and personal loan — so you can choose the one that costs you least and suits your needs.

Quick Comparison

Feature PCP HP Personal Loan
Monthly payments Lowest Higher Higher
Total cost Usually highest Middle Usually lowest
Own the car at the end? Only if you make balloon payment Yes, automatically Yes, from day one
Deposit Typically 10%+ Typically 10%+ None required
Mileage limits Yes (typically 8,000–12,000 per year) No No
Condition restrictions Yes (excess wear charges) No (you own it) No (you own it)
Typical APR 5–10% 5–9% 3–7% (good credit)
Can modify the car? No Yes (once fully paid) Yes (you own it)
Negative equity risk Higher Lower None

PCP (Personal Contract Purchase) Explained

PCP is the most popular form of car finance in the UK, accounting for around 80% of new car finance agreements. It offers the lowest monthly payments but is often the most expensive overall.

How PCP Works

Stage What happens
Deposit You pay a deposit, typically 10% of the car’s value (or a manufacturer contribution)
Monthly payments You pay fixed monthly instalments for a set term (usually 3–4 years)
What you finance Only the car’s depreciation — the difference between the price and the Guaranteed Minimum Future Value (GMFV)
At the end Choose: hand back the car, make the balloon payment to own it, or part-exchange for a new PCP
Balloon payment A large final payment (GMFV) if you want to keep the car — typically 30–50% of the original price

PCP Cost Example

Item Amount
Car price £25,000
Deposit £2,500 (10%)
APR 6.9%
Term 48 months
Monthly payment £250
Balloon payment (GMFV) £10,500
Total paid if you buy the car £24,500 (deposit + 48 payments + balloon)
Total interest paid £2,000
Total paid if you hand back £14,500 (deposit + 48 payments) — and you don’t keep the car

PCP Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Lowest monthly payments You do not own the car
Drive a newer car every 3–4 years Mileage limits (excess mileage charges of 5–30p per mile)
Manufacturer deposit contributions available Excess wear and tear charges
Flexibility at the end of the deal Highest total cost if you buy the car
Gap insurance covers negative equity risk Easy to get trapped in a rolling PCP cycle
No obligation to buy at the end Interest charged on the full amount, including balloon

Watch Out For

Risk Details
Excess mileage If you exceed your agreed mileage, you pay 5–30p per extra mile. On a 3-year deal, being 5,000 miles over at 10p/mile costs £500
Wear and tear Scratches, dents, and interior damage beyond fair wear and tear will be charged
Negative equity If the car is worth less than the GMFV, you may owe money when handing it back
Rolling PCPs Constantly starting new deals means you never own a car and always have payments

HP (Hire Purchase) Explained

HP is a more straightforward form of car finance. You pay monthly until you own the car outright.

How HP Works

Stage What happens
Deposit You pay a deposit, typically 10% or more
Monthly payments Fixed monthly instalments for a set term (usually 3–5 years)
What you finance The full remaining value of the car after the deposit
At the end You own the car after the final payment (plus a small option-to-purchase fee)
Ownership Car is yours — no balloon payment, no hand-back

HP Cost Example

Item Amount
Car price £25,000
Deposit £2,500 (10%)
APR 6.5%
Term 48 months
Monthly payment £535
Option-to-purchase fee £10
Total paid £28,190
Total interest paid £3,190

Monthly payments are higher than PCP because you are paying off the full value, not just the depreciation.

HP Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
You own the car at the end Higher monthly payments than PCP
No mileage limits No flexibility to hand car back (without loss)
No wear and tear charges Tied into the agreement for the full term
Simple — fixed payments, clear end date Deposit required
Good for high-mileage drivers Car depreciates while you are paying it off
Can modify the car once paid off

Personal Loan Explained

A personal loan from a bank or building society lets you buy the car outright with cash and own it from day one.

How a Personal Loan Works

Stage What happens
Application Apply for a loan from a bank, building society, or online lender
Receive funds Money paid into your bank account
Buy the car You pay for the car in full — you are a cash buyer
Monthly payments Fixed monthly repayments to the lender for the loan term
Ownership You own the car outright from day one

Personal Loan Cost Example

Item Amount
Car price £25,000
Deposit £0 (optional — you could put some down to reduce the loan)
APR 4.9%
Term 48 months
Monthly payment £575
Total paid £27,600
Total interest paid £2,600

Personal Loan Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Usually the lowest APR if you have good credit Higher monthly payments (full car value financed)
You own the car from day one Requires good credit score for best rates
No mileage limits No flexibility if you want to change car early
No wear and tear charges No manufacturer deposit contributions
Can negotiate a better price as a cash buyer Loan is unsecured — not tied to the car
Full Section 75 or chargeback protection
Can buy privately, not just from dealers

Cash Buyer Advantage

Buying with a personal loan makes you a cash buyer, which gives you negotiating power:

Advantage Details
Negotiate on price Dealers prefer cash sales — you may get £500–£2,000 off
Buy privately Access to cheaper private sales, not just dealer stock
No dealer finance pressure No risk of being upsold onto expensive deals
Consumer protection Section 75 (credit card deposit) or chargeback applies

Total Cost Comparison

Here is how the three options compare for the same £25,000 car over 48 months.

PCP (hand back) PCP (buy car) HP Personal Loan
Deposit £2,500 £2,500 £2,500 £0
Monthly payment £250 £250 £535 £575
Balloon payment £10,500
Total paid £14,500 £24,500 £28,190 £27,600
Total interest £2,000 £2,000 £3,190 £2,600
Own the car? No Yes Yes Yes
Cost to own the car £24,500 £28,190 £27,600

The personal loan is the cheapest way to buy and own this car, despite higher monthly payments. PCP looks cheap at £250/month but costs £24,500 if you want to keep the car.

Which Is Best for You?

Choose PCP If

  • You want the lowest monthly payments
  • You like driving a new car every 3–4 years
  • You do low to average mileage (under 10,000 miles per year)
  • You are comfortable never owning the car
  • You want the option to walk away at the end

Choose HP If

  • You want to own the car at the end
  • You drive high mileage (no limits with HP)
  • You want a simple agreement with no surprises
  • You plan to keep the car for several years after paying it off
  • You want to modify or personalise the car

Choose a Personal Loan If

  • You have a good credit score (for the best rates)
  • You want to own the car from day one
  • You want to negotiate a cash-buyer discount
  • You want to buy privately (not just from a dealer)
  • You want the lowest total cost of ownership

Your Rights

Voluntary Termination

Under the Consumer Credit Act 1974, you have the right to voluntarily terminate an HP or PCP agreement once you have paid 50% of the total amount payable (including interest and fees).

Detail PCP HP
When you can VT After paying 50% of total amount After paying 50% of total amount
What you do Hand back the car in reasonable condition Hand back the car in reasonable condition
Cost Nothing more owed (if 50% paid and car in good condition) Nothing more owed
Impact on credit Should not affect credit score Should not affect credit score

Cooling-Off Period

You have a 14-day cooling-off period on any regulated credit agreement. You can cancel the finance deal within 14 days of signing without penalty, though you must repay any money already received.

Before You Sign

  • Check the total amount payable, not just the monthly payment
  • Compare the APR across PCP, HP, and personal loan quotes
  • Read the mileage limits and excess mileage charges on PCP agreements
  • Check what constitutes fair wear and tear for PCP hand-backs
  • Consider GAP insurance if using PCP (covers the gap between insurance payout and finance owed if the car is written off)
  • Check for early repayment charges
  • Ask about the option-to-purchase fee at the end of HP
  • Do not let the dealer pressure you into their finance — compare independently first

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