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Urges Law Firms, CMCs to Consider Client Positions on Motor Finance Compensation

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Summary

The FCA has published a statement urging law firms and claims management companies (CMCs) involved in potential challenges against the FCA's motor finance redress scheme to consider their position and that of their clients. The FCA is advising these firms to write to clients explaining that involvement in a challenge is likely to delay compensation, offer clients the option to exit the contract, and strongly consider waiving any fees. The FCA's scheme aims to return £7.5bn to consumers, with over 12m motor finance agreements made between 2007 and 2024 eligible for compensation under the scheme.

“Any law firm or claims management company (CMC) involved in a potential challenge against the scheme that also has clients making motor finance claims should consider their position and that of their clients carefully.”

FCA , verbatim from source
Why this matters

Law firms and CMCs with motor finance clients should review their current caseload against this FCA statement. The FCA has explicitly stated that firms involved in challenging the scheme should write to clients about likely delays, offer exit options, and consider waiving fees. Firms that have not yet communicated with clients about challenge-related delays should treat this statement as a clear regulatory signal to act.

AI-drafted from the source document, validated against GovPing's analyst note standards . For the primary regulatory language, read the source document .
Published by FCA on fca.org.uk . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors FCA News & Press Releases for new banking & finance regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 54 changes logged to date.

What changed

The FCA has issued a statement addressing law firms and CMCs that may be involved in legal challenges against the FCA's motor finance compensation scheme. The FCA is explicitly advising these firms to write to affected clients explaining that their involvement in a challenge is likely to delay compensation, and to offer those clients the option of exiting their contract and waiving any fees incurred.

For law firms and CMCs, this statement signals the FCA's expectation that firms take proactive steps to protect client interests during the pendency of any challenge. Affected firms should review their client portfolios, assess the impact of any challenge on compensation timelines, and consider whether fee waivers or exit arrangements are appropriate given the FCA's stated position.

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

FCA calls on law firms and claims management companies to consider the position of their clients

Statements First published:

23/04/2026

Last updated: 23/04/2026
We’ve no vested interest in setting up a motor finance redress scheme.


What matters to us is getting fair compensation for consumers as quickly as possible and supporting a healthy motor finance market for the future.

That's what our scheme will do, and it's free for consumers to use.

Learn more about our motor finance redress scheme.

Any law firm or claims management company (CMC) involved in a potential challenge against the scheme that also has clients making motor finance claims should consider their position and that of their clients carefully.

At the very least, they should write to those clients to explain they’re involved in a challenge that’s likely to delay compensation.

They should give those clients the option of exiting the contract and strongly consider waiving any fees.

Our scheme will put £7.5bn back in people’s pockets. Some have already waited over 2 years for a response to their complaint. With pressure on household bills rising, they shouldn’t be made to wait longer.

Over 12m agreements made between 2007 and 2024 are eligible for compensation under the scheme. Our analysis shows millions of those did not involve the particularly serious misconduct identified in the case considered by the Supreme Court.

Advice for consumers

  • If you’ve used a CMC authorised by the FCA, and you're unhappy with how it's handled your case or the fees it’s charged, you should complain. If you’re dissatisfied with the response, you can take your complaint to the Claims Management Ombudsman.
  • If you’ve used a law firm regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority, and you're unhappy with how it's handled your case or the fees it’s charged, you should complain. If you’re dissatisfied with the response, you can take your complaint to the Legal Ombudsman.
  • Our compensation scheme is free to use. Consumers do not need to use a CMC or a law firm, and those who do may lose up to 36% of any compensation. If you decide to go through the courts, this may cost you more.
  • Don’t sign up to multiple CMCs or law firms to represent you. Doing so may lead to multiple fees.
  • Be cautious of potential scammers who may try to contact you via cold calls, texts or emails, claiming you are owed motor finance commission compensation or offering to check eligibility.
  • Report nuisance calls and texts to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO).
  • Report misleading advertising to the Advertising Standards Agency (ASA).

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Car finance claims Millions of car finance customers to get payouts this year as FCA goes ahead with compensation scheme

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
FCA
Published
April 23rd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals Financial advisers Consumers
Industry sector
5221 Commercial Banking
Activity scope
Consumer compensation Regulatory advisory Client communications
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Finance
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
Dodd-Frank
Topics
Consumer Protection Financial Services

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