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Priority review Notice Added Final

Motor Finance Compensation Scheme Implementation Period

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Published March 4th, 2026
Detected March 5th, 2026
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Summary

The FCA has announced that a proposed motor finance compensation scheme will include an implementation period of 3 to 5 months. This aims to streamline the process for consumers to receive compensation and for firms to manage claims, with millions expected to receive payouts in 2026.

What changed

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has provided an update on its proposed motor finance compensation scheme, indicating that it will likely include an implementation period of three months, potentially extending to five months for older agreements. This decision, made in response to over 1,000 consultation responses, aims to streamline the consumer journey and facilitate smoother operations for firms. Key changes include immediate acceptance of redress offers by consumers and allowing various communication channels between firms and customers, while still targeting compensation payouts for millions in 2026.

Firms should prepare for the potential implementation of this scheme, with final rules expected in late March 2026. While the FCA advises consumers to complain now to expedite potential compensation, the announcement of an implementation period suggests a structured rollout rather than immediate processing for all claims. Regulated entities involved in motor finance should review the FCA's guidance on streamlining processes and consumer communication to ensure readiness for the scheme's eventual launch and to manage claims efficiently within the specified timelines.

What to do next

  1. Review FCA's proposed changes to the motor finance compensation scheme.
  2. Prepare operational processes for a potential 3-5 month implementation period.
  3. Ensure communication channels with consumers align with potential new FCA requirements.

Source document (simplified)


- Motor finance

Motor finance compensation scheme to include implementation period

Statements First published:

04/03/2026

Last updated: 04/03/2026
We'd also streamline the scheme, so millions get compensation in 2026.


We're considering over 1,000 responses to our proposals for a compensation scheme for motor finance customers who were treated unfairly.

If we proceed with a scheme, we are likely to make several changes. If we do go ahead, we expect to publish final rules in late March. The timing of publication will be outside market hours and we'll confirm the date in advance.

Final decisions on the scheme have not yet been made. But to help firms prepare and ensure consumers get any money owed promptly, we're setting out some details now on how we intend to streamline the consumer journey and make it smoother for firms to operate.

Given the scale and complexity of the scheme and in response to feedback, we're likely to introduce an implementation period of 3 months, with up to 5 months for older agreements. Firms could choose to process claims under the scheme sooner.

We would also streamline the process for consumers and firms.

  • People who complain before the scheme starts would no longer be asked if they wish to opt out. Instead, within 3 months of the end of the implementation period, their lender would tell them whether they're owed compensation, and how much.
  • Consumers receiving a redress offer would be able to accept it immediately, rather than waiting for a final determination.
  • Firms would not be required to write to customers via recorded delivery. We would allow a range of channels that best meet consumers' needs with appropriate safeguards to prevent fraud. Even with an implementation period, streamlining the process means millions of people would receive compensation in 2026.

Our advice remains that anyone concerned they weren't told about commission involved in their motor finance deal should complain now. Doing so means they should get any compensation sooner. There is no need to use a claims management company (CMC) or law firm, and those who do may lose over 30% of any compensation.

We've cracked down on poor practice by FCA-regulated CMCs. Over 800 misleading adverts have been removed or amended since January 2024 and we've intervened with 5 CMCs causing harm: 2 reduced exit fees and 4 agreed to stop taking on new clients until they can show they comply with our rules.

The likely changes to the scheme were supported by many consumer groups and firms that responded to our consultation. As well as providing a better experience for consumers, the changes would help keep the cost of delivering the scheme proportionate, supporting a well-functioning market for the millions of people that rely on it.

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Financial Conduct Authority
Published
March 4th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Financial advisers
Geographic scope
UK

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Finance
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Compensation Schemes Motor Finance Consumer Protection

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