The four ways to pay for a UK car, side by side
Most UK car purchases involve a choice between four structures. Each has a fundamentally different total cost and exit position, and "lowest monthly" almost never equals "cheapest overall."
- Cash purchase. Pay the full price up front from savings. No interest, no fees. You own the car immediately, can sell it whenever you want, and the depreciation hit is entirely yours.
- Personal loan. Borrow from a bank or building society, pay the dealer in cash. You own the car from day one. Interest rates depend on credit score and loan term — typically 6-15% APR in 2026. Penalty-free early repayment is the norm for unsecured personal loans under £25,000.
- Hire Purchase (HP). The lender owns the car until you make the final payment. Fixed monthly payments, typically 1-5 years, then ownership transfers. Voluntary termination after 50% paid lets you walk away — useful if circumstances change.
- Personal Contract Purchase (PCP). Like HP but with a large "balloon" final payment (the Guaranteed Future Value, or GFV) that you can pay (to own), refinance, or hand the car back. Monthly payments are lower than HP but you own nothing at the end without paying the balloon.
- Personal Contract Hire (PCH) / lease. You never own the car. Pay an upfront amount plus fixed monthly fees, return the car at the end. Includes maintenance in some variants. Mileage limits apply and exceeding them is expensive.
The total cost framework that actually matters
For each option, the comparable cost is: deposit + (monthly × term) + balloon (if applicable) + finance fees − resale value at end. Cash and personal loan come out cheapest if you'll keep the car beyond the typical 3-4 year finance term. PCP is cheapest in absolute monthly terms but you must add the GFV if you intend to own. Lease wins only if you genuinely want a fresh car every 2-3 years and don't drive excessive miles.
The most expensive watch-outs
Excess mileage on PCP/lease typically costs 5-15p per mile over the agreed cap — a 5,000-mile overrun can add £400-£750. Damage charges on hand-back follow BVRLA "fair wear and tear" guidelines — anything beyond is invoiced. Voluntary termination on HP/PCP requires you to have paid 50% of the total amount payable; before that point you're liable for the rest. GAP insurance mis-selling is back on the FCA's radar — buy from an independent broker, not the dealer, and only if the loan exceeds the car's likely insurance write-off value.
Authoritative reference: FCA motor finance consumer information and MoneyHelper: buying and running a car.
Total payable by route
| Route | Monthly | Total paid | Ownership note |
|---|
Useful guidance
A worked total-cost comparison
To see why "lowest monthly" misleads, take a £20,000 car bought over 48 months with a £2,000 deposit, so £18,000 is financed. The figures below use illustrative 2026 rates; your own quotes will differ, and you can change every input in the calculator above. Personal-loan and HP payments repay the whole £18,000; the PCP defers a £7,500 optional final payment (the GMFV) to the end, which is why its monthly figure looks so much smaller.
| Route | Typical APR | Rough monthly | Total to own | You own it? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal loan | 7.9% | ~£439 | ~£23,070 | Yes, from day one |
| Hire purchase (HP) | 9.9% | ~£455 | ~£23,830 | Yes, after the final payment |
| PCP (then pay balloon) | 10.9% | ~£339 | ~£25,770 | Only if you pay the £7,500 balloon |
| PCP (hand the car back) | 10.9% | ~£339 | ~£18,270 paid, nothing owned | No |
Two lessons fall out of this. First, the personal loan is usually the cheapest way to own the car outright, because it carries no balloon and often the lowest APR for a good credit score. Second, the PCP's low headline monthly is real only if you are content to walk away at the end with nothing; choose to keep the car and you pay more in total than HP or a loan, because you are financing the deferred balloon as well. The monthly figure and the cost of ownership are answering two different questions.
APR, not the headline rate or the monthly
Dealers and lenders compete on the figure that flatters them — usually the monthly payment, sometimes a "flat rate" of interest. The only figure that lets you compare like with like is the representative APR, which folds in interest and most compulsory fees and is expressed on the reducing balance. A "5% flat rate" is not 5% APR: because flat-rate interest is charged on the original amount rather than the falling balance, the true APR is often close to double the flat figure. Always ask for the APR and the total amount payable in writing.
Note too that "representative" APR only has to be offered to 51% of accepted applicants. If your credit profile is weaker you may be quoted a higher personalised rate, which is one reason to get a decision in principle before committing to a particular car. The headline rate on the forecourt is a starting point, not a promise.
Section 75, negative equity and end-of-deal charges
Buying on credit is not only about cost; it also changes your legal protection and your exit risk.
- Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act. When you use credit — including a finance agreement or a credit card — to buy goods costing more than £100 and up to £30,000, the lender is jointly liable with the supplier if things go wrong (misrepresentation or breach of contract). For a faulty car or a dealer that goes bust, that joint liability can be far more useful than chasing the trader alone. Even paying just the deposit on a credit card can bring the whole purchase within Section 75 protection. Our Section 75 and chargeback guide explains how to claim.
- Negative equity. Cars depreciate fastest in their early years. On longer agreements with small deposits, the outstanding finance can exceed the car's value for a stretch — you are in negative equity. That matters if you want to change the car early or it is written off, because you may still owe money after the car is gone. PCP partly manages this through the guaranteed minimum future value, but rolling negative equity from an old deal into a new one is how people end up over-borrowed.
- Mileage and condition charges. On PCP and lease, exceeding the agreed annual mileage typically costs a few pence to around 15p per excess mile, and damage beyond the industry "fair wear and tear" standard is invoiced on return. Setting the mileage realistically at the outset is cheaper than paying excess charges later.
- Voluntary termination. Regulated HP and PCP agreements give a statutory right to hand the car back once you have paid 50% of the total amount payable, capping your loss if circumstances change. Before that halfway point you remain liable for the shortfall.
Which route suits whom
| Your situation | Usually the better fit |
|---|---|
| You have the cash and a healthy emergency buffer left over | Cash — no interest, full ownership, simplest to sell |
| You want to own the car and keep it for years, with a good credit score | Personal loan — typically the lowest total cost to own |
| You want to own but spread the cost, or have a thinner credit file | Hire purchase — secured on the car, often easier to get than an unsecured loan |
| You like a newer car, low monthlies and flexibility at the end | PCP — provided you accept you only own it if you pay the balloon |
| You always want a fresh car, never want to own, and drive predictable miles | Lease / PCH — pure usage cost, no resale worries |
Before signing anything, sense-check the decision against the rest of your finances. A car payment is a fixed monthly commitment that can affect mortgage affordability and crowd out saving and investing. The cheapest car is frequently the one you keep for longer after the finance ends, whichever route gets you there.
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