How will car finance compensation payments work?
How will car finance compensation payments work? 13 hours ago
Who could receive car finance compensation?
The vast majority of new cars, and many second-hand ones, are bought with finance agreements.
Customers pay an initial deposit to secure the vehicle, then a monthly fee with interest.
The FCA said this provided an incentive for a buyer to be charged a higher-than-necessary interest rate, leaving them paying too much.
How much compensation could victims receive?
Under the latest proposals, the FCA expects average payouts of £829 per mis-sold agreement.
The total cost of the compensation, including administrative costs, could be about £9.
The exact amount individual consumers will receive will depend on the degree of harm suffered.
What do victims need to do to claim compensation? Complaints have already been made about four million finance agreements. Those people do not need to do anything.
The regulator's central compensation scheme allows people to complain and potentially receive compensation for mis-sold deals, without the need for a lawyer or to go through the courts. Motorists have also been warned to be on the alert for scammers posing as car finance lenders offering fake compensation. The FCA has published this guidance on how to complain.
Under its plans: lenders will contact those who have already complained.
If they don't hear back after one month, lenders will assume they should look at the case and pay compensation if appropriate those who have already complained before the scheme gets up and running are likely to receive compensation faster those who have not complained will be contacted by their lender within six months of the scheme starting.
People will be asked if they want to opt in to the scheme to have their case reviewed.
When will drivers receive compensation and who will pay?
Compensation could be delayed further if legal challenges are mounted by lenders.
Lenders - including some of the UK's biggest banks and specialist motor finance firms - have already set aside billions of pounds for potential payouts.
"We don't recognise losses on that scale," said Adrian Dally from the Finance and Leasing Association, adding that the number of people the regulator said lost out "seems implausibly high". The Supreme Court considered three test cases before it ruled. It focused on whether the car dealers had a duty to act on behalf of their customers, rather than in their own interests.
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