Car Finance - What You Should Know About Dealer Finance
Car finance has become big business. A huge number of new and used
car buyers in the UK are making their vehicle purchase on finance of
some sort. It might be in the form of a bank loan, finance from the
dealership, leasing, credit card, the trusty 'Bank of Mum & Dad', or
myriad other forms of finance, but relatively few people actually buy a
car with their own cash anymore.
A
generation ago, a private car buyer with, say, £8,000 cash to spend
would usually have bought a car up to the value of £8,000. Today, that
same £8,000 is more likely to be used as a deposit on a car which could
be worth many tens of thousands, followed by up to five years of monthly
payments.
With various manufacturers and dealers claiming that
anywhere between 40% and 87% of car purchases are today being made on
finance of some sort, it is not surprising that there are lots of people
jumping on the car finance bandwagon to profit from buyers' desires to
have the newest, flashiest car available within their monthly cashflow
limits.
The appeal of financing a car is very straightforward; you
can buy a car which costs a lot more than you can afford up-front, but
can (hopefully) manage in small monthly chunks of cash over a period of
time. The problem with car finance is that many buyers don't realise
that they usually end up paying far more than the face value of the car,
and they don't read the fine print of car finance agreements to
understand the implications of what they're signing up for.
For
clarification, this author is neither pro- or anti-finance when buying a
car. What you must be wary of, however, are the full implications of
financing a car - not just when you buy the car, but over the full term
of the finance and even afterwards. The industry is heavily regulated in
the UK, but a regulator can't make you read documents carefully or
force you to make prudent car finance decisions.
Financing through the dealership
For
many people, financing the car through the dealership where you are
buying the car is very convenient. There are also often national offers
and programs which can make financing the car through the dealer an
attractive option.
This blog will focus on the two main types of car finance offered by car dealers for private car buyers: the Hire Purchase (HP) and the Personal Contract Purchase (PCP), with a brief mention of a third, the Lease Purchase (LP). Leasing contracts will be discussed in another blog coming soon.
What is a Hire Purchase?
An
HP is quite like a mortgage on your house; you pay a deposit up-front
and then pay the rest off over an agreed period (usually 18-60 months).
Once you have made your final payment, the car is officially yours. This
is the way that car finance has operated for many years, but is now
starting to lose favour against the PCP option below.
There are
several benefits to a Hire Purchase. It is simple to understand (deposit
plus a number of fixed monthly payments), and the buyer can choose the
deposit and the term (number of payments) to suit their needs. You can
choose a term of up to five years (60 months), which is longer than most
other finance options. You can usually cancel the agreement at any time
if your circumstances change without massive penalties (although the
amount owing may be more than your car is worth early on in the
agreement term). Usually you will end up paying less in total with an HP
than a PCP if you plan to keep the car after the finance is paid off.
The
main disadvantage of an HP compared to a PCP is higher monthly
payments, meaning the value of the car you can usually afford is less.
An
HP is usually best for buyers who; plan to keep their cars for a long
time (ie - longer than the finance term), have a large deposit, or want a
simple car finance plan with no sting in the tail at the end of the
agreement.
What is a Personal Contract Purchase?
A
PCP is often given other names by manufacturer finance companies (eg -
BMW Select, Volkswagen Solutions, Toyota Access, etc.), and is very
popular but more complicated than an HP. Most new car finance offers
advertised these days are PCPs, and usually a dealer will try and push
you towards a PCP over an HP because it is more likely to be better for
them.
Like the HP above, you pay a deposit and have monthly
payments over a term. However, the monthly payments are lower and/or the
term is shorter (usually a max. of 48 months), because you are not
paying off the whole car. At the end of the term, there is still a large
chunk of the finance unpaid. This is usually called a GMFV (Guaranteed
Minimum Future Value). The car finance company guarantees that, within
certain conditions, the car will be worth at least as much as the
remaining finance owed. This gives you three options:
1) Give the
car back. You won't get any money back, but you won't have to pay out
the remainder. This means that you have effectively been renting the car
for the whole time.
2) Pay out the remaining amount owed (the
GMFV) and keep the car. Given that this amount could be many thousands
of pounds, it is not usually a viable option for most people (which is
why they were financing the car in the first place), which usually leads
to...
3) Part-exchange the car for a new (or newer) one. The
dealer will assess your car's value and take care of the finance payout.
If your car is worth more than the GMFV, you can use the difference
(equity) as a deposit on your next car.
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