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Who Pays in the FCA Motor Finance Scandal? £9bn Liability Explained

1st Apr 2026
The Financial Conduct Authority has confirmed a £9.1 billion compensation scheme for motorists mis-sold car finance—but the real question isn’t the size of the payout. It’s who is actually responsible for it.  Around 12.1 million agreements are expected to fall within scope, with average compensation estimated at roughly £830. On paper, the answer looks straightforward. Lenders failed to disclose commission structures that affected what customers paid. That creates legal liability. But this case doesn’t play out in the usual way. Instead of letting courts decide outcomes case by case, the FCA has stepped in with a market-wide solution that effectively decides who pays, how much, and under what conditions. The result is something different: not just liability being enforced, but liability being shaped. The Legal Basis of Liability The controversy comes down to how motor finance agreements were structured between 2007 and 2024. Lenders paid commission to brokers—usually car dealers—who in some cases could increase the interest rate to earn more. The problem isn’t commission itself. It’s that customers were often not told how those arrangements worked, particularly where they affected the price being paid. Courts have already made clear that this can create an “unfair relationship” between lender and borrower. Under the Consumer Credit Act 1974, courts look at the relationship as a whole. That includes how the agreement was presented, how pricing was set, and whether key information was withheld. Where commission structures were hidden or influenced the cost of credit, that threshold is likely to be met. Although customers dealt with brokers, liability sits with lenders. They provide the credit, design the structure, and are responsible for ensuring transparency. Even where a broker influenced the rate, the lender allowed that mechanism to exist. In practice, liability follows control—not who dealt with the customer. How the FCA Has Reshaped Who Pays This case stands out not because liability exists, but because of how it is being handled. Instead of allowing claims to play out individually through the courts or the Financial Ombudsman Service, the FCA has imposed a single, standardised redress scheme across the market. In doing so, it shifts the outcome away from a traditional legal process and into something more controlled. The regulator has set the boundaries—deciding which claims qualify, how compensation is calculated, and where limits apply. The pool of eligible agreements has been narrowed, compensation is capped in many cases, and total exposure has been brought down to a level the industry can absorb. That has a clear effect. Liability still exists, but it is not being expressed in full. It is being filtered. More importantly, the financial consequences have effectively been decided in advance. Instead of courts working through damages case by case, the FCA has defined both the scope of the problem and how it will be paid for. That reduces uncertainty for firms, but it also changes the nature of liability itself. It becomes less about legal outcome, and more about regulatory design. Without that intervention, the alternative would likely have been years of fragmented litigation. Millions of claims moving through lenders, the Financial Ombudsman Service, and the courts, with inconsistent outcomes and significantly higher costs. The scheme replaces that with speed and predictability—but it does so by limiting how liability is ultimately realised. The Commercial Reality: Where the Cost Falls In practical terms, the financial burden sits with lenders—banks, specialist motor finance providers, and manufacturer-backed finance arms. Some of that cost may be absorbed over time, but the immediate impact is real. Firms are already allocating capital to fund redress, and the consequences extend beyond past conduct. Pricing models will tighten, risk appetite will adjust, and lending decisions are likely to become more cautious. The cost does not disappear—it moves. Over time, it is likely to be reflected in how credit is priced and offered, meaning future consumers may ultimately bear part of the impact through higher costs or reduced access to finance. What this exposes is a familiar but often underestimated risk. Where a firm designs or enables a pricing structure, it is likely to carry the consequences when that structure fails. Intermediaries may shape the transaction, but responsibility still flows back to the institution behind it. A Structural Shift in Liability This case points to a broader shift in how responsibility is handled in regulated markets. Legal liability still matters—but it no longer decides the outcome on its own. Where problems are widespread, regulators are stepping in earlier and taking a more direct role in shaping how those outcomes are reached. For businesses, that changes the risk entirely. When harm is systemic, it won’t just be worked through in court. It will be organised, narrowed, and enforced at scale. That leaves a different kind of exposure. The question is no longer just whether a firm is responsible—but how that responsibility will be defined, and on whose terms. For full details of the scheme, see the Financial Conduct Authority’s official statement.

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