PCP Withdrawal Question
PCP Withdrawal Question
Author
Discussion

117

Original Poster:

15 posts

198 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
Hi Guys,

Recently financed a Porsche via their own finance. (1 week ago) however since my situation has changed slightly and I am considering using the 14 day withdrawal to pay off the balance and ideally pay less interest. Within the Ts and Cs I notice however that it states if the balance is over £60.560 (which it is) then there is no right to withdraw. Is that true? Or does the legal cooling off period stand anyway?

AdamIM

1,267 posts

50 months

Friday 17th November 2023
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[redacted]

PositronicRay

28,683 posts

207 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
I thought right to withdrawal only applied to regulated agreements?

AdamIM

1,267 posts

50 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
PositronicRay said:
I thought right to withdrawal only applied to regulated agreements?
Correct. There is one caveat, if the amount of credit exceeds £60,260-OP said 'balance' which implied credit+interest.

The Rotrex Kid

34,097 posts

184 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
PositronicRay said:
I thought right to withdrawal only applied to regulated agreements?
Certainly sounds like the OP has signed an unregulated agreement (the amount tallies up as well)

Was it a business purchase OP?

If you have signed an unregulated agreement, then no, you do not have a right of withdrawal.

PositronicRay

28,683 posts

207 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
You agreement will state if its regulated.

RUSTILLDOWN

370 posts

92 months

Friday 17th November 2023
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Unbelievable that someone can afford a car like that but can’t read a contract.

bad company

21,522 posts

290 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
RUSTILLDOWN said:
Unbelievable that someone can afford a car like that but can’t read a contract.
Really! Do you read all of the small print on every contract you agree?

If true that’d be VERY impressive.


LooneyTunes

9,081 posts

182 months

Friday 17th November 2023
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Have you asked them for a settlement figure?

Usually possible to pay off part way through a PCP.

Dimebars

1,035 posts

118 months

Friday 17th November 2023
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LooneyTunes said:
Have you asked them for a settlement figure?

Usually possible to pay off part way through a PCP.
Paying via settlement figure is different to withdrawing

Sheepshanks

39,484 posts

143 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
bad company said:
RUSTILLDOWN said:
Unbelievable that someone can afford a car like that but can’t read a contract.
Really! Do you read all of the small print on every contract you agree?

If true that’d be VERY impressive.
I read mine. The salesman (very experienced with Merc, BMW and VW) insisted that I owned the car from collection. He looked genuinely gobsmacked when I pointed to the bit in the contract that said VWFS owned it.


OP - was yours done in a business name? I thought all VWFS consumer agreements were regulated now.

LooneyTunes

9,081 posts

182 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
Dimebars said:
LooneyTunes said:
Have you asked them for a settlement figure?

Usually possible to pay off part way through a PCP.
Paying via settlement figure is different to withdrawing
I am aware of that. What the OP wants to do is pay off the balance. A settlement would allow him to do so and potentially save him the interest (his other objective). Entirely possible that the OP used the wrong word and/or wasn't aware of options...

Sheepshanks

39,484 posts

143 months

Friday 17th November 2023
quotequote all
LooneyTunes said:
Dimebars said:
LooneyTunes said:
Have you asked them for a settlement figure?

Usually possible to pay off part way through a PCP.
Paying via settlement figure is different to withdrawing
I am aware of that. What the OP wants to do is pay off the balance. A settlement would allow him to do so and potentially save him the interest (his other objective). Entirely possible that the OP used the wrong word and/or wasn't aware of options...
I've done it a couple of times (with regulated agreements) and I think you can only Withdraw for the first couple of weeks, but they still call the balance the Settlement payment.

If you Settle after 14 days then there's a couple of months interest to pay, which could well be £1K+ in the OPs case. Withdrawing means the interest payment is negligible - did one a few weeks ago and VWFS waived it, which was a surprise.

117

Original Poster:

15 posts

198 months

Saturday 18th November 2023
quotequote all
Thanks for the input all. The agreement is a personal one and also states at the top of the agreement ‘regulated under the consumer credit act 1974’ however the amount outstanding is just over 70k (excluding interest) so looking further online it appears when over the 60,260 limit any rights to withdrawal are waived legally. No big deal, may aswell let it run a few months as I will have to pay a minimum 2 months interest if choosing early settlement.

Jon39

14,557 posts

167 months

Saturday 18th November 2023
quotequote all

If the Porsche you are driving is a Taycan, when the PCP contract ends, you might be pleased that you did not pay cash.
The arithmetic is of course fixed and possibly in your favour.


Sheepshanks

39,484 posts

143 months

Saturday 18th November 2023
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[redacted]

Mark V GTD

3,052 posts

148 months

Saturday 18th November 2023
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It’s VWFS and I can’t see you having any problems either way. As some have said earlier though if it’s a Taycan think carefully before jettisoning the hand back facilty that a PCP deal provides.