PCP Deposit
Author
Discussion

RM88

Original Poster:

87 posts

130 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
Evening guys. 

This may seem an odd question. Hopefully going to secure a car next week. Does anyone have any experience of paying the initial payment via credit card or is this even possible. The only reason is I've got an amex avios card which offers 25,000 points for reaching a certain spend amount. Was hoping to kill 2 birds and all that with popping it on that to get the points then obviously settling straight away. 

Cheers thumbup

LarsG

991 posts

95 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
Look, firstly, buy a car you can afford and not one you aspire to. That also means a PCP.

By all means if you really want a PCP put the deposit on a credit card to get the points ONLY IF you have the cash to pay it off on the next statement. Also you may have to declare the debt on the credit card and that may affect you credit rating score when you apply for the PCP.

If you take out the cash on a credit card the interest rate will be high. Don't forget you will have to pay off the card £50-100 a month on top of the PCP if you can't clear the card. Don't forget you will have to insure the car as well, another huge cost unless you have an amazing no claims and you are in your 50's

Bottom line is that if you don't have the cash deposit and you have to finance the deposit you can't really afford the car.






anonymous-user

74 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
Why not ask the dealer? Some (many?) do not accept Amex.

cuprabob

17,558 posts

234 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
Some garages have a limit on how much they will accept on a credit card.

Some garages don't accept Amex.

Even if I can pay cash, I like to at least pay an amount over £100 using a credit card in order to get Section 75 protection, just incase things don't go smoothly.

Blaster72

11,962 posts

217 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
LarsG said:
Look, firstly, buy a car you can afford and not one you aspire to. That also means a PCP.
Classic case of not reading the OP rofl

RM88

Original Poster:

87 posts

130 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
LarsG said:
Look, firstly, buy a car you can afford and not one you aspire to. That also means a PCP.

By all means if you really want a PCP put the deposit on a credit card to get the points ONLY IF you have the cash to pay it off on the next statement. Also you may have to declare the debt on the credit card and that may affect you credit rating score when you apply for the PCP.

If you take out the cash on a credit card the interest rate will be high. Don't forget you will have to pay off the card £50-100 a month on top of the PCP if you can't clear the card. Don't forget you will have to insure the car as well, another huge cost unless you have an amazing no claims and you are in your 50's

Bottom line is that if you don't have the cash deposit and you have to finance the deposit you can't really afford the car.
Yeah I get what you are saying and thanks for the reply but not really asking about the pitfalls of cc debt I have deposit money covered I'm only doing it for the air miles. Would literally be on the amex balance for 1 minute.

towser44

3,977 posts

135 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
A lot of garages also charge a fee for using credit card in my experience. Was 3% the last time I asked.

LarsG

991 posts

95 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
RM88 said:
LarsG said:
Look, firstly, buy a car you can afford and not one you aspire to. That also means a PCP.

By all means if you really want a PCP put the deposit on a credit card to get the points ONLY IF you have the cash to pay it off on the next statement. Also you may have to declare the debt on the credit card and that may affect you credit rating score when you apply for the PCP.

If you take out the cash on a credit card the interest rate will be high. Don't forget you will have to pay off the card £50-100 a month on top of the PCP if you can't clear the card. Don't forget you will have to insure the car as well, another huge cost unless you have an amazing no claims and you are in your 50's

Bottom line is that if you don't have the cash deposit and you have to finance the deposit you can't really afford the car.
Yeah I get what you are saying and thanks for the reply but not really asking about the pitfalls of cc debt I have deposit money covered I'm only doing it for the air miles. Would literally be on the amex balance for 1 minute.
You may still have to declare it, many dealers won't accept CC payments over a certain amount and then there may be a transaction charge. You need to ask.

Technically you maybe asked the financial questions prior to giving the deposit so you wouldn't telling porkies. Once you have signed the paperwork you may be asked how you'd like to pay the deposit. Money Saving Expert has a few threads on this.

If you can pay you'll not only get the miles but also card protection on the deposit which could help should something happen in the future.



craig1912

4,270 posts

132 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
towser44 said:
A lot of garages also charge a fee for using credit card in my experience. Was 3% the last time I asked.
Didn’t think they could do that anymore

anonymous-user

74 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
Don't worry about it as you can just scrawl "paid by credit card" on a piece of toilet roll and then claim the points if you believe the OP on the other PCP thread.

Blaster72

11,962 posts

217 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
craig1912 said:
Didn’t think they could do that anymore
They can't, they can however have an admin fee for using a card so long as they apply the same admin fee to debit card payments.

OP, you really need to call the place you're buying from.

cailean

917 posts

193 months

Tuesday 5th June 2018
quotequote all
towser44 said:
A lot of garages also charge a fee for using credit card in my experience. Was 3% the last time I asked.
Not allowed to anymore

tickedon

121 posts

97 months

Wednesday 6th June 2018
quotequote all
LarsG said:
By all means if you really want a PCP put the deposit on a credit card to get the points ONLY IF you have the cash to pay it off on the next statement. Also you may have to declare the debt on the credit card and that may affect you credit rating score when you apply for the PCP.
I’ve taken out PCP on an Audi and Mazda in last 12 months, no one asked about other debts. PCP is secured on the car - all they want to do is confirm your identity and check you don’t have a ridiculous credit history. Wasn’t even asked what my annual income was!

The only time I’ve been asked those kind of questions is for my mortgage. Have never ever been asked for those sorts of details for loans or credit cards.

juggsy

1,494 posts

150 months

Wednesday 6th June 2018
quotequote all
RM88 said:
Evening guys. 

This may seem an odd question. Hopefully going to secure a car next week. Does anyone have any experience of paying the initial payment via credit card or is this even possible. The only reason is I've got an amex avios card which offers 25,000 points for reaching a certain spend amount. Was hoping to kill 2 birds and all that with popping it on that to get the points then obviously settling straight away. 

Cheers thumbup
I’ve done exactly this, the garage had a max spend on credit card so they allowed me to split it so I could get the credit card rewards. I paid as much as I could on this, the rest of the deposit I put on debit card. Paid off the credit card on the next statement and got a nice wedge of cash back.

You might need to wait for the statement to get the points though so don’t pay it off until this comes through

cholo

1,161 posts

255 months

Wednesday 6th June 2018
quotequote all
LarsG said:
Look, firstly, buy a car you can afford and not one you aspire to. That also means a PCP.

By all means if you really want a PCP put the deposit on a credit card to get the points ONLY IF you have the cash to pay it off on the next statement. Also you may have to declare the debt on the credit card and that may affect you credit rating score when you apply for the PCP.

If you take out the cash on a credit card the interest rate will be high. Don't forget you will have to pay off the card £50-100 a month on top of the PCP if you can't clear the card. Don't forget you will have to insure the car as well, another huge cost unless you have an amazing no claims and you are in your 50's

Bottom line is that if you don't have the cash deposit and you have to finance the deposit you can't really afford the car.
Classic case of poster seeing the two biggest swear words on PH (PCP and Credit Card) and going off on one! biglaugh




Zetec-S

6,562 posts

113 months

Wednesday 6th June 2018
quotequote all
tickedon said:
LarsG said:
By all means if you really want a PCP put the deposit on a credit card to get the points ONLY IF you have the cash to pay it off on the next statement. Also you may have to declare the debt on the credit card and that may affect you credit rating score when you apply for the PCP.
I’ve taken out PCP on an Audi and Mazda in last 12 months, no one asked about other debts. PCP is secured on the car - all they want to do is confirm your identity and check you don’t have a ridiculous credit history. Wasn’t even asked what my annual income was!

The only time I’ve been asked those kind of questions is for my mortgage. Have never ever been asked for those sorts of details for loans or credit cards.
^^^^ This ^^^^

I've only ever been asked for basic information (mainly to confirm my ID) when applying for PCP.

RM88

Original Poster:

87 posts

130 months

Friday 8th June 2018
quotequote all
Put deposit down today on the car. No problem with the amex. Thanks to all those who replied thumbup

syl

693 posts

95 months

Friday 8th June 2018
quotequote all
Good luck with your BA Amex - I've saved over £250k using Avios in the last 10 years (OK, I wouldn't have actually bought some of the flexible first class flights had I had to pay with real cash), most of it courtesy of Amex. Mind you, I've spent a frightful amount on it.