Tuesday, 25 March 2025
Seven steps to a best practice motor finance redress scheme

This month the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) confirmed that an upcoming Supreme Court ruling could trigger the introduction of a scheme to compensate borrowers who were mis-sold car finance.
The FCA is set to announce its final decision within six weeks of the Supreme Court’s verdict from 1st to 3rd April, but experts are already predicting that a redress scheme is on the way, once FCA has gained greater clarity on its scope from the court ruling and consulted with industry.
This has major implications for motor finance lenders. Under a redress scheme, lenders would have to determine whether customers lost out due to the firm’s failings and offer suitable compensation. The FCA has made it clear that it will set rules for lenders and put in place checks to make sure they are followed. Remediation itself is likely to be extremely complex.
In this demanding and sensitive business context, a failure to take proactive steps could result in significant negative financial and reputational consequences. It is therefore imperative that lenders act early and start to put in place strategies and processes for an effective redress scheme.
In a series of blogs, we are setting out practical guidance for lenders as they look to respond to the FCA’s expected requirements. This first blog identifies the seven essential components of a best practice redress scheme.
A key decision for lenders is the level of support needed to implement required processes and the extent to which that should be delivered by specialist partners. Potential risks, such as non-compliance, regulatory fines, data security breaches and inaccurate decisions and payouts, can be successfully mitigated by working with expert specialists.
Talan Data’s work is informed by two decades of experience in managing and supporting large-scale remediation programmes, including complex redress and data quality initiatives for the financial services sector. We have a dedicated team of data specialists ready to prepare and support responses to the anticipated FCA redress scheme – taking lenders from strategy through to implementation.
With the right partner by their side, lenders can be confident that their processes are not only compliant but deliver compensation to customers in the “orderly, consistent and efficient way” that the FCA expects.