Articulo
Leasing de CochesPersonal Contract Hire vs Personal Contract Purchase in 2026 (UK Driver Guide)
PCP and PCH look identical on the price comparison ad but the FCA changes in 2025 mean they are no longer interchangeable. Here is the right one for your situation.
Top offer
Compare providers, then open the best offer
Start with a compact overview and jump straight to the most relevant provider or the wider category.
| Selection | Comparison, providers, and next steps in one place. |
|---|---|
| Speed | Direct handoff to the most relevant offer without extra friction. |
| Value | Category and topic links for deeper shortlisting. |
Compare providers, then open the best offer
Start with a compact overview and jump straight to the most relevant provider or the wider category.
Introduccion
PCP and PCH look identical on the price comparison ad but the FCA changes in 2025 mean they are no longer interchangeable. Here is the right one for your situation.
Por que importa
Personal Contract Hire (PCH) and Personal Contract Purchase (PCP) look almost identical on a finance comparison ad. They have similar monthly payments, similar terms, often the same showroom presentation. But following the FCA disclosure changes that took full effect in 2025, the two products are no longer interchangeable. Picking the wrong one in 2026 can cost you GBP 4,000 to GBP 9,000 across a typical three-year term.
Factores clave para comparar
Estos puntos merecen una comparacion clara antes de decidir.
Cuota mensual y pago inicial
Plazo del contrato y limite de kilometros
Seguro, mantenimiento y extras
Condiciones de devolucion y flexibilidad final
What each product really is
PCH (lease): You rent the car for a fixed term, return it at the end. You never own the vehicle. Monthly payments cover depreciation plus profit margin. There is no balloon, no option to buy.
If you want to go deeper, these related articles help with comparison and the next decision.
PCP: You finance the car with three components — small deposit, monthly payments covering part of the depreciation, and a large balloon (Guaranteed Minimum Future Value, GMFV) at the end. At the end you can: pay the balloon to keep the car, hand it back, or part-exchange.
Real cost comparison 2026
Sample: 2026 Vauxhall Astra GS, on-the-road price GBP 28,500, 36 months, 10,000 miles/year:
- PCH: initial GBP 1,800, 35 monthly payments of GBP 285. Total cost: GBP 11,775.
- PCP: deposit GBP 3,500, 35 monthly payments of GBP 240, balloon GBP 11,200. Total if returned: GBP 11,900. Total if kept: GBP 23,100.
If you definitely return the car, PCH wins by a small margin (GBP 125) and is simpler. If there is any chance you keep it, PCP is cheaper than buying outright at the end thanks to interest already paid on the depreciation.
Quick comparison
Ready for the next step?
If you are already comparing options, jump directly to the provider or the broader market view now.
The FCA changes that took effect in 2025
- Total cost disclosure: dealers must show the total amount payable in the same font size as the headline monthly figure. No more buried balloons.
- Excess mileage transparency: the per-mile excess charge must be on the front sheet, not in small print at the back.
- Voluntary termination: dealer must show the 50 percent threshold rule on PCP, including the exact pound amount required.
- Discretionary commission ban: the 2024 ruling means brokers can no longer adjust the interest rate to maximise their own commission.
When PCH wins
- You change car every 2 to 4 years and never want a balloon decision.
- You prefer no upfront cash impact (deposits are smaller).
- You do high mileage and want it factored into the rental rather than charged at the end.
- You qualify for business contract hire — VAT recovery is then huge.
When PCP wins
- You might keep the car beyond the term.
- You are buying a model with strong residuals (Toyota, Honda, premium German).
- You want the option to part-exchange any time after the 50 percent threshold.
- You expect to make voluntary termination available as a hedge.
Common misconceptions in 2026
- PCH is always cheaper. False — only if you definitely return the vehicle.
- PCP lets you walk away easily. Voluntary termination only kicks in once you have paid 50 percent of the total, which is typically at month 22 to 28.
- You can negotiate the balloon. The GMFV is set by the manufacturer's captive finance and is non-negotiable.
- Excess mileage is the same on both. PCH excess mileage charges are usually 30 to 50 percent higher than PCP.
Bottom line
In 2026 the choice between PCH and PCP comes down to one question: do you want the optionality to keep the car or not? If yes, take PCP and accept the slightly higher headline. If no — and you are confident — PCH is simpler and slightly cheaper, with the FCA reforms ensuring you actually see the total cost before signing.
Last updated: May 2026. Sample figures use Q1/Q2 2026 dealer quotes and exclude maintenance packages.
Nota de autor y redaccion
Este articulo fue preparado editorialmente, revisado por ultima vez el May 23, 2026 y esta pensado para apoyar la investigacion y la comparacion.
Best offer now
Take the most relevant offer while it is fresh
Use the direct handoff to the provider instead of restarting your research later.
Articulos relacionados
Articulos relacionados
Mas contenido para la misma decision o ruta de investigacion.
Renting vs leasing en Espana 2026: la diferencia fiscal que cambia la cuota mensual
Renting y leasing parecen iguales en el escaparate, pero su tratamiento fiscal en Espana es muy distinto. Cual...
Comparativa de Alquiler de Coches en el Aeropuerto de Berlín (BER)
Landing at Berlin Brandenburg Airport? Compare the best car rental agencies, hidden airport fees, and find out...
Ofertas de Alquiler de Coches en el Aeropuerto de Stuttgart
Landing in the home of Mercedes and Porsche? Here is the ultimate guide to renting a car at Stuttgart Airport...
Guía de Alquiler de Coches en el Aeropuerto de Hamburgo (2026)
Flying into Northern Germany? Here is the ultimate 2026 guide to renting a car at Hamburg Airport (HAM), avoid...