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BNPL regulation in automotive: Essential repairs are being backed by essential protections

This summer will see an important shift in how UK motorists experience instalment payments for car repairs, with new ‘buy now, pay later’ (BNPL) regulation.

From 15th July, BNPL agreements come under full FCA regulation, bringing clearer standards to how short-term credit is offered.

While this represents a step-change for many retail BNPL providers, the picture in automotive is quite different – and increasingly positive.

Both industry experience and the FCA’s own analysis underline a crucial truth: BNPL in automotive is fundamentally unlike high-frequency retail BNPL.

Regulation will accelerate, not hinder, its role in making mobility more affordable, predictable and customer-centric.

Jonathan Westwood

Automotive BNPL is not retail BNPL– and regulators know it

Consumer bodies, regulators and industry commentators have historically focused on the harms of fast repeat, discretionary retail BNPL.

But the automotive use case has never belonged in that category.

Reflecting Bumper’s consistent advocacy on behalf of the automotive industry, the FCA has recognised automotive BNPL as a positive, pragmatic use case, distinct from high-volume online shopping models.

Automotive customers face unexpected, essential costs – a failed MOT, a timing belt replacement, an urgent brake repair.

Bumper’s latest Automotive Aftersales Report found that 92% of drivers consider repairs and servicing an essential household expenditure.

BNPL here is not a lifestyle enabler; it is a mobility lifeline.

The sector is moving into a regime focused not on restricting access, but on applying proportionate protections under the Consumer Duty.

Why automotive BNPL is positioned to thrive under regulation

From July, customers using automotive BNPL products will be assured the same safeguards as traditional credit borrowers.

These include clear information disclosures, proportionate affordability checks, access to the Financial Ombudsman Service, and enhanced protections for those in difficulty.

Drivers have already shown that they trust instalment options when they are presented clearly and responsibly – it is why BNPL options have become a natural part of approving essential repairs.

Automotive BNPL has already matured on the back of clarity, sensible checks and a focus on essential repairs – qualities that the FCA’s new regime now brings to the surface.

Indeed, motorists have built substantial confidence in automotive BNPL by interacting with providers, like Bumper, which already operate with the same rigour expected of regulated credit, building customer familiarity and trust long before formal BNPL oversight begins.

Within the automotive sector, the way instalment finance is delivered already reflects many of the principles regulators want to see embedded across the wider BNPL market.

This gives automotive BNPL a natural advantage as the rules evolve, for several key reasons:

1. Essential, not discretionary spending

Automotive BNPL resolves short-term affordability gaps for essential repairs – a very different risk profile to retail BNPL, where discretionary purchasing can accumulate.

2. Built into the service journey

Unlike consumer ecommerce journeys, BNPL in automotive is embedded within a professional diagnostic and advisory process.

Customers are not adding a pair of jeans to a basket; they are often agreeing to safety-critical work, typically after receiving a formal quote and workshop assessment.

3. Dealers benefit from transparency and simplicity

For many retail-focused BNPL providers, the distribution chain becomes more complex under regulation.

The automotive industry bucks that trend: dealers’ responsibilities remain light-touch, predictable and supported by their provider.

4. Outcomes-based regulation plays to automotive BNPL’s strengths

The FCA has signalled a shift toward outcomes-based, Consumer Duty-aligned frameworks and away from overly prescriptive rules.

Automotive BNPL already relies on clear communication, proportionate assessments, and a stable low-volume credit environment – making it naturally aligned with this regime.

Regulation invites a new phase of BNPL innovation

Automotive BNPL moves into its next phase stronger than ever.

Far from constraining the sector, FCA regulation recognises and amplifies its strengths: essential spending, predictable risk, transparent journeys and measurable customer outcomes.

For dealers, OEMs and repair networks, the question becomes how they will integrate BNPL to reduce the need for discretionary discounting, and deliver greater workshop utilisation and stronger customer loyalty.

This is the moment BNPL in automotive moves from helpful to indispensable – regulated, trusted and built for the future of mobility.

Jonathan Westwood

Words by

Jonathan Westwood

Updated 01 Jul 2026

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