Close Brothers · Nissan
Nissan finance with Close Brothers
Check whether your Nissan agreement arranged through Close Brothers between 2007 and 2024 is eligible under the FCA's Consumer Redress Scheme.
Takes under 60 seconds. No documents needed. No win, no fee*.
About Close Brothers
Close Brothers has set aside £300 million for motor finance redress. Close Brothers estimated in April 2026 that the scheme as published would result in a pro-forma provision of approximately £320 million on a post-PS26/3 basis, compared to its existing IAS 37 provision of £294 million as at January 2026. The provision remains under review.
Named in both the Court of Appeal ruling (October 2024) and the Supreme Court judgment [2025] UKSC 33 (Hopcraft v Close Brothers). One of two lenders at the centre of the landmark ruling. Has suspended new motor finance lending while the review proceeds. Accepted the FCA's scheme in 2026 and confirmed it will not challenge.
Current scheme status
Accepted scheme; not challenging. Has suspended new motor finance lending.
Nissan and motor finance
Nissan is a major mainstream brand in the UK, with the Qashqai widely credited as having created the mainstream crossover segment; consistent top-ten UK sales throughout the scheme period.
PCP became the dominant purchase route for Nissan from around 2012 onwards. Nissan Finance (RCI Financial Services) operated through franchised dealers, with broad market lenders also active across the network.
Nissan's strength in the crossover and SUV segments, particularly through the Qashqai, drove strong finance volumes throughout the scheme period. PCP penetration grew rapidly from around 2013, with average agreement values ranging from approximately £8,000 on a Micra to £26,000 on an X-Trail. The Qashqai's consistent position as the UK's best-selling crossover made it one of the highest-volume individual models in the FCA scheme, and a significant source of commission-related claims.
Common Nissan models in scope
Nissan Qashqai
The UK's most consistently successful crossover SUV; one of the highest-volume PCP models in the country throughout the scheme period and a natural target for commission-linked finance.
Nissan Juke
Nissan's compact crossover and a significant volume model since its 2010 launch; widely sold on PCP with strong finance penetration across its model range.
Nissan Micra
Nissan's city car; sold on PCP and HP throughout the scheme period across multiple generations, with the third and fourth UK-market generations spanning much of the review window.
Nissan X-Trail
Nissan's family SUV; sold consistently on PCP and HP throughout the scheme period, particularly popular as a larger-family alternative to the Qashqai.
Nissan Leaf
Nissan's pioneering electric car sold in the UK from 2011; PCP was commonly used for Leaf agreements through the scheme period, including during the DCA era.
Nissan Note
A compact MPV sold throughout the scheme period on PCP and HP; consistent volume across the first and second generations.
Are you eligible?
You may be eligible to claim against Close Brothers if all of the following apply:
- You took out a PCP or HP motor finance agreement between 6 April 2007 and 1 November 2024.
- The finance was arranged through a UK dealer or broker, on a regulated agreement.
- The agreement was for a car, van or motorcycle for personal use.
- You can identify yourself, we can trace the agreement details on your behalf.
What makes an agreement eligible?
- A Discretionary Commission Arrangement (DCA) was in place and was not properly disclosed to you. Under a DCA, the dealer could increase your interest rate to earn a larger commission from the lender without telling you.
- The commission paid to the dealer was unusually high — amounting to at least 39% of the total cost of credit and 10% of the loan — and was not properly disclosed.
- There was a contractual tie giving the lender exclusivity over your finance, which was not made apparent to you.
What you could receive
The FCA has confirmed the average payout under the scheme is £829 per agreement. Individual outcomes vary depending on the size of your agreement, the commission charged, and how long the finance ran. If you financed more than one vehicle through Close Brothers, each agreement can be assessed.
How it works
- 1
Tell us your basics
Enter your name and a few details. We do not need finance documents to start, our team will trace historic agreements on your behalf.
- 2
We assess your agreements
We check what we find against the FCA scheme criteria and tell you which agreements are likely in scope, including any you may have forgotten.
- 3
We pursue the right route
Where the scheme offers the best outcome, we run it for you. Where independent litigation could produce a better result, we say so honestly and explain why.
Ready to check your Nissan agreement with Close Brothers?
Takes under 60 seconds. No documents needed. No win, no fee*.
Frequently asked questions
Did Close Brothers use Discretionary Commission Arrangements on Nissan finance?
Which Nissan models are covered?
Can I do this myself?
Will making a claim affect my credit score?
Do I need to find old paperwork?
What if my lender has been taken over or has exited the market?
Related information
Close Brothers hub
All Close Brothers scheme information and related makes.
Nissan hub
All UK lenders that financed Nissan during the scheme period.
All lenders and makes
Browse the full directory of lenders and car manufacturers in scope.
The scandal explained
Background on the FCA review, the Supreme Court judgment, and the redress scheme.
Financed a car between 2007 and 2024?
Check your eligibility for the FCA's mandatory motor finance redress scheme. Takes under a minute. No documents needed.
Start your eligibility check