The repayments on many loans and car finance are too high to be manageable so people get deeper into debt trying to repay them.
When you applied, a lender should have checked a loan would be affordable for you – often they did not check properly and you should never have been given this loan.
This article describes how to complain, with a template to use.
Many people have won complaints using this. If you win, you get the interest refunded in cash. When you still owe a balance, the interest is removed so you only repay what you borrowed.
These complaints do not hurt your credit record if you carry on making the loan repayments while the complaint goes through.
Contents
A quick overview
What types of loans?
- any personal loans, including high-cost lenders, bank loans, and credit union loans;
- you can complain if you are still paying the loans, it has already been repaid, it has defaulted, or you have a payment arrangement/DMP;
- a consolidation loan may have been cheaper than the credit cards it cleared – but it may still have been unaffordable!
- you can also complain about car finance. But if you are still paying car finance, be careful – read Car finance affordability – what you get if you win a complaint
- the complaints here do not apply to mortgages or business loans.
What is “unaffordable”?
The regulator says “affordable” means:
you can make the repayments without hardship or having to borrow elsewhere.
For large loans, a lender should have made adequate checks at the start. The larger your loan, the worse your credit score and the more other debt you had, the closer a lender should look.
If your loan was fine at the beginning and only caused problems later when you lost your job or your mortgage repayments went up, you are unlikely to win an affordability complaint as this could not have been predicted at the start.
How does this work?
You first make a complaint to the lender saying the loan was unaffordable and ask for a refund of the interest.
There is a template here you can adapt to say what happened to you. Send it by email.
The lender has up to 8 weeks to reply. Lenders reject many good complaints, so you can send a rejection to the Financial Ombudsman.
Complain to the lender
Send your complaint by email
It’s easiest if all communications are by email – free, instant and you have a copy with a date stamp to show the ombudsman.
If your loan has been sold to a debt collector, send your complaint to the original lender not the debt collector.
Find the right email address to use
BANK EMAIL ADDRESSES see this list : email complaint addresses for banks.
CAR FINANCE LENDERS see this list: email address for car finance lenders
PAYDAY LOANS see this other article as there is a better template to use for smaller loans where you borrowed a lot
OTHER LENDERS Here are the email addresses for most large non-bank lenders. There are a lot of smaller lenders, including many Credit Unions. If your lender is not listed, ask in the comment below for an email address.
Abound (used to be Fintern) complaints@getabound.com
Admiral loansquality@admiralgroup.co.uk
Anico complaints@anicofinancialservices.com
Avant Credit emailcomplaints@avantcredit.co.uk
Bamboo Loans complaints@bambooloans.com
Better Borrow enquiries@chetwood.co
Castle Community Bank complaints@castlecommunitybank.co.uk
Creation customercare@creation.co.uk
Everyday Loans – for loans after 31 March 2021, see Evlo and use the template in this article. It is no longer possible to make complaints about their loans before that date
Evlo (rebrand of Everyday Loans) complaints@evlo.co.uk
Fair Finance complaints@fairfinance.org.uk
Finio Loans (rebrand of Likely Loans) complaints@oakbrookfinance.com
Fluro (used to be Lending Works) cx@fluro.co.uk
Koyo loans info@koyoloans.com
Lendable complaint@lendable.co.uk
Lifestyle Loans info@lifestyleloans.co.uk
Likely Loans – see Finio
LiveLend support@livelend.co
Loans by Mal (Monthly Advance Loans) Complaints@loansbymal.co.uk
Loans 2 Go read Loans2Go – how to complain
MBNA mbnaonlinecomplaints@mbna.co.uk
Moneyline headoffice@moneyline-uk.com
My Community Bank complaints@mycommunitybank.co.uk
Novuna (used to be called Hitachi) ComplaintsTeam@NovunaPersonalFinance.co.uk
Plata complaints@plata.com
Plend complaints@plend.co.uk
Progressive Money complaints@progressivemoney.co.uk
Quick Loans customerscare@quickloans.co.uk
Ratesetter complaints@ratesetter.comcomplaints@ratesetter.com
Reevo complaints@reevomoney.com
Salary Finance (Neyber) complaints@salaryfinance.com (for loans, not “salary advance”)
Savvy info@savvy.co.uk
Shawbrook Customercare.team@shawbrook.co.uk
Snap Finance customer@snapfinance.co.uk
Tandem pl@tandem.co.uk
TM Advances info@tmadvances.co.uk
Updraft complaints@updraft.com
Vanquis customer.relations@vanquisbank.co.uk
Wagestream complaints@wagestream.com (for loans , not “salary advance”)
Zopa complaints@zopa.com
118 118 Money complaints@118118money.com
Use this template
Email the lender to begin your complaint. Put AFFORDABILITY COMPLAINT as the subject of your email.
Template for you to adapt:
I have moved since the loan started. My current home address is xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx. Please do not send any letters to other addresses there may be on my file. [only include this if you have moved!]
Please confirm the date this loan started, the amount, the interest rate and the monthly repayments. [don’t include this if you already know the information]
I am asking for a refund of the interest and any charges I paid, plus statutory interest, and to delete any negative information from my credit record. [the refunds for car finance can be a lot more complicated than this, see but this is all you need to put in your complaint]
I also want the CCJ that I have for this debt set aside. [delete this sentence if you don’t have a CCJ!]
I attach copies of my bank statements and credit report from the time I applied for this loan/these loans. [delete if you don’t yet have them yet, but they help your case if you do. Even if they show gambling, that supports your argument the loan was unaffordable.]
I didn’t know that the lender was supposed to check that I could repay the loan without having to borrow more. I only found out in [2025] when I saw a newspaper article in the Sun/an advert on Facebook for refunds/a friend said they had made a complaint/posts about them on Instagram/TikTok, whatever. So I am complaining within 3 years of having found out that I have cause to complain. [only put this paragraph if some of your loans are more than 6 years old. It explains why you haven’t complained before. It’s only an example so change it so it really covers what happened to you!]
Add extra information if you want – see below for some ideas – you don’t have to do this.
Do you need a payment arrangement now?
If you want an affordable payment arrangement now, add a sentence to the complaint saying this. These complaints may take months to sort out – a payment arrangement can get your finances into a safe place:
- a payment arrangement shows on your credit record, but if you win the complaint all negative marks will be deleted
- talk to a debt adviser such as National Debtline if you want to know more about payment arrangements
- but don’t risk a payment arrangement for car finance or a logbook loan – one would put your car at risk.
Other details you can add
The template above is fine, you don’t have to add a lot more details.
But you can add extra points if they apply in your case, for example
- my bank statements and credit record (attached) show that I was unable to afford the loan repayments.
- this was a large loan, you knew I had poor credit and may have been in a difficult position so you should have tried to verify my income and expenses. If you had done this, you would have rejected my application.
- during a telephone call, your agent suggested some figures should be lower to get my application accepted.
- (if the lender was your bank) – you should have seen from my bank account that I was in financial difficulty, I was using my overdraft a lot, I was only making minimum payments to my credit card from you.
And some points about top-ups or second loans:
- a credit check would have shown that my finances had got worse since the first loan
- I had said the first loan was to consolidate debt, but you should have seen that this hadn’t happened.
While you are waiting for a reply
Try to get copies of your bank statements from 3 months before a loan to three months afterwards. You can get statements from closed bank accounts, normally going back 6 years.
Also get a statutory credit report now and download it. You can get one from TransUnion. Do this as soon as possible as sometimes the details change, so you want a full one saved to show the Ombudsman later if necessary.
Do not wait until the Ombudsman asks you for credit records or bank statements – you want them ready to hand. They really help your case as they prove your financial situation when you took the loan out.
You should get a response from the lender within 8 weeks. If you don’t, phone them up and ask when you will get it – a couple of days is worth waiting for but many responses are rejections, so don’t wait weeks for one, go to the Ombudsman straight away.
Go to the Ombudsman if you don’t get a good offer
Don’t be put off by a rejection! Sometimes lenders send long, complicated replies designed to make you look as though you should give up:
- if they say the loan was over 6 years ago, see below for “time limits”. The Ombudsman may go back further than 6 years.
- they may say you were going to use it to consolidate more expensive debts – that doesn’t mean this loan was affordable, just not as unaffordable as the other debts;
- if the lender said it was your fault because your loan application wasn’t accurate – the lender should have made checks to verify it.
I suggest you rely on your instinct – if the loan caused you problems, send it to be looked at by the Ombudsman.
If you aren’t sure, ask in the Comments below this article. You only have 6 months to send the complaint to FOS, so it’s best to do this as soon as possible.
It isn’t usually worth trying to negotiate with these lenders, you are just wasting your time.
Send to Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS)
This is easy with the online form here: Send a complaint to the Ombudsman. It asks you for all the details they need.
The main part of your complaint can be a version of what you sent the lender in your complaint. Add any more details you want, including pointing out mistakes in the lender’s reply. Also attach:
- the reply from the lender
- Trans Union statutory credit record
- bank statements starting 3 months before first loan
- do not worry if you don’t have A copy of your credit or finance agreement – lots of people don’t. The lender will supply a copy if FOS asks for it. Don’t delay sending a complaint to FOS while you try to get this from the lender.
Bank statements
Don’t delay sending a case to the Ombudsman while waiting for this information.
If you don’t have the bank statements from the time of the loan application, get them now. And then send them to the Ombudsman, don’t wait to be asked.
You can get these going back at least 6 years even from closed accounts. And you can often go back a lot further with an account that you are still using. Ask your bank if you need statements from further back than you can get in the app.
“Is there a time limit?”
You can’t complain about a loan that started before April 2007.
Lenders will often reject a complaint if the loan started more than 6 years ago.
But if your loan was still being repaid within the last 6 years, the Ombudsman may well decide they can look at it. So if your loan started in 2018 and finished in 2022, send this to the Ombudsman if the lender says it’s too old, because it isn’t.
The ombudsman may also look at older loans if you had a continuous stream of borrowing which carried on into the last 6 years. So if you had 2 loans, the first from 2014-17, when it was refinanced into a loan from 2017-2021, the Ombudsman may decide they can look at the earlier loan as well. And if you had two overlapping loans, eg from 2014-2019 and 2017-2022, the Ombudsman may look at both.
But if your loans from this lender ended more than 6 years ago, then it is very unlikely you will win a case at the Ombudsman.
Need some help?
Don’t use a claims management company. They are expensive, often incompetent and use a similar template to the one in this article.
Instead, ask a question in the comments below.
M says
Hi all
Has anyone in here had a successful affordability complaint against Lendable or Vanquis!? I am in the process of complaints for both.
Sara (Debt Camel) says
Lots of wins against both!
Here is a recent one against Lendable that they upheld – they reject many complaints and they have to go to the Ombudsman https://debtcamel.co.uk/refunds-catalogue-credit-card/comment-page-53/#comment-546457
Here is a recent win against Vanquis at the Ombudsman – https://debtcamel.co.uk/refunds-catalogue-credit-card/comment-page-53/#comment-546364
Tom says
I used Sara’s template for an affordability complaint against Salary Finance. I’ve just had a final response and they have found in my favour! Reducing the amount owed by nearly £3000! Thank you Sara.
Jessica says
Hi Sara,
I have a large loan of £25,000, which I used as a last resort to consolidate multiple debts. I applied in 2023 and the loan was for 96 months and the interest rate given is 16.9%. I’ve since realised that I probably should have applied for a debt management plan to consolidate, as I have since applied for 2 more loans to try and get out of debt. Do you think that with still six more years to go I would be able to apply for an affordability refund? I would be paying back nearly £44,000, which seems insane now I have learn’t of the various options that were available.
Sara (Debt Camel) says
this large loan was unsecured? who was the lender?
Sara (Debt Camel) says
This large loan left you short each month so you ending up borrowing more?
This is common with consolidation loans. It may have been cheaper than the debts you cleared, but the lower monthly payment may still have been unaffordable…
I suggest you complain. And also complain about the 2 later loans as well.
Jessica says
Ok, I am worried as my salary increased quite significantly in December. Would they use this against me?
I’ve since cut up my credit cards and I am trying to gazelle focus on overpaying, but it is still going to take me years to pay everything back. The interest is killing me on the HSBC loan. The repayments for each loan are as follows:
£460 – HSBC – 16.9% – left to pay £32,619 – 71 payments left. Loan was for £25,000
£258 – Creation – 7.4% – left to pay £12,919 – 49 payments left. Loan was for £13,000
£247 – Zopa – 8.9% – left to pay £13,811 – 55 payments left. Loan was for £12,000
Thanks
Sara (Debt Camel) says
Affordability is a check that is carried out on your situation at the time the loan started. Your recent loan increase is irrelevant.
Were either the Creation or Zopa loans after December?
Jessica says
The Zopa one I applied for in April this year.
Thanks
Sara (Debt Camel) says
so the Zopa one may be harder to complain about as your salary had gone up a lot.
J says
Finally after 2 months of my investigator reviewing my complaint they have got back to me stating she has made a decision. However, she thinks it would be beneficial to discuss things over the phone, have you ever heard of this happening before?
Sara (Debt Camel) says
is this from the lender or the Ombudsman?
J says
It’s from the FOS Investigator, have you heard of this happening before?
Sara (Debt Camel) says
A few investigators like to do this i think. If you were prefer not to talk on the phone, just say you would rather do this by email
Louise says
Can I please have an email address for the following companies:
– lendable
– rate setter
Sara (Debt Camel) says
They are now both in the list in the article above
S says
I used this exact approach with Bamboo and managed to get a really positive outcome. At first they rejected my complaint, but after challenging it further they offered to remove all the interest from my loan – which saved me thousands. If you’re struggling, don’t give up. Definitely use the affordability template! Put as much detail in the complaint as possible. Can’t thank Debt Camel enough for all the information and advice! Thanks once again :)
Ash says
Thank you Debt camel for the fantastic complaint template! I managed to get around £1200 back from Novuna, which will be a massive help to me, I wouldn’t have known where to start before coming across your instagram so thank you
Kaylee says
Hey, Do you have an email address for Specialist Motor Finance company please?
Sara (Debt Camel) says
complaints@smfmotor.com
Jess says
Hey do you have an email for Monzo for their loans and Plane Saver Credit Union? Thank you!
Sara (Debt Camel) says
Monzo address – see the list of bank emails linke£ to from the article above
Plane saver – simonjumna@planesaver.co.uk
Dave Smith says
Halifax finally gave in after my wife won our complaint against them with the FOS. They said they wouldn’t pay until the new court ruling on FOS decisions and how they were come to. However, today the FOS said Halifax have contacted them and said they won’t contest it any further and will pay my wife £3300 overdraft fees going back to 2018 plus 8% interest.
I assume the court has now ruled and it hasn’t gone in the banks favour? Either way, a great win for my wife. Thanks for all your help! To date we have managed to claim back (including this Halifax) over £14,000! And the biggest is yet to come! (If we win) I’ll keep you posted. 👍
Sara (Debt Camel) says
excellent. I haven’t seen that the judgments have been published yet.