Part exchanges can make or break the profit in a deal.
Done well, a PX gives you extra margin, extra stock, and a smoother sale. Done badly, it quietly eats your profit through over-allowance, slow prep, and “small” issues that turn into big bills.
Most customers don’t want the hassle of selling privately. They want the easy option: hand over the keys, drive away, job done.
That’s why part exchange is still a core part of retail in the UK. It’s also why making PX work properly can lift your results without spending more on advertising.
Digital buying makes this even more important. In one survey, 51% of recent buyers said they wanted to include their part exchange as part of a digital process, not as a messy afterthought.
So if your PX process is slow or unclear, you don’t just lose margin. You lose the deal.
A PX value is really a bundle of risks:
Trade buyers price risk instantly. Retail customers don’t. That’s why the gap between a “nice PX” and a “problem PX” is often bigger than the customer expects.
The best PX teams don’t chase perfection. They chase clarity.
This sounds obvious, but it’s where profit leaks out.
A proper appraisal means you capture the things that cost money later:
Dealerway’s advice to the trade is simple: present the car like you would retail, photograph it well, and be honest about damage, because missing details get priced in.
If your team are still doing PX appraisals like it’s 2016, on a wet forecourt with a quick walk-round, you’re leaving money on the table.
It’s tempting. Customer is dug in. You’re close to the sale. Someone says, “Just give them the extra £300.”
That £300 nearly always becomes £600.
Because it’s rarely only the over-allowance. It’s:
If you need to bridge a gap, bridge it with logic:
Customers often accept a lower PX figure when you show them why.
This one matters for margin.
Customers fixate on PX value. Dealers fixate on retail price. The winner is the dealer who controls the full deal outcome.
So structure the deal so you protect your margin where it’s least visible:
Auto Trader’s Deal Builder messaging is that customers who build deals online are more likely to buy at the advertised price, which helps dealers protect margin.
That works in the showroom too. When customers feel the deal is clear, they negotiate less.
PX cars can be profit, but they can also be “slow stock” that sits there while your best cars fly out.
Delaying prep and listing has a real cost. Cap HPI research has suggested a typical used family hatch can depreciate by around £7 per day, meaning delays can quietly drain profit.
So build a simple rule:
Speed protects profit.
Not every PX should be retailed. Some should be traded out immediately.
A clean way to decide:
Auto Trader’s old retailer survey (from 2021) found many retailers had turned sales away due to unwanted part exchanges. The point still stands, unwanted PX can block deals unless you have a clean disposal path.
You don’t need to love every PX. You need a plan for every PX.
Trade buyers still respond to good adverts.
Dealerway’s guidance is basically “treat it like retail”, clean photos, good light, all angles, clear disclosure of damage, because it builds confidence and lifts bids.
Even if you’re selling PX stock to the trade, a proper listing gets:
This is where deals slow down.
Many customers arrive with finance still on the vehicle. Part exchange can still work, but you need the settlement figure early, not at the end when everyone is tired.
Industry guidance is clear that part exchange with outstanding finance is possible, but the dealer typically settles it, and the customer’s equity position matters.
If they’re in negative equity, you need to handle it carefully. Rolling it into a new agreement can increase the total borrowed and monthly cost, so you have to keep it affordable and clear.
This is where clean, honest finance conversations protect outcomes and reduce complaints later.
Customers want convenience. You still need control.
If your PX process feels smooth, you’ll convert more deals. Digital journeys are pushing this faster. Buyers want part exchange built into the deal, not handled as a separate awkward step.
A strong process usually includes:
Renegotiation should be rare. If it happens often, your appraisal process is the issue.
Part exchanges are only as profitable as the finance behind them.
At Marsh Finance, we work closely with UK dealers to support cleaner PX deals, clearer settlements, and stronger customer outcomes. Our flexible finance structures help you manage outstanding finance, handle negative equity responsibly, and keep monthly payments affordable without eroding margin elsewhere in the deal.
If you want part exchange to work harder for your business, not quietly chip away at profit, partner with Marsh Finance and build stronger deals from the ground up.