Yeah it varies from person to person. Either way, paying the car off in a few years with 6.7% interest is still much better than doing PCP. At least this way you will be able to sell the car whenever you want, and recoup a lot of the funds for it.
Far from this clear. Often manufacturer PCP loan % is in the same territory as personal loans, if not they often offer discount to in effect offset it.
Audi gave me £4k on top of dealer discount if i took PCP, dont want PCP, sure you can have the dealer discount but not the £4k deposit contribution.
The £4k was pretty similar to the total amount of interest over the term.
What i did was actually take the PCP, withdraw from the agreement, and take a loan out at half the APR. As this was below (well below) my investment returns I am happy to have the loan, but that besides the point.
So I got £4k to take the PCP, then withdrew, and kept the £4k. I will pay just under £2k interest over a longer period with the loan, which I can pay off in part or full at any time.
PCP vs loan is a far from simple equation. When i was looking for example Ford were giving 0% PCP. Not much discount comparatively, but then you tend to get better or same on a PCP as opposed to cash (source of cash doesn't matter to the dealer)
When looking at loan rates they tend to be that small or large loans come with higher rates. Middle of the range type unsecured amounts tend to be best. £10-25k or so, and often middleish type terms, 3-5 years.
Its quite often better to take a larger and or longer loan out then pay some back if its more than you need. On consumer loans now they cannot penalise you for doing this