Fair Value Assessments Under Consumer Duty: A Practical Framework
Methodology, Data Inputs, and the Substantive Analytical Standard the FCA Expects
Fair value assessment is the most operationally demanding component of the Price and Value outcome under Consumer Duty, and the area where the gap between strong and weak firm practice has widened most visibly through 2024-2025. The substantive analytical work required — examining whether the price paid by customers is reasonable relative to the benefits received, with consideration of customer characteristics, total cost, and differential pricing — goes far beyond traditional product pricing review. Firms that produce credible fair value assessments invest substantively in methodology, data inputs, and board governance; firms that don’t typically face FCA supervisory pressure as the substantive standard is tested.
This blog sets out a practical framework for fair value assessment in 2026 — what the methodology should look like, what data inputs are needed, how the assessment should engage with adverse findings, and what the FCA examines during supervisory dialogue. For the broader regime context, see our Four Consumer Duty Outcomes Guide.
The Fair Value Standard Under Consumer Duty
The Price and Value outcome (PRIN 2A.4) requires firms to ensure the price paid by customers is reasonable relative to the benefits they receive. The substantive standard requires firms to consider:
- Total cost — explicit charges, implicit charges, ancillary fees, and any reduction in benefits
- Total benefits — the product itself, ongoing service, brand value, and other relevant benefits
- Customer characteristics — particularly differential pricing across customer groups and any disadvantage for vulnerable customers
- Comparator considerations — comparison to similar products in the market where applicable
- Cumulative impact — particularly where multiple fee layers apply
The assessment must be documented, refreshed at least annually, approved at appropriate seniority, and form part of the firm’s overall Consumer Duty framework. See our Consumer Duty Pillar Guide.
What a Substantive Fair Value Methodology Looks Like
Strong fair value methodologies typically include the following components:
1. Product scope definition
Clear identification of which products require fair value assessment, with appropriate granularity. Aggregating diverse products into a single assessment typically obscures fair value patterns; assessing each product separately surfaces them.
2. Cost analysis
Comprehensive cost analysis covering:
- Explicit charges (fees, premiums, interest)
- Implicit charges (spreads, currency conversion, embedded margins)
- Ancillary fees (transaction fees, adviser charges, platform fees)
- Charges deducted from benefits (e.g., fund charges reducing investment returns)
- Cumulative impact across multiple fee layers
3. Benefit analysis
Substantive analysis of benefits delivered to customers:
- The core product or service
- Ongoing servicing and support
- Risk management or protection benefits
- Brand value and trust benefits
- Convenience or accessibility benefits
- Specific benefits for the target market
4. Customer segment analysis
Where pricing varies across customer segments, substantive analysis of:
- Whether differential pricing reflects genuine cost or benefit differences
- Whether vulnerable customers receive worse value than others
- Whether specific demographic groups face systematic disadvantage
- Whether loyalty patterns produce unfair outcomes
5. Comparator analysis
Where appropriate, comparison to similar products in the market — accounting for differences in benefits, target market, and service.
6. Conclusion with substantive support
A documented fair value conclusion supported by the substantive analysis — not just an assertion that fair value applies.
7. Action where concerns are identified
Where the assessment identifies fair value concerns, substantive action — pricing changes, product modifications, customer redress, or product withdrawal where appropriate.
One of the most consistent fair value concerns the FCA has highlighted is the “loyalty penalty” — where long-standing customers pay materially more than new customers for substantively the same product, without commensurate additional benefit. The classic examples are home insurance and energy supply, where the FCA has taken specific action. For other product types, fair value assessments need to identify and address loyalty penalty patterns proactively, with documented reasoning where differential pricing is justified by genuine differences in benefit or cost. Methodologies that don’t substantively engage with the loyalty penalty dimension fail the substantive standard.
Data Inputs Required
Substantive fair value assessment requires substantial data inputs:
Cost data
Granular cost data covering all relevant charge types — typically requiring substantial finance team engagement. For products with implicit charges (spreads, embedded margins), the assessment may require methodology development to extract cost information.
Customer outcome data
Data on what customers actually experience — claim rates, persistency, complaint patterns, customer feedback, satisfaction data — providing evidence of benefit realisation.
Market comparator data
Where comparator analysis applies, market data on comparable products. Data sources may include market intelligence, industry surveys, or external pricing databases.
Customer segment data
Demographic and behavioural data on customer segments, supporting analysis of differential outcomes across customer groups.
Vulnerable customer data
Specific data on vulnerable customer outcomes, supporting analysis of whether the assessment captures vulnerable customer concerns. See our Vulnerable Customers Guide.
Sector-Specific Considerations
Investment and wealth management
Fair value assessment for investment products is particularly demanding given multiple fee layers (advice + platform + investment management + fund). Cumulative impact analysis is essential. See our Wealth Management Compliance Guide.
Insurance products
Insurance fair value involves analysing claim outcomes against premium paid — including consideration of claim acceptance rates, payment timing, and product utility for the target market.
Banking products
Banking fair value covers savings rate fairness, account fee structures, lending pricing fairness, and ancillary product pricing. The FCA’s specific work on cash savings rates has substantially elevated banking fair value expectations.
Consumer credit
Consumer credit fair value engages affordability, total cost of credit, and the relationship between cost and customer outcomes. Affordability and forbearance practice both engage fair value substantively.
Asset management (manufacturer obligations)
Asset managers conduct fund-level fair value assessment under the AFM framework, with substantive board engagement. See our Asset Management Compliance Guide.
Payments and fintech
Fair value for payments products engages transaction fees, FX margins, and ancillary product pricing. Subscription and freemium models face specific fair value considerations.
Board Engagement on Fair Value
Fair value assessment requires substantive board engagement — not just formal approval. Strong board governance includes:
- Substantive board discussion of methodology
- Board challenge of analytical conclusions
- Board engagement with adverse findings
- Board ownership of action plans where concerns are identified
- Consideration of fair value in pricing decisions throughout the year — not just annually
For SMF16 holders specifically, leading the board through fair value engagement is one of the more demanding aspects of the role — see our SMF16 Compliance Oversight blog.
What the FCA Examines
FCA supervisory dialogue on fair value has intensified materially through 2024-2025, with several specific focus areas:
Methodology substance. Whether the methodology engages substantively with all relevant dimensions or applies a documentary framework without substantive analytical depth.
Conclusion support. Whether fair value conclusions are supported by substantive analysis or asserted without analytical foundation.
Loyalty penalty engagement. Whether the assessment substantively addresses loyalty penalty patterns where they exist in the firm’s customer base.
Vulnerable customer analysis. Whether vulnerable customers face fair value disadvantage, with specific MI rather than aggregate analysis.
Cumulative fee impact. Where multiple fee layers apply, whether the cumulative customer impact is substantively analysed.
Action where concerns emerge. Whether the firm takes substantive action where the assessment identifies concerns — pricing changes, product modifications, redress — or maintains existing practices despite adverse findings.
Board engagement evidence. Whether the assessment shows substantive board challenge or pro-forma approval.
Common Fair Value Pitfalls
Conclusory frameworks. “Products provide fair value” assertions without substantive supporting analysis.
Cost analysis incompleteness. Where implicit charges, ancillary fees, or cumulative impact aren’t substantively captured.
Benefit analysis vagueness. Where benefits are described qualitatively without substantive quantification or evidence.
Differential pricing without scrutiny. Where pricing varies across customer groups but the differential isn’t substantively analysed.
Loyalty penalty avoidance. Where the methodology doesn’t engage with loyalty patterns despite their relevance to the firm.
Vulnerable customer aggregation. Where vulnerable customer fair value is asserted without specific MI.
Comparator weakness. Where comparator analysis applies but is conducted superficially.
Action plan absence where concerns identified. Where the assessment identifies fair value concerns but the firm continues existing practices.
Annual refresh as compliance check. Where annual refresh confirms continued fair value without substantive reanalysis.
Closed product books treated lightly. Where live products receive substantive analysis but closed books receive a cursory paragraph.
The Recruitment Implication
Fair value assessment requires specific senior team capability that combines compliance knowledge with commercial pricing analytics:
- SMF16 (Compliance Oversight) — owns governance of the assessment process
- SMF2 (CFO) — typically owns cost analytics. See our SMF2 Guide
- Head of Pricing or equivalent — owns commercial pricing methodology
- Head of Customer Outcomes — emerging dedicated role at larger firms
- Fair Value specialist — increasingly common dedicated role bridging compliance and commercial
The candidate pool with substantive fair value assessment experience is meaningfully tight — particularly candidates who have led methodology development through the early Consumer Duty cycles. Firms recruiting specialist fair value capability should benchmark compensation realistically and plan recruitment timelines accordingly.
A Note from Our Founder — Adrian Lawrence FCA
Fair value assessment is the area of Consumer Duty where commercial pricing meets regulatory analytical rigour, and the area where the gap between substantive and documentary compliance has widened most visibly through 2024-2025. Firms that have invested in genuine analytical methodology, substantive board engagement, and willingness to act on adverse findings typically run their FCA dialogue from a position of strength. Firms that have approached fair value as a compliance check increasingly face supervisory pressure.
The recruitment angle that comes up most often in our placements is the commercial-compliance bridge capability. Strong fair value leaders combine compliance regulatory knowledge with commercial pricing analytics — and the candidate pool with both dimensions is genuinely tight. Firms recruiting senior compliance leadership in 2026 should expect substantive fair value experience to be a meaningful part of the role specification.
If you are recruiting senior compliance leadership and want to discuss the fair value dimension, I’m happy to have a direct conversation.
Speak to Adrian about a senior compliance appointment →
Adrian Lawrence FCA | Founder, FD Capital | ICAEW Verified Fellow | ICAEW-Registered Practice | Companies House no. 13329383
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Related Reading
For deeper detail: The Four Consumer Duty Outcomes | Cross-Cutting Rules & Principle 12 | Vulnerable Customers Under Consumer Duty | TCF and Consumer Duty | Consumer Duty Pillar Guide | How Consumer Duty Reshaped SMF16 | The Consumer Duty Annual Board Report | Distribution Chain Obligations | Wealth Management Compliance | Asset Management Compliance
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April 25, 2026Adrian Lawrence FCA is the founder of FD Capital and a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW). He holds a BSc from Queen Mary College, University of London, and has over 25 years of experience as a Chartered Accountant and finance leader working with private, PE-backed and owner-managed businesses across the UK. He founded FD Capital to connect growing businesses with the Finance Directors and CFOs they need to scale — and personally interviews candidates for senior finance appointments.