The
Royal Automobile Club was formed in 1897 by
Frederick Richard Simms, which set up an "associate section" to provide members
roadside assistance and motoring services. The club incorporated the associate section as R.A.C. Motoring Services Ltd. in 1978. In 1987, the organisation introduced an "Advanced Computer Aided Rescue System".
British School of Motoring (BSM) was purchased by R.A.C. Motoring Services Ltd. in December 1998. in
Almondsbury,
Bristol The RAC moved into the
RAC Regional Control Centre adjacent to the
Almondsbury Interchange in 1994, designed by
Grimshaw Architects. In 1999, R.A.C. Motoring Services was sold by the members of the Royal Automobile Club to Lex Service for £437m, with each of the 12,000 members receiving £34,000, and each of the 4,000 RAC Motoring Services staff receiving £1,000. Lex Service renamed themselves RAC plc in 2002. In October 2000, RAC purchased
Intergraph's Computer Aided Dispatch System (I/CAD), a Command and Control system. The National Customer Service Awards' recognized the system with the 'Best Use of Technology in Customer Service' award in October 2004.
Aviva acquired RAC plc for around £1.1 billion in March 2005. They sold some parts of the business for £500m, BSM was later sold to Acromas Holdings, which owns
The Automobile Association. Aviva ceased providing loans under the RAC brand name in January 2008, and dissolved its partnership with
The Co-operative Bank. Aviva sold the RAC to
The Carlyle Group in June 2011. Although Carlyle had planned a stock market flotation for the RAC, in September 2014 Carlyle agreed to sell almost half its stake to Singapore's sovereign wealth fund
GIC Private Limited. In December 2015, Carlyle agreed to sell its remaining stake to
CVC Capital Partners, in a transaction valuing the RAC at £1.4 billion. In 2022 Silver Lake acquired a holding in RAC Group but specific values were not publicly disclosed. ==Services==