Credit & Debt

Debt Management Plan Guide UK — Negotiate Lower Payments

How debt management plans work in the UK. Free vs paid DMPs, what creditors must agree, how long they last, and whether a DMP is right for your debt situation.

A debt management plan (DMP) is one of the most accessible ways to manage unaffordable debt. It does not write off any debt — but it makes payments manageable while giving you breathing room to regain control of your finances.

How a DMP Works

StepWhat Happens
1), Budget assessmentDMP provider reviews your income and essential spending
2. Affordable payment calculatedYour disposable income becomes your monthly DMP payment
3. Creditors contactedProvider asks creditors to accept reduced payments
4. Payments distributedYou pay one monthly amount; provider splits it between creditors
5. Interest and chargesProvider requests creditors freeze these (not guaranteed)
6. Continue until repaidPay monthly until all debts are cleared

Who Should Consider a DMP?

  • You have unsecured debts you cannot afford to repay at current rates
  • You have some disposable income (even £50-£100/month)
  • You want to repay debts in full but need lower payments
  • Your debts are not severe enough to need an IVA or bankruptcy
  • You want an informal arrangement (not legally binding)

Free vs Paid DMP Providers

FeatureFree ProviderPaid Provider
Cost£015–20% of your monthly payment
Service qualityHigh (regulated charities)Varies
Example providersStepChange, PayPlan, CAPVarious commercial companies
Your monthly payment to debts100% goes to creditors80-85% goes to creditors
Advice qualityImpartial, regulatedMay push products

Always use a free provider. There is no advantage to paying for a DMP.

Free DMP Providers

ProviderContact
StepChange0800 138 1111
PayPlan0800 280 2816
Christians Against Poverty (CAP)0800 328 0006
National Debtline (advice, not a DMP)0808 808 4000

What Creditors Typically Agree To

RequestLikelihood
Reduced monthly paymentsVery likely
Frozen interest and chargesLikely (most major creditors)
Stop contact/chasingYes (communications through DMP provider)
Write off part of debtNo (DMPs repay in full)
Accept indefinitelyUsually (reviewed periodically)

Example DMP

DetailBefore DMPDuring DMP
Monthly payments to creditors£500£150
Number of paymentsMultipleOne
Interest chargedYes (18-25% APR)Frozen (if creditors agree)
Creditor contactDirectThrough DMP provider
Estimated time to clear5 years10+ years (but affordable)

Example: £15,000 of Debt

ScenarioMonthly PaymentDurationTotal Paid
Current payments£5003–4 years£18,000–£22,000 (with interest)
DMP (interest frozen)£1508 years 4 months£15,000
DMP (interest not frozen)£15012+ years£20,000+

Pros and Cons

Advantages

ProDetail
Affordable paymentsBased on what you can actually afford
Single paymentSimpler than managing multiple debts
InformalNot legally binding; you can change or leave anytime
Free (if using a charity)No fees with recommended providers
Creditor protectionMost stop chasing and contacting you
No formal recordNot on the Insolvency Register

Disadvantages

ConDetail
Not legally bindingCreditors can withdraw at any time
Longer repaymentTakes longer to clear debts at lower payments
Credit score impactReduced payments are recorded as partial payments
Interest may continueSome creditors may not freeze interest
No debt write-offYou repay everything you owe
Changed circumstancesMust update provider if income/expenses change

DMP vs Other Debt Solutions

FeatureDMPIVABankruptcy
Debt written offNoYes (40-70%)Yes (most unsecured)
Legally bindingNoYesYes
DurationUntil repaid5-6 years12 months
Credit file impact6 years6 years6 years
Assets at riskNoPossibly (home equity)Yes
Public recordNoYesYes
Upfront costFreeFree (fees from payments)£680

Tips for Success

  1. Budget carefully — see our budget planner guide
  2. Be honest about income and expenses with your provider
  3. Pay consistently — set up a direct debit on payday
  4. Report changes — if your income or expenses change
  5. Build a small emergency fund — even £500 prevents emergencies derailing your plan
  6. Stop using credit — cut up cards and close accounts where possible
  7. Review annually — if your income increases, consider paying more to clear debts faster

For other approaches to debt, see our debt repayment strategies guide and credit score guide.