Credit & Debt

CCJ Guide UK — County Court Judgments Explained

What is a CCJ? How County Court Judgments work, how they affect your credit, what to do if you receive one, and how to get a CCJ removed from your record.

A County Court Judgment (CCJ) is one of the most serious marks that can appear on your credit file. Understanding what a CCJ means, how to respond to one, and how to deal with its consequences can save you from long-term financial damage.

How a CCJ Happens

Stage What Happens Your Options
1. Unpaid debt A creditor chases you for money owed Pay, negotiate, or dispute
2. Court claim filed Creditor applies to the county court You receive a claim form
3. Response deadline You have 14 days to respond Acknowledge, defend, or admit
4. Judgment If you don’t respond or admit the debt, a CCJ is issued Pay within 1 month to remove
5. Enforcement If you don’t pay, creditor can enforce Bailiffs, attachment of earnings, charging order

What to Do When You Receive a Claim Form

You have 14 days from receiving the form to respond. You have three options:

Option 1: Pay in Full

  • If you can, pay the full amount immediately
  • The claim is settled and no CCJ is issued

Option 2: Admit and Make an Offer

  • Complete the admission form
  • Propose a payment plan you can afford
  • The court may accept your offer or adjust it
  • A CCJ is still issued but you have structured payments

Option 3: Defend the Claim

  • If you dispute the debt (e.g. it is wrong, you do not owe it, or the statute of limitations applies)
  • Complete the defence form within 14 days
  • The case may go to a hearing

Critical: Do NOT ignore a claims form. If you do not respond within 14 days, a default judgment is issued automatically.

Impact of a CCJ

Area How It Affects You
Credit score Severely reduced (drops 100–250 points)
Credit file Recorded for 6 years
Mortgages Most mainstream lenders will decline
Borrowing Very difficult to get credit at reasonable rates
Renting Many landlords check for CCJs
Bank accounts May be restricted to basic accounts
Insurance Some providers ask about CCJs
Employment Some employers check credit (finance, legal roles)

Paying a CCJ

Pay Within 1 Month

  • CCJ is removed from the Register of Judgments
  • Your credit file is updated (though the default may remain)
  • This is the best outcome if a CCJ has been issued

Pay After 1 Month (But Within 6 Years)

  • CCJ remains on the register but is marked as “satisfied”
  • Better than unsatisfied, but still visible for the full 6 years
  • Apply to the court for a certificate of satisfaction (£15 fee)

Cannot Pay

  • Contact the creditor to negotiate
  • Apply to the court to vary the judgment (change payment terms)
  • Seek free debt advice from StepChange or Citizens Advice

Getting a CCJ Set Aside

You can apply to have a CCJ set aside (cancelled) if:

Ground Detail
You did not receive the claim Court can set aside and allow you to respond
You have a valid defence The debt is disputed or incorrect
Procedural error The creditor did not follow correct procedures

Application fee: £275 Process: Apply to the court that issued the CCJ

Enforcement Methods

If you do not pay a CCJ, the creditor can use enforcement actions:

Method What It Means
Bailiffs (enforcement agents) Can visit your home to collect goods
Attachment of earnings Money deducted from your wages
Charging order Debt secured against your property
Third-party debt order Freezes and takes money from your bank account

Preventing CCJs

Action How It Helps
Open all post Never ignore letters from creditors or courts
Communicate with creditors Contact them before debts escalate
Negotiate payment plans Most creditors prefer negotiation over court action
Seek debt advice early Free help from StepChange, National Debtline
Keep address up to date Ensure court documents reach you
Budget carefully Avoid falling behind on payments

Statute of Limitations

In England and Wales, a creditor generally has 6 years to take court action from the date of your last payment or acknowledgment of the debt. After this period, the debt may become statute-barred — meaning it cannot be enforced through the courts.

Important: Making a payment or acknowledging the debt in writing resets the clock.

After a CCJ: Rebuilding Your Credit

  1. Pay the CCJ as soon as possible (within 1 month if you can)
  2. Check your credit file — ensure the CCJ is recorded correctly
  3. After paying, apply for a certificate of satisfaction
  4. Use a credit builder card to start rebuilding
  5. Register on the electoral roll
  6. Keep all accounts in good standing
  7. Wait — the CCJ drops off after 6 years

For more on managing debt, see our debt repayment strategies and credit score guide.