Credit & Debt

IVA Guide UK — Individual Voluntary Arrangements Explained

What is an IVA? How Individual Voluntary Arrangements work, eligibility, costs, pros and cons, and how they affect your credit score and future finances.

An Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) is a formal debt solution for people who cannot afford to repay their debts in full. It can write off a significant portion of what you owe — but it is a serious commitment with long-lasting consequences for your credit and finances.

How an IVA Works

Stage What Happens
1. Assessment Insolvency practitioner (IP) reviews your income, expenditure, and debts
2. Proposal IP drafts an IVA proposal to your creditors
3. Creditor vote Creditors holding 75%+ of your debt (by value) must approve
4. Implementation You make agreed monthly payments for 5–6 years
5. Completion Remaining included debt is legally written off

Eligibility

Requirement Detail
Minimum debt Typically £6,000–£10,000+ (unsecured)
Number of creditors Usually 2 or more
Disposable income Enough to make meaningful payments (£80–£100+/month)
Residency Must be resident in England, Wales, or Northern Ireland (Scotland uses a Protected Trust Deed)
Type of debt Unsecured debts only (credit cards, loans, overdrafts, catalogue debts)

What Debts Can Be Included?

Included Not Included
Credit cards Mortgage arrears
Personal loans Secured loans
Overdrafts Student loans
Store cards Child maintenance
Catalogue debts Court fines
HMRC debts (sometimes) Council tax arrears (sometimes)
Payday loans Fraud-related debts

Typical IVA Terms

Feature Typical Terms
Duration 5–6 years
Monthly payment Based on disposable income (usually £100–£400)
Total repaid 30–60% of original debt
Debt written off 40–70% of original debt
IP fees Paid from your contributions (not extra)

Example

Detail Amount
Total unsecured debt £30,000
Monthly payment £200
IVA duration 60 months
Total repaid £12,000
Debt written off £18,000 (60%)

Pros and Cons

Advantages

Advantage Detail
Debt written off Typically 40–70% of your debt
Single payment One affordable monthly amount
Legal protection Creditors cannot chase you (if they voted for the IVA)
Interest frozen No more interest or charges on included debts
Avoid bankruptcy Less severe than bankruptcy in some respects
Keep your home Usually (though equity may need to be released)

Disadvantages

Disadvantage Detail
Credit file Recorded for 6 years — severely affects borrowing
Public record Listed on the Individual Insolvency Register
Restrictions Must disclose when applying for credit over £500
Home equity May need to remortgage or extend the IVA to release equity
Windfall clause Inheritances, PPI payouts etc. must be paid into the IVA
Failure risk If you cannot maintain payments, it can fail (leading to bankruptcy)
Long commitment 5–6 years of reduced living standard

Impact on Your Life

Area Impact
Credit score Severely damaged for 6+ years
Bank account May need to change to a basic account
Mortgage Very difficult to get during the IVA
Employment Must disclose for some jobs (finance, legal, military)
Renting Some landlords check credit — may be harder
Car finance Not available during the IVA
Mobile phone contract May be declined — use pay-as-you-go

Alternatives to an IVA

Alternative Best For
Debt management plan If you can repay debts in full but need lower payments
Balance transfer If debt is manageable and you have a reasonable credit score
Debt consolidation If you can get a lower interest rate
Bankruptcy If debts are completely unmanageable
Debt Relief Order (DRO) Low income, few assets, debts under £30,000
Full and final settlement If you have a lump sum to offer creditors

Important Warnings

  1. Never pay for debt advice — free services (StepChange, National Debtline, Citizens Advice) are available
  2. Beware IVA “factories” — some companies aggressively market IVAs when they are not the best solution
  3. An IVA is not right for everyone — always explore alternatives first
  4. Get independent advice — from a free debt charity, not a commercial IVA provider
  5. Understand the full commitment — 5–6 years of restricted finances

Getting Help

Organisation Contact
StepChange 0800 138 1111 (free)
National Debtline 0808 808 4000 (free)
Citizens Advice citizensadvice.org.uk
MoneyHelper 0800 138 7777 (free)

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