Council Tax UK 2026/27 — Bands, Bills, Discounts and How to Reduce Yours

What Happens If You Miss a Council Tax Payment?

What happens when you miss council tax, the enforcement process, bailiff powers, payment arrangements, and how to get help. UK guide.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

Missing a council tax payment sets off a strict enforcement process, but at every stage there are options to resolve it. Here is exactly what happens, step by step, and how to protect yourself.

For the wider cluster covering bands, discounts, support and billing basics, use the main Council Tax hub.

The Council Tax Enforcement Timeline

StageWhat happensTimeframe
1. Payment missedCouncil notices the missed instalmentDay the payment was due
2. Reminder noticeCouncil sends a reminder — 7 days to payWithin 14 days of missed payment
3. You pay within 7 daysNothing further happens — back to normal instalmentsCrisis averted
4. Second missed paymentFinal notice — lose right to pay by instalmentsAfter second miss in same year
5. Full balance demandedEntire remaining council tax for the year becomes dueImmediately after final notice
6. Court summonsCouncil applies to magistrates’ courtUsually 2–4 weeks after demand
7. Liability orderCourt grants a liability order — council gets enforcement powersAt court hearing
8. Enforcement actionBailiffs, attachment of earnings, or benefit deductionsAfter liability order
9. Bankruptcy or charging orderFor large debts — rareLast resort
10. Committal to prisonExtremely rare — requires proof of wilful refusalAbsolute last resort

What Each Stage Means

Reminder Notice (Stage 2)

DetailInformation
When sentAfter first missed payment
Time to pay7 days
If you pay in timeInstalments continue as normal
How many reminders per yearMaximum 2 — after 2 reminders, a final notice is issued
Cost to youNothing — no fees at this stage

Final Notice (Stage 4)

DetailInformation
When sentAfter second missed payment (or failure to pay reminder)
What it demandsThe full remaining balance for the year
ExampleIf you owe £1,800 for the year and have paid £600, the full £1,200 remaining is due
Can you negotiateYes — contact the council immediately

Court Summons (Stage 6)

DetailInformation
Court costs added£80–£130 (varies by council)
Do you have to attend courtNot required, but you can
Can you still payYes — paying before the hearing usually stops proceedings
What happens at courtCouncil applies for a liability order; rarely contested

Liability Order (Stage 7)

DetailInformation
What it gives the councilLegal power to enforce the debt
Your credit fileCouncil tax debt does not appear on credit files unless a County Court Judgment (CCJ) is involved
Enforcement options available to councilSee below

Enforcement Actions After a Liability Order

ActionHow it worksYour rights
Attachment of earningsYour employer deducts payments directly from your wagesCouncil sets the amount based on your earnings
Deductions from benefitsDWP deducts a fixed amount from UC, JSA, ESA, IS, or Pension CreditCurrently up to £3.70/week per debt
Bailiff (enforcement agent)Bailiff visits your home to collect payment or take goodsMust follow strict rules (see below)
Charging orderA charge is placed on your property — debt repaid when you sellRarely used for council tax
Bankruptcy proceedingsCouncil can petition for your bankruptcy if debt exceeds £5,000Drastic — council must justify this
Committal to prisonMagistrates can sentence up to 90 days (only for wilful refusal)Extremely rare — must prove you could pay but refused

Bailiff Rules for Council Tax

RuleDetails
Notice periodBailiff must give at least 7 days’ notice before first visit
HoursCan only visit between 6am and 9pm (except commercial premises)
Forced entry — first visitCannot force entry on a first visit — can only enter through an open door or if invited in
Forced entry — subsequent visitsCan force entry if a controlled goods agreement is in place and has been breached
Who they can deal withMust speak to the debtor (the person named on the council tax bill)
Vulnerable peopleMust follow vulnerability guidelines — cannot take enforcement action against clearly vulnerable people
What they can takeCan take goods to the value of the debt (not essential items — see below)
FeesCan charge fees (compliance £75, enforcement £235, sale £110)

Items Bailiffs Cannot Take

Protected items
Essential household items (cooker, fridge, washing machine, beds)
Clothing
Tools of trade up to £1,350 in value
Items belonging to someone else (you must prove they are not yours)
Items on hire purchase or rental
Disability equipment or items needed for a disabled person
Children’s items

How to Stop the Enforcement Process

StageWhat to do
Before summonsContact the council and ask for a payment arrangement
After summons but before courtPay the balance plus court costs, or contact the council to negotiate
After liability orderContact the council and propose a realistic payment plan
After bailiff instructedContact the bailiff firm and the council — request the debt is recalled
At any stageSeek free debt advice (see below)

Getting Help

OrganisationContactWhat they do
Citizens Advicecitizensadvice.org.ukFree advice on council tax debt and negotiations
StepChangestepchange.orgFree debt advice including council tax debt plans
National Debtlinenationaldebtline.orgFree phone advice on council tax debt
Your council’s revenues teamPhone number on your billCan arrange payment plans directly

Council Tax Reduction

If you are on a low income, you may qualify for Council Tax Reduction (previously Council Tax Benefit). This is administered by your local council and can reduce your bill by up to 100%.

Eligibility factorDetails
IncomeMust be on a low income or receiving certain benefits
SavingsMost councils have a savings threshold (often £6,000–£16,000)
How to applyContact your council or apply online through their website
BackdatingCan be backdated by up to 3 months in most cases

Scotland — Key Differences

DifferenceDetails
Prison for council tax debtAbolished in Scotland
Sheriff officers (not bailiffs)Different rules apply
Council Tax ReductionAdministered by Scottish councils with slightly different rules
EnforcementSummary warrant route, not magistrates’ court

Related guides:

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Council Tax