Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA): The Complete UK Guide

If you owe £6,000+ in unsecured debt and can afford small monthly payments but will never pay it all back, an IVA may be your route out. This legally binding agreement with creditors typically writes off 50-70% of debt after 5-6 years. According to the Insolvency Service, over 60,000 people entered IVAs in 2025. This guide explains everything — including the parts others leave out.

IVA at a Glance

Duration 5–6 years typically Legal Protection Yes — creditors cannot contact you
Debt Written Off 50–70% on average Credit Impact 6 years on credit file
Monthly Cost Based on affordability Public Record Yes — Insolvency Register
Minimum Debt ~£6,000 (2+ creditors) Who Sets It Up Licensed Insolvency Practitioner

Advantages

  • Legal protection from creditors
  • Interest and charges frozen
  • Write off 50-70% of debt typically
  • One affordable monthly payment
  • Keep your home (usually)
  • Fixed end date — debt freedom guaranteed

Disadvantages

  • Credit file damaged for 6 years
  • Public Insolvency Register listing
  • Some job restrictions (finance, law)
  • Can't obtain credit over £500
  • Windfalls go to creditors
  • ~30% failure rate if payments missed

How an IVA Works — Step by Step

An Individual Voluntary Arrangement is a formal, legally binding agreement between you and your creditors. Once approved, it protects you from legal action while you pay what you can afford. Here's the complete process:

  1. Initial Assessment (Day 1)

    You meet with an Insolvency Practitioner (IP) or their team for a free consultation. They review your debts, income, and expenses using the Common Financial Statement. If suitable, they'll explain the implications and obtain your consent to proceed.

  2. Proposal Preparation (Days 2-14)

    Your IP drafts a formal proposal to creditors. This document details your financial situation, what you can afford to pay monthly, and how long the IVA will last. The proposal includes IP fees (typically 20-25% of payments) which come from your contributions, not added on top.

  3. Interim Order (Optional)

    If you're facing immediate legal action (bailiffs, court proceedings), your IP can apply for an Interim Order. This provides immediate protection while your proposal is considered.

  4. Creditors' Meeting (Day 21-28)

    Your proposal is sent to all creditors. They have 14 days to vote. The meeting is usually virtual — you don't attend. Critical: You need 75% by debt value to approve. If you owe £20,000 total and one creditor holding £16,000 agrees, that's 80% — approved. Creditors can request modifications (like extending from 5 to 6 years).

  5. The Protocol Period (Months 1-60/72)

    Once approved, you make monthly payments to your IP, who distributes them to creditors after deducting their fees. Payments are reviewed annually — if your income increases significantly (10%+), payments may rise. If it drops, they can be reduced.

  6. Annual Reviews

    Every 12 months, you provide updated income and expenditure details. Your IP can adjust payments accordingly. You must declare any windfalls (inheritance, compensation claims, lottery wins) — these go to creditors in full.

  7. Property Review (Year 5)

    If you're a homeowner, your property equity is assessed in the fifth year. If significant equity exists (typically £5,000+), you may need to remortgage to release funds or extend the IVA by 12 months instead.

  8. Completion (Month 60-72)

    After making all agreed payments, your IP issues a completion certificate. Remaining debt is legally written off. The IVA remains on your credit file for 6 years from the start date, not completion.

⚠️ Warning: Missing payments can cause IVA failure. If you miss 3+ months, your IP may terminate the arrangement. This leaves you vulnerable to creditor action, including potential bankruptcy proceedings.

Eligibility Criteria

Not everyone qualifies for an IVA. Here are the essential requirements:

Minimum Requirements

  • Debt Level: Typically £6,000+ in unsecured debt (though no legal minimum exists)
  • Number of Creditors: At least 2 creditors (single creditor IVAs are theoretically possible but rare)
  • Residency: You must live in England, Wales, or Northern Ireland (Scotland has different rules)
  • Income: Regular income with £80-100+ monthly disposable income after essentials
  • Commitment: Ability to maintain payments for 5-6 years

Who IVAs Work Best For

  • Homeowners wanting to protect their property
  • Employed individuals with steady income
  • Self-employed people (though income verification is stricter)
  • People with £6,000-£80,000 unsecured debt
  • Those facing legal action from creditors

Who Should Avoid IVAs

  • People with only priority debts (council tax, child maintenance)
  • Those with less than £6,000 debt (fees make it uneconomical)
  • Anyone with very irregular income
  • People likely to need credit within 6 years
  • Certain professionals where insolvency affects licensing (check your professional body)

What Debts Are Included in an IVA?

Understanding which debts can and cannot be included is crucial. You cannot cherry-pick — if a debt can be included, it must be.

✅ Included (Unsecured Debts)

  • Credit cards
  • Personal loans
  • Overdrafts
  • Store cards
  • Payday loans
  • Council tax arrears
  • Utility bill arrears
  • HMRC debts (income tax, VAT)
  • Benefit overpayments
  • CCJs (County Court Judgments)
  • Catalogue debts
  • Debts to friends/family (if documented)

❌ Excluded (Cannot be included)

  • Secured debts (mortgages, secured loans)
  • Hire purchase (if you keep the goods)
  • Student loans
  • Child maintenance arrears
  • Criminal fines
  • TV licence arrears
  • Social fund loans
  • Debts incurred through fraud
Council Tax Confusion: Current council tax isn't included — you must keep paying it. Only arrears from previous years can be included. Many people misunderstand this critical point.

The True Cost of an IVA

IVA providers often obscure the real costs. Here's complete transparency:

How Payments Work

Your monthly payment is based on disposable income — what's left after essential living costs. The Insolvency Practitioner's fees come FROM these payments, not in addition to them.

Real-World Example

  • Total Debt: £25,000
  • Monthly Payment: £180
  • Duration: 60 months (5 years)
  • Total Paid: £180 × 60 = £10,800
  • IP Fees (20%): ~£2,160
  • Creditors Receive: ~£8,640
  • Debt Written Off: £25,000 - £8,640 = £16,360 (65%)

Insolvency Practitioner Fees

IPs typically charge:

  • Nominee Fee: £1,000-1,500 (for setting up the IVA)
  • Supervisor Fee: 15-20% of monthly payments
  • Disbursements: Additional costs for specific actions

These fees are why IVAs under £6,000 rarely work — the fees consume too much of the payments.

Hidden Costs

  • Equity Release: Homeowners may need to remortgage in year 5
  • Extended Terms: If you can't release equity, add 12 months of payments
  • Lost Windfalls: Any unexpected money goes to creditors
  • Career Impact: Some professions face restrictions

Key Advantages of an IVA

🛡️ Legal Protection

Once approved, creditors cannot contact you, take legal action, or send bailiffs. This "breathing space" is legally binding — creditors who violate it face penalties.

❄️ Frozen Interest

All interest and charges stop immediately upon approval. Your debt won't grow, making repayment realistic. Without this, high-interest debts can be impossible to clear.

💰 Significant Write-Off

Typically 50-70% of total debt is written off at completion. This is legally binding — creditors cannot pursue written-off amounts later.

🏠 Keep Your Home

Unlike bankruptcy, you usually keep your home. While equity may be reviewed in year 5, forced sales are rare. Most IVAs protect homeowners effectively.

📅 Fixed End Date

You know exactly when you'll be debt-free. After 5-6 years, it's over — no matter how much was written off. This certainty helps mental health significantly.

💳 One Payment

Replace multiple creditor payments with one affordable monthly amount. Your IP handles distribution — you never deal with creditors again.

Key Disadvantages — The Honest Truth

Many sites sugarcoat IVA downsides. Here's what you really need to know:

📉 Credit File Damage — 6 Years

An IVA appears on your credit file for 6 years from the start date. Your score will plummet immediately. Getting any credit — mortgages, car finance, even mobile contracts — becomes extremely difficult. Some providers may offer "bad credit" products at punitive rates.

📢 Public Record

Your name appears on the public Insolvency Register, searchable by anyone. While employers rarely check routinely, it's there if they look. The entry includes your address and the IP's details. It's removed 3 months after completion.

💼 Career Restrictions

Certain professions face serious implications:

  • Financial Services: FCA-regulated roles often prohibited
  • Accountancy: May affect professional membership
  • Law: Solicitors must notify the SRA
  • Company Directors: No formal ban, but lenders may refuse business credit
  • Police/Military: May affect security clearance

Check your employment contract for insolvency clauses.

🚫 Credit Restrictions

You cannot obtain credit over £500 without declaring the IVA. This includes:

  • Credit cards (all will be cancelled)
  • Loans (even payday loans)
  • Hire purchase agreements
  • Some utility contracts require deposits

💸 Windfall Clause

Any unexpected money must go to creditors:

  • Inheritance (even years later if expected during IVA)
  • PPI refunds
  • Compensation claims
  • Lottery wins (yes, really)
  • Work bonuses over a threshold

🏠 Home Equity Review

In year 5, homeowners face equity assessment. If you have significant equity (£5,000+), you must either:

  • Remortgage to release funds (difficult with damaged credit)
  • Extend the IVA by 12 months
  • Have someone else buy out the equity share

⚠️ High Failure Rate

Approximately 30% of IVAs fail, usually due to:

  • Missed payments (job loss, illness)
  • Inability to maintain payments after review
  • Non-disclosure of assets or income
  • Creditor objections to variations

Failed IVAs often lead to bankruptcy — a worse outcome than starting with bankruptcy.

IVA vs Other Debt Solutions

An IVA isn't universally best. Here's an honest comparison:

Feature IVA DMP Bankruptcy Consolidation
Debt Written Off 50-70% None Most debts None
Duration 5-6 years Varies (5-10+ years) 12 months Loan term
Legal Protection Yes No Yes No
Credit Impact 6 years Varies 6 years Minimal
Keep Home Usually Yes At risk Yes
Public Record Yes No Yes No
Monthly Cost Affordable Flexible IPA if surplus Fixed
Minimum Debt ~£6,000 Any ~£5,000 Varies

The Verdict — Is an IVA Right for You?

✅ An IVA IS Right for You If:

  • You owe £6,000+ in unsecured debt
  • You have stable income with £80+ monthly disposable
  • You'll never repay debts in full at current payments
  • You want legal protection from creditors
  • You're a homeowner wanting to protect your property
  • You can commit to 5-6 years of payments
  • Your job doesn't prohibit insolvency
  • You accept the credit implications

❌ An IVA is NOT Right for You If:

  • Your debt is under £6,000
  • You have no regular income
  • You could repay debts within 3-4 years
  • You work in restricted professions
  • You'll need credit soon (mortgage, car)
  • Your income is very irregular
  • You can't commit to 5-6 years
  • A DMP would clear debts in similar timeframe

Ready to Check Your Eligibility?

Use our free calculator to see if you qualify for an IVA and estimate your write-off amount.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I get an IVA with bad credit?

Yes, you can get an IVA with bad credit. In fact, most people entering an IVA already have damaged credit from missed payments. Your credit score doesn't determine IVA eligibility — your ability to make regular payments and having sufficient debt (typically £6,000+) are what matter. The IVA will further damage your credit for 6 years, but it provides a path to becoming debt-free.

Do I need a certain amount of debt for an IVA?

While there's no legal minimum, most Insolvency Practitioners require at least £6,000 in unsecured debt from 2 or more creditors. Below this threshold, the fees make an IVA uneconomical — you'd pay more in fees than debt relief received. If you have less debt, consider a Debt Management Plan instead.

Will my employer find out about my IVA?

In most cases, your employer won't be informed directly about your IVA. However, it is recorded on the public Insolvency Register which anyone can search. Some professions (financial services, law, accountancy) require disclosure, and some employment contracts have insolvency clauses requiring you to inform your employer. Check your contract carefully. See our guide: Does an IVA Affect My Job?

What happens if I miss an IVA payment?

Missing one payment isn't automatically fatal to your IVA. Contact your Insolvency Practitioner immediately — they can often arrange a payment holiday or variation. You're typically allowed to miss up to 3 months of payments over the IVA term, but these must be made up by extending the arrangement. However, if you miss 3+ consecutive months without agreement, your IVA may fail, potentially leading to bankruptcy if creditors pursue this.

Can I keep my car in an IVA?

Usually yes, if it's essential for work or family needs and worth less than £5,000. Cars on HP/PCP finance aren't included in the IVA — you continue those payments separately. High-value vehicles may need to be downgraded with the difference going to creditors. See our detailed guide: Can I Keep My Car in an IVA?

What happens after an IVA ends?

Once you complete all payments, you receive a completion certificate from your Insolvency Practitioner. Remaining debt is legally written off — creditors cannot pursue it. The IVA stays on your credit file for 6 years from the start date, not the end. You're removed from the Insolvency Register 3 months after completion. You're then free to rebuild your credit, though it takes time to recover fully.

Can I pay off an IVA early?

Yes, you can settle an IVA early with a lump sum, but creditors must agree. They typically accept 75-85% of remaining payments as a lump sum settlement. For example, if you have £10,000 in payments remaining, a £7,500 lump sum might be accepted. This could come from a family member, remortgage (if credit permits), or asset sale. Early settlement doesn't improve the credit file impact — the IVA still shows for 6 years from the start date.

What's the difference between an IVA and bankruptcy?

The key differences: IVAs last 5-6 years vs bankruptcy's 12 months. You usually keep your home in an IVA but risk losing it in bankruptcy. IVAs write off 50-70% of debt; bankruptcy writes off most unsecured debts entirely. Both appear on your credit file for 6 years. Bankruptcy has more severe professional restrictions but provides faster resolution. See our comparison: IVA vs Bankruptcy

About the Author

Sarah Mitchell is a Senior Debt Advisor with 12 years' experience helping people resolve debt problems. She specializes in IVAs and has helped over 2,000 clients achieve debt freedom. View full bio

Medical Review

This article was reviewed by James Robertson IP, a Licensed Insolvency Practitioner with 20 years' experience. James ensures all information is accurate, current, and complies with insolvency legislation. View credentials

Last reviewed: 9 February 2026