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What Happens If You're Made Bankrupt in the UK?
What bankruptcy means, how it affects your home, job, bank accounts, and credit rating. The full process and alternatives explained. UK 2026 guide.
Bankruptcy is a serious step that writes off most debts but comes with significant consequences. Here is exactly what happens, what you lose, and what alternatives you should consider first.
What Bankruptcy Means
| Feature |
Details |
| What it does |
Writes off most unsecured debts after 12 months |
| Who controls your finances |
An Official Receiver (government official) or appointed trustee |
| Duration |
Restrictions last 12 months (usually) |
| Your assets |
May be sold to repay creditors |
| Credit file |
Bankruptcy recorded for 6 years |
| Cost to apply |
£680 (as of 2026) |
The Bankruptcy Process
| Stage |
What happens |
| 1. Application |
You apply online through the Insolvency Service (gov.uk) or a creditor petitions the court |
| 2. Adjudicator decision |
An adjudicator reviews your application and makes a bankruptcy order (usually within days) |
| 3. Official Receiver takes over |
OR contacts you, freezes accounts, and investigates your assets and income |
| 4. Interview |
You have a telephone interview with the Official Receiver about your finances |
| 5. Income Payments Agreement |
If your income is above essential needs, you may pay surplus income for 3 years |
| 6. Asset realisation |
Your non-essential assets may be sold |
| 7. Discharge (12 months) |
Most debts are written off and restrictions lifted |
Which Debts Are Written Off?
| Debts included (written off) |
Debts NOT included (still owed) |
| Credit cards |
Student loans |
| Personal loans |
Court fines |
| Overdrafts |
Child maintenance arrears |
| Catalogue debts |
Debts from fraud |
| Store cards |
Some tax debts (varies) |
| Payday loans |
Secured debts (mortgage) |
| Utility arrears |
Social fund loans |
| Council tax arrears |
Debts incurred after bankruptcy order |
| Medical debts |
|
| Most HMRC debts |
|
What You Lose
Your Home
| Situation |
What happens |
| Home with equity |
Trustee can sell it (after 12 months, must apply to court within 3 years) |
| Home with no equity |
You may be able to keep it (but situation reviewed) |
| Rented home |
Bankruptcy does not affect your tenancy directly |
| Joint ownership |
The other owner’s share is protected, but trustee can force a sale |
| Council/housing association |
Tenancy is protected |
If there is equity in your home, the trustee (or Official Receiver) has 3 years to deal with your interest in the property. If they take no action within 3 years, your interest reverts back to you.
Your Possessions
| What you keep |
What you may lose |
| Essential household items (bed, fridge, cooker, washing machine) |
Valuable jewellery |
| Clothing |
Expensive electronics (beyond everyday use) |
| Tools of trade (up to £1,000 in England, unlimited in Scotland) |
Second vehicles |
| One reasonable vehicle (if needed for work, usually worth less than ~£1,000) |
Art, antiques, collectibles |
| Basic furniture |
Investment portfolios |
| Items needed for disability |
Savings and ISAs |
Your Income
| Income level |
What happens |
| Income covers essential living costs only |
No payments required |
| Income exceeds essential living costs |
You may be required to pay surplus income for 3 years via an Income Payments Agreement (IPA) |
| Essential living costs include |
Rent/mortgage, council tax, food, utilities, transport to work, insurance |
| IPA typical deduction |
Surplus above reasonable living costs |
Your Bank Accounts
| What happens |
Details |
| Existing accounts |
Usually frozen and may be closed |
| Basic bank account |
You have a right to a basic account (no overdraft/credit) |
| Banks that offer basic accounts |
Monzo, Starling, most high-street banks |
| Savings |
Official Receiver will take savings above a minimal level |
| Pensions |
Usually protected — pension funds are not normally included in bankruptcy |
Restrictions During Bankruptcy
| Restriction |
Details |
| Borrowing |
Cannot borrow more than £500 without disclosing your bankruptcy |
| Business |
Cannot be a company director or manage a company without court permission |
| Trading name |
Must disclose bankruptcy if trading under a different name |
| Certain professions |
May be disqualified from some roles (solicitor, accountant, MP, police officer, etc.) |
| Bank accounts |
Limited to basic accounts |
| Existing contracts |
Some contracts (e.g. mobile phone) may be terminated |
After Discharge (12 Months)
| What changes |
Details |
| Debt |
Most unsecured debts are written off |
| Restrictions |
Lifted (unless extended by a BRO) |
| Income payments |
IPA may continue for up to 3 years from the date it started |
| Credit file |
Bankruptcy recorded for 6 years from the order date |
| Getting credit |
Very difficult for the first 6 years — improves gradually |
| Employment |
Most job restrictions are lifted |
| Bank accounts |
Can apply for standard accounts (but may still face refusals) |
Bankruptcy Restrictions Orders (BROs)
| Feature |
Details |
| What it is |
An extension of bankruptcy restrictions beyond the normal 12 months |
| Duration |
2 to 15 years |
| Why imposed |
Dishonest behaviour, reckless spending, hiding assets, gambling debts |
| What it means |
Same restrictions as during bankruptcy continue for the BRO period |
| How common |
Relatively rare — only for misconduct |
Alternatives to Bankruptcy
| Alternative |
Best for |
Lasts |
Entered on credit file |
| Debt Relief Order (DRO) |
Debts under £30,000, few assets, low income |
12 months |
6 years |
| Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) |
Regular income, debts over £6,000 |
Typically 5–6 years |
6 years |
| Debt Management Plan (DMP) |
Can afford reduced payments |
Until debts repaid |
May be noted |
| Administration Order |
Debts under £5,000, CCJ already in place |
Until debts repaid |
6 years |
| Full and final settlement |
Lump sum available to offer creditors |
One-off |
May be noted |
Bankruptcy vs IVA
| Feature |
Bankruptcy |
IVA |
| Duration of restrictions |
12 months |
5–6 years |
| Monthly payments |
Surplus income for up to 3 years |
Fixed monthly payments for 5–6 years |
| Your home |
May be sold |
Usually keep it (may need to release equity) |
| Debts written off |
After 12 months |
Remainder after IVA term |
| Credit file |
6 years |
6 years |
| Cost |
£680 application |
Fees taken from payments |
| Public record |
Yes (Insolvency Register) |
Yes (Insolvency Register) |
Bankruptcy vs DRO
| Feature |
Bankruptcy |
DRO |
| Debt limit |
No limit |
Up to £30,000 |
| Asset limit |
No limit (but assets at risk) |
Under £2,000 (car under £2,000) |
| Income limit |
No limit |
Disposable income under £75/month |
| Cost |
£680 |
£90 |
| Duration |
12 months |
12 months |
Scotland — Sequestration
In Scotland, the equivalent of bankruptcy is called sequestration. The process is similar but with some differences:
| Scotland difference |
Details |
| Name |
Sequestration |
| Application route |
Through the Accountant in Bankruptcy (AiB) |
| Cost |
£150 (Minimal Assets Process) or £200 (full sequestration) |
| Discharge |
Usually 12 months |
| Debt Arrangement Scheme (DAS) |
Scottish alternative to DMP/IVA — statutory protection from creditors |
Getting Free Debt Advice
| Organisation |
Contact |
| StepChange |
stepchange.org — free, comprehensive debt advice |
| Citizens Advice |
citizensadvice.org.uk |
| National Debtline |
nationaldebtline.org |
| Business Debtline |
businessdebtline.org (for self-employed) |
| Christians Against Poverty |
capuk.org |
Always get free professional debt advice before applying for bankruptcy. An adviser can assess whether bankruptcy, an IVA, or another solution is right for your situation.
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