Avoid Bankruptcy With An IVA

An IVA is an Individual Voluntary Arrangement, which is a formal agreement you make with your creditors. They are arranged through specialist companies and are an agreement you make to pay a certain amount of money to your creditors for a set period of time. Once this amount of time is up any debt you still have is written off completely. With IVAs you simply need to get the creditors of 75% of your debt to agree to it, and the remaining 25% will be bound to the legal agreement whether they wish to or not. This is perfect if you owe 75% of your debt to a single creditor, and the remaining to others. You only need to get that single creditor to agree to the IVA, then no matter what the other creditors wish they are bound to the agreement anyway. An IVA gives you more control over the situation than a bankruptcy, and you pose less risk of losing your home or other assets. Generally in an IVA your interest is frozen from the time it starts so the debt can no longer increase. You can even continue business trading and are able to have a bank account under an IVA. The specialist company that sets up your IVA will factor their fees into the payments you make each month under the agreement, though IVAs cost money to maintain it will cost you less than filing for bankruptcy. Not every debt problem is best solved with an IVA, you need to make sure there is not a better solution before you enter into one. Many debt companies will provide information on IVAs but be careful that you are not dealing with a company that will only suggest an IVA so that they can collect the set-up fees from you. Whether an IVA is ideal for your situation or not you will want to make sure you are dealing with a company that can find a solution that is best for you and your situation. The best way to find a trustworthy company to help you with an IVA is to research, look for the companies that come highly recommended and have been successful in helping many people out of debt. Try contacting a handful of these companies and see who comes up with the best solution for you. You do not have to commit to the first company you find, you can always say no and keep looking.

Continue : Insolvency

Filed under Bankruptcy by on #

Leave a Comment

Fields marked by an asterisk (*) are required.