Wooden model house and keys illustrating help with rent arrears

Help With Rent Arrears Debt

Rent arrears can build up fast, and the pressure of owing money to your landlord is unlike most other debts. As a priority debt, the consequences of leaving them unaddressed are serious – but people get into arrears for all kinds of reasons, and there are ways to get help.

NDH Financial is a licensed Insolvency Practitioner firm with an in-house IP and debt consultants who work with people across England, Wales and Northern Ireland. We help people take back control when rent arrears are piling up and becoming hard to manage.

Where rent arrears have built up as part of a wider debt problem, an Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) could pull everything into a single monthly payment you can actually afford to pay. Creditors are legally bound to stop contact once it’s approved, interest is frozen, and any remaining qualifying debt is written off when the arrangement completes**.

What is rent arrears debt?

Rent arrears are the outstanding amount owed to your landlord for missed or incomplete rent payments. Each time a payment is missed or short, the balance carries forward, and the total can grow quickly.

Rent is different from most other forms of debt. It’s not a line of credit you’ve applied for – it’s a basic housing cost that can become impossible to meet when income drops or circumstances change. Arrears can build up through no fault of your own.

What makes rent arrears particularly serious is their status as a priority debt. Non-priority debts, such as credit cards and personal loans, also carry consequences, but they don’t put your home at risk in the same way. With rent arrears, continued non-payment can trigger a legal process that could ultimately result in you having to leave your property.

Types of Rent Arrears Debt

Private Rental Arrears

Private rental arrears are owed to a landlord or letting agent managing a privately rented property. Under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025, which came into force in May 2026, private landlords must now establish legal grounds for seeking possession and follow a formal court process, offering tenants greater protection than before. That said, arrears of three months or more can still trigger mandatory possession proceedings, so getting advice early remains important.

Council and Social Housing Arrears

In a council or housing association tenancy, the council or housing association is your landlord and you pay rent directly to them. This is different from temporary accommodation arrangements, where a council may place you in a privately owned property. In a standard social tenancy, if payments aren’t kept up, you’re in arrears to your social landlord directly.

Arrears caused by Housing Benefit problems are particularly common in this sector. If a Housing Benefit claim is delayed, reduced, or stopped, the shortfall becomes the tenant’s responsibility and can build up quickly. Social landlords are generally expected to work with tenants and offer support before escalating to legal action, but possession proceedings remain an option if arrears go unaddressed for too long.

Supported and Temporary Accommodation Arrears

Arrears can also arise in supported housing, hostels and local authority temporary accommodation. Many of these arrangements are licences rather than tenancies, which means different legal rules apply, so occupants have fewer protections than standard tenants.

Causes of Rent Arrears Debt

Most people don’t fall into rent arrears through carelessness. There’s usually a clear trigger, and often several factors building on each other at the same time.

Changes in Income

A job loss, reduced hours, or a gap between jobs can make it genuinely difficult to afford to pay your rent each month. Because rent is typically one of the highest fixed costs in a household budget, even a temporary drop in earnings can leave a shortfall that’s hard to recover from without support.

Delays in Benefits

A lot of private and social tenants rely on Universal Credit and Housing Benefit to help cover housing costs. Delays in processing a new claim or changes to an existing entitlement can leave you in arrears before payments are even in place.

Unexpected Expenses

A sudden outgoing, like a car repair, a medical cost or a household emergency, can throw a tight budget off course. When disposable income is already stretched, an unplanned cost can force difficult choices about which bills get paid first.

Relationship Breakdown

When a couple splits and one partner remains in the property, the rent that was previously shared can become a full-cost commitment on a single income. Combined with the financial disruption of separation itself (legal costs, new deposits, changes to child maintenance), arrears can accumulate quickly.

Rising Rent and Cost of Living

Private rents have risen substantially in many parts of England, Wales and Northern Ireland, often outpacing wage and benefit growth. When rent takes up a larger share of a fixed income, there’s simply less room to absorb other rising costs, and arrears can develop even for people who have always paid on time.

Mental Health and Wellbeing

Debt and mental health are closely linked. Financial stress can make it harder to open correspondence, make calls, or engage with problems before they worsen. For some people, anxiety about arrears becomes a barrier to addressing them, causing the balance owed to grow.

Will rent arrears affect my credit score?

Rent arrears don’t automatically appear on your credit file, as not every landlord reports payment information to credit reference agencies – but many letting agents and referencing companies do. Once arrears are passed to a collections team or legal action is taken, a default or County Court Judgment is likely to be registered on your credit file.

Things that can damage your credit score as a result of rent arrears include:

  • Payment history recorded by a referencing agency or letting agent
  • A default registered when arrears are passed to a debt collection company
  • A County Court Judgment obtained by your landlord to recover the outstanding balance
  • An eviction recorded as part of possession proceedings

Any negative marker placed on your credit file will remain there for 6 years. This can make it harder to be approved for future tenancies, access credit or, in some circumstances, pass pre-employment checks.

If your credit file has already taken a hit, the 6-year period begins only after the issue is formally resolved. Taking action sooner rather than later limits the long-term damage.

Get in touch today

NDH Financial can help free you from the shackles of your debt.

Call us on 0800 002 9051 or apply below.

If you’re an existing client, please call us on 0800 002 9061.

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What happens if I can't pay my rent arrears?

Landlords follow a set process when rent goes unpaid. Under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025, all possession claims must go through the courts, and landlords must rely on specific legal grounds to recover their property. Where that process ends up depends largely on how early you engage with it.

Initial contact: Most landlords or letting agents will reach out informally when a payment is missed, by phone, text or email. Responding at this point and being open about your situation is the best way to prevent things from moving further.

Section 8 notice: If informal contact doesn’t resolve the arrears, your landlord can serve a formal Section 8 notice citing legal grounds for possession. For rent arrears, they must give you at least 4 weeks’ notice before applying to court. Mandatory grounds apply once arrears reach three months or more.

Application for possession: Once the notice period has passed, your landlord can apply to the county court for a possession order. All possession claims now require a court hearing, and the court will consider the level of arrears and your personal circumstances before reaching a decision.

Possession order: If the court grants a possession order, you’ll be given a date by which you must leave the property. Some orders are suspended on condition that you meet an agreed repayment schedule. Sticking to that schedule is critical if you want to remain in your home.

Warrant of eviction: If you don’t leave by the date set out in the possession order, your landlord can apply for a warrant authorising enforcement agents to carry out the eviction.

County Court Judgment: Your landlord may also pursue a CCJ separately to recover the outstanding balance. A CCJ stays on your credit record for 6 years and can affect your financial options well beyond the tenancy itself.

At every stage, the sooner you speak to a debt consultant or an Insolvency Practitioner, the more options are likely to remain open to you.

Can you write off rent arrears debt?

Rent arrears don’t write themselves off, but there are formal routes through which the balance can be reduced or cleared.

There is a legal concept called statute-barring, which applies if 6 years pass without a payment being made or the debt being acknowledged in writing. Once statute-barred, a creditor loses the right to pursue the amount through the courts. In reality, most landlords take action long before 6 years have passed, so this is rarely a practical option for people dealing with arrears.

A formal debt solution is a far more accessible route. Solutions such as an IVA or a Debt Relief Order for rent arrears can bring the outstanding balance into a structured arrangement alongside any other unsecured borrowing you have.

A formal debt solution will address the arrears you’ve already built up. You’ll need to budget for your ongoing rent payments separately and keep up with them throughout.

Debt Solutions for Rent Arrears

Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA)

An IVA is a legally binding agreement between you and your creditors, proposed and overseen by a licensed Insolvency Practitioner. The monthly payment is set according to what’s left from your income once essential living costs are accounted for, so it’s based on what you can realistically manage, not what you owe.

Any rent arrears built up before the IVA is approved can be included alongside other unsecured debts. You’ll need to pay your rent separately going forward, as ongoing housing costs sit outside the arrangement.

Once your IVA is in place:

  • Creditors included in the arrangement must stop all contact
  • Interest and charges on included debts are frozen from the date of approval
  • You make a single monthly payment for the life of the arrangement
  • Any balance remaining on qualifying debts is written off when the IVA ends**

In many cases, people repay only a fraction of what they originally owed. A write-off of between 25% and 73% is achievable*, though the exact figure depends on your individual circumstances and requires creditor approval.

Check if You Qualify for an IVA

Debt Relief Order (DRO)

A DRO is designed for people with relatively low levels of debt, minimal disposable income, and few assets. To qualify, your total unsecured debts must be under £30,000, and you’ll need to meet the income and asset thresholds set by the Insolvency Service. Rent arrears qualify for inclusion.

Once a DRO is approved, all included debts are put on hold for 12 months. During that period, creditors can’t request payment or add further interest. If your financial position remains unchanged at the end of the 12 months, the included debts are written off in full.

DROs are available in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Learn More

Debt Management Plan (DMP)

A DMP is a voluntary arrangement in which you make a single reduced payment each month, which is then distributed between your creditors. Because it’s informal, it carries no legal weight. Creditors don’t have to participate; they can still add interest, and your landlord remains free to pursue possession proceedings regardless, even if a plan is in place.

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Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy is a formal insolvency process that can clear rent arrears and other unsecured debts. The process typically concludes within 12 months, at which point qualifying debts are discharged.

You may be required to sell assets, including property or savings, and if you have disposable income above a certain threshold, you could be asked to make contributions for up to three years. Bankruptcy is recorded on your credit file for six years and can restrict access to certain professional roles. It’s often considered a last resort when other options aren’t viable.

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Breathing Space

The Breathing Space scheme provides 60 days of legal protection during which creditors, including your landlord, must pause enforcement activity and cannot add interest or charges. It’s not a debt solution in itself, but it creates the space to speak to an Insolvency Practitioner and work out what longer-term route is right for you.

Learn More

Tips for Dealing with Rent Arrears Debt

Tell Your Landlord as Soon as Possible

Tell your landlord as soon as you know you’re going to miss a payment, as it gives you the best chance of reaching an informal arrangement before the situation escalates. Most landlords would far rather agree a manageable plan than go through the cost and disruption of possession proceedings. Silence tends to make things worse.

Check Your Benefit Entitlement

If your circumstances have changed, it’s worth checking whether you’re now eligible for Universal Credit or Housing Benefit. If your situation has changed, it’s worth taking the time to make a claim, as a successful application could help cover some or all of your ongoing rent costs. You may also be able to apply for a Discretionary Housing Payment from your local council if you’re facing a shortfall that your standard entitlement doesn’t fully cover.

Contact Your Local Council

If you’re at risk of losing your home, your local council has a statutory duty to provide housing advice. Reaching out before possession proceedings are underway gives them more scope to help and could open up options that wouldn’t be available later on.

Put Rent Before Non-Priority Creditors

When money is tight, it’s worth being deliberate about the order in which you pay what you owe. Rent arrears carry consequences – including the loss of your home – that most other debts don’t. Covering your rent before paying non-priority creditors, such as gambling companies or store cards, makes practical sense.

Get Professional Debt Advice

If rent arrears are sitting alongside other debts and the overall picture is becoming difficult to manage, speaking to a debt consultant or an Insolvency Practitioner is the most direct way to understand what options are available. The earlier you get proper advice, the more realistic your options are likely to be.

Struggling with rent arrears debt? Talk to NDH Financial

Rent arrears can feel urgent and isolating, particularly when they’re part of a wider debt problem. But there’s usually more than one way forward, and knowing which ones are available makes a real difference.

Our debt consultants will take the time to understand your full financial picture – your income, your outgoings, your rent arrears, and any other debts you’re carrying. They’ll explain what options are realistically available to you and what each one would mean in practice. There’s no pressure and no obligation to go ahead.

For people where an IVA is the right fit, rent arrears can be brought into the arrangement alongside other unsecured debts. You’ll have one fixed monthly payment, a clear timeline, and a defined point at which the remaining balance is written off**.

To find out where you stand, book a confidential consultation with our team.

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