What is an IVA?
An IVA is a promise to pay creditors part of what you owe them, usually by regular payments over a fixed period of time. In order to set up an IVA, you must persuade 75% of your known creditors to accept the deal. As long you keep up the IVA payments, none of your creditors is allowed to make you bankrupt and, when the IVA is over, the slate is wiped clean of those debts.
In order to persuade 75% of your creditors to agree to an IVA, rather than to go ahead and make you bankrupt, you will have to convince them that they will get more money through the IVA than they would if they were to make you bankrupt.
You will be required to provide full information about your finances to a “licensed insolvency practitioner” (usually a qualified lawyer or accountant) who will prepare a report for the court and your creditors. Your creditors will then meet and decide whether to accept your offer. Your offer must be the best you can afford: concealing information or lying to your creditors in order to get an IVA is a criminal offence.







