Is An IVA (Individual Voluntary Arrangement) Right For You?
As an increasing amount of people face ever-mounting debt, some have started to consider individual voluntary arrangements (IVAs) as a way of avoiding bankruptcy. First created in the 80s to help businesses avoid bankruptcy, they are now also available to individuals who are unable to solve their financial problems. An IVA is an agreement that an individual makes with their creditor(s) as a way of avoiding bankruptcy. The individual will negotiate with the creditor(s) either a monthly payment over the course of up to five years, or a lump sum from the sale of goods or the remortgage of property. The creditor(s), for their part of the arrangement, would then write off the remainder of your debt. The benefits for taking up an individual voluntary arrangement with your creditors are vast. The reason more than 6000 people take up IVAs with their creditors every year is down to: protection against court action from your creditors, frozen interest and late payment fees, and a repaired credit rating once your debt is written off. An IVA can be used to reduce all your unsecured debts. This includes things such as store cards, catalogues, credit cards, overdrafts, personal loans and business loans. This is no doubt that IVAs can work well, and few people would dismiss an option that could cut their debt by up to 75%, but they are not always the solution for everyone. For example, you have to be able to afford a lump sum payment and / or at least $300 a month. Lots of people faced with bankruptcy just can not afford that. In order to set up an IVA, an insolvency practitioner must propose the agreement to your creditors; you are not able to propose it yourself. The charges that these insolvency practitioners charge you will vary, but most will take their fees from your monthly payments. It is always good practice to shop around for recommended insolvency practitioners as if up front payments are made and the agreement falls through then you have wasted money you have not got. $20,000 is commonly the minimum amount of debt you need in order to qualify for an IVA. The most important point to consider is that 75% of your creditors, that is, the creditors that own 75 per cent of your debt, must agree to the terms negotiated in the individual voluntary arrangement; if fewer than 75% agree, then you will have to consider other alternatives to protecting your solvency. If the remaining 25% do not agree, they are legally bound to the arrangement anyway.
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- What Is An IVA (Individual Voluntary Arrangement)? | Debt Reduction Calculator
- How To Arrange An Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA)
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Tagged with: debt • debt management • finance • individual voluntary arrangement • ivas • personal finance
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