Agreements made on or after 1 February 2011
Following the implementation of the European Commission’s Consumer Credit Directive 2008, there are additional pre-contract requirements for all regulated agreements,1CC(DI) Regs except those: •secured on land;
•for credit of more than £60,260;
•for business lending.
Pre-contract information
With effect from 1 June 2021, the words ‘Standard European Consumer Credit Information’, which appeared below the main heading, must be omitted from the form referred to below. No alternative replacement wording is required.
If the agreement was made on or after 1 February 2011, more onerous pre-contract information requirements than those described above apply instead. The pre-contract information must be provided before the agreement is made. It is the creditor’s responsibility to ensure that this has been done. The information must be disclosed using a form known as the pre-contract credit information form, which must be in writing and in a format that the client can take away to consider.
The creditor must also inform the client:
•that it will tell her/him if a decision not to proceed is based on credit reference agency information;
•of her/his right to request a copy of the draft agreement;
•of the period of time for which the pre-contract information remains valid (where applicable).
Separate rules apply to:
•certain telephone contracts;
•non-telephone distance contracts;
•excluded pawnbroking agreements (see here); •overdraft agreements.
If the creditor does not disclose the required information or it does not use the proper form and format, the agreement is improperly executed and is enforceable only with the permission of the court.
These provisions are very complex and prescriptive. For guidance on the regulations, see .
Explanation and advice
If the agreement was made on or after 1 February 2011, the creditor must provide the client with an explanation and advice.2s55A CCA 1974. These provisions were repealed on 1 April 2014 and are now in the FCA Handbook, CONC. For the position before this date, see the 12th edition of this Handbook. This applies to all regulated agreements except: •those secured on land;
•pawnbroking agreements (but see here); •overdrafts;
•those for credit of more than £60,260.
The client must be provided with an ’adequate explanation’ of:3From 2 November 2015, see FCA Handbook, CONC 4.2. For the position before this date, see the 12th edition of this Handbook. •any features that may make the agreement unsuitable for particular types of use;
•how much the client will have to pay, periodically and in total;
•any features that could have a significant adverse effect in ways the client is unlikely to foresee;
•the main consequences if the client fails to make the payments due under the agreement;
•the effects of withdrawing from the agreement, and when and how to exercise this right.
The explanation can be verbal, in writing or both, and should enable the client to make a reasonable assessment of whether s/he can afford the credit and the key associated risks.
In addition, if the client is taking out a payday loan, the creditor or credit broker must explain that the agreement is unsuitable to support sustained borrowing over a long period and is expensive as a means of longer-term borrowing. The creditor or credit broker must enable the client to request and obtain further information and explanation about the agreement without incurring undue cost or delay.
The creditor or credit broker can require the client to acknowledge that it has provided an explanation and that s/he has received any written information. It cannot require the client to acknowledge the adequacy of this.
For further information, particularly in relation to specific categories of agreement and where agreements are marketed at a distance or by electronic means, see the Consumer Credit Sourcebook.4FCA Handbook, CONC 4.2 There are no sanctions for non-compliance with these requirements, but the client could argue that there is an unfair relationship (see here) or complain to the Financial Ombudsman Service (see here).
Assessment of creditworthiness
If the agreement was made on or after 1 February 2011, the creditor must assess the client’s creditworthiness. This includes the risk that the client will not make the payments due under the agreement by their due date (the credit risk), and the risk to the client of not being able to make the repayments under the agreement or of there being a significant negative effect on her/his overall financial position (the affordability risk).5FCA Handbook, CONC 5.2 and 5.3 were replaced by CONC 5.2A with effect from 1 November 2018 This applies to all regulated agreements except: The creditor must carry out an assessment before:
•making a regulated agreement;
•significantly increasing the amount of credit under the agreement; or
•significantly increasing the credit limit under the agreement.
The creditor must assess the client’s creditworthiness based on sufficient information of which it is aware at the time the assessment is carried out, on information obtained from the client, where appropriate, or, if necessary, from a credit reference agency. The creditor must consider the client’s ability to make the repayments as they fall due over the life of the agreement. Repayments may be made out of the client’s income, including income received either jointly with, or by, another person (eg, a member of the client’s household), where it would be reasonable to expect such income to be available for repayments under the agreement,without the client having to borrow to make the repayments or fail to make any other payment s/he has a legal obligation to make, and without the repayments having any significant adverse effect on the client’s financial situation. When considering affordability, the creditor must not take into account the existence of, or the intention to provide, or request the provision of, any guarantee or other form of security.
The creditor must take reasonable steps to determine the amount, or make a reasonable assessment, of the client’s current income, including any potential reduction in the client’s income during the term of the agreement which is reasonably foreseeable. The creditor may only take into account any potential increase in the client’s income where there is appropriate evidence that this increase is likely to happen during the term of the agreement. The creditor must also take reasonable steps to determine the amount, or make a reasonable assessment, of the client’s current ‘non-discretionary expenditure’. This includes payments needed to meet priority debts and other essential expenses, together with payments the client has a legal obligation to make – eg, loan repayments or council tax. It may, therefore, be appropriate for the creditor to compare the size of the client’s existing debts to her/his income as part of the assessment process. The creditor should also take into account any information it possesses which may indicate that the client is in, has recently experienced, or is likely to experience, financial difficulties or is particularly vulnerable – eg, has mental health or mental capacity issues. Where appropriate, the creditor may also take into account information obtained in the course of previous dealings with the client, but should consider whether that information remains valid, having regard to the passage of time, or whether it should be updated.
In relation to high-cost short-term loans, the High Court has ruled that a lender’s failure to take repeat borrowing into consideration when making lending decisions is a breach of CONC 5.2A (creditworthiness assessment), in particular its obligation to consider both the client’s ability to make the repayments under the agreement as they fall due and the potential for the client’s commitments under the agreement to have a significant adverse effect on the client’s financial situation.6Kerrigan v Elevate Credit International (t/a Sunny) [2020] EWHC 2169 (Comm) In the case of guarantor loans, as well as assessing the borrower’s creditworthiness, the creditor must consider the potential for the commitments under the agreement to have a significant effect on the guarantor’s financial situation.
For further information, see the Consumer Credit Sourcebook.7FCA Handbook, CONC 5.2A There are no sanctions for non-compliance with these requirements, but the client could argue that there is an unfair relationship (see here) or complain to the Financial Ombudsman Service (see here).8For a discussion on the Financial Ombudsman Service approach to complaints about unaffordable lending, see S McFadden, ‘Unaffordable Lending: the FOS approach’, Adviser 157
A copy of the draft agreement
If the agreement was made on or after 1 February 2011, the creditor must provide the client with a copy of the prospective agreement ’without delay’ if the client requests this.9s55C CCA 1974 This applies to all regulated agreements except: •those secured on land;
•pawnbroking agreements;
•those for credit of more than £60,260;
•those for business lending.
The creditor does not have to comply with the request if it has decided not to proceed with the transaction. Otherwise, if the creditor does not comply, it breaches its statutory duty. The breach does not create any additional rights or remedy for the client.
Once the agreement becomes an executed agreement (signed by both parties), the creditor must provide a copy of this to the client ’without delay’,10s61A CCA 1974 except if the client has been given a copy of the draft agreement and the executed agreement is identical. If this is the case, the creditor must inform the client that: In the case of authorised overdraft agreements, instead of a copy of the executed agreement, the client must be given a document containing the terms of the agreement.11s61B CCA 1974 With certain exceptions, this must be done before or at the time the agreement is made. If the creditor does not comply, the agreement is improperly executed and enforceable only with the permission of the court.