During the individual voluntary arrangement
Once the IVA is set up, it will be regularly reviewed. Guidance relating to the treatment of income and expenditure during the IVA can be found in the protocol, but you should always check your client’s arrangement for specific terms relating to this.
The IVA provider (acting as supervisor of the IVA) (see here) carries out a review of the client’s income and expenditure every 12 months and the client is expected to increase their contributions to the IVA by 50 per cent of any net surplus. Overtime, bonus and commission payments in excess of 10 per cent of the client’s normal take-home pay must be disclosed and 50 per cent of the excess paid into the IVA. If the client is made redundant during the IVA, they must pay any amount in excess of six months’ take-home pay into the IVA. In addition, the client must report any increases in income or additional sources of income to the supervisor. A review of the client’s income and expenditure should then be carried out and an ‘appropriate’ payment set up. In recognition of the impact of the cost of living crisis, the Insolvency Service issued guidance to insolvency practitioners on 26 June 2022 which offers further flexibility for reduced payments. You can view the Insolvency Service’s Dear IP letter, issue 147 at .
The guidance suggests that if, following a review of income and expenditure a variation of the client’s payments appears to be appropriate, reductions should generally be accepted by creditors of up to 50 per cent of the payment or £75 a month (whichever is higher) without the need for a formal variation. At the same time, an extension of the IVA of up to 12 months should also be considered, provided this will not extend the IVA to more than seven years. If the reduction in payments cannot be made up through such an extension, but the supervisor considers that the IVA is nevertheless sustainable, a formal variation should be proposed.
The guidance suggests that, were the contributions to fall below £50 a month, the sustainability of the arrangement would be in doubt and the supervisor should consider whether a settlement of the IVA based on the funds paid in to date should be formally proposed – eg, where the client would be eligible for a DRO if the arrangement failed. This means that no further payments would be due into the IVA. If this is not appropriate, the supervisor should consider referring the client for debt advice on an alternative solution. The supervisor can also reduce the dividend payable by up to 15 per cent without referring back to creditors to reflect changes in the client’s income and expenditure.
The client may be allowed ’payment holidays’ or to make reduced payments into the IVA for periods of up to nine months in total if, because of a change in circumstances such as an emergency item of expenditure or other unforeseen reduction in income, they are unable to make their full contributions or pay anything at all. The IVA is extended by no more than 12 months to recover the shortfall.
The supervisor can extend the IVA for up to six months without the agreement of creditors if the client has failed to disclose income.
The client must not obtain any credit of more than £500 without the prior approval of the supervisor other than as provided for in their income and expenditure. This does not apply to any remortgage of, or release of equity in, the client’s home under the terms of the IVA.
Many IVAs provide that, if the client defaults, the arrangement automatically comes to an end and/or the supervisor may make the client bankrupt. The standard terms state that, if the client’s contributions fall more than three months in arrears (unless this has been agreed) or they have failed to comply with any of their other obligations under the IVA, they will be in breach of the arrangement. The supervisor should give the client up to one month to remedy or explain any default. If the client fails to do this, the supervisor must either issue a certificate of termination bringing the arrangement to an end or refer the matter to the creditors within 28 days to:
•vary the terms of the IVA; or
•bring the arrangement to an end by issuing a certificate of termination; or
•make the client bankrupt.
Terminated IVAs should be removed from credit reference reports. Check to make sure that has been done. If it has not been, a query can be raised with the credit reference agency concerned, to get the report updated.