Skip to main content

Addies profile

Letter from Addies? Read this before you pay or call back

Addies is a UK debt-collection business chasing balances on behalf of original creditors or as the debt purchaser. Here's the calm, step-by-step way to handle an Addies letter, including how an IVA legally stops them and writes off what you owe.

Written by Alex Carter - IVA.tv editorial writerReviewed by IVA.tv Editorial Review Team - UK debt guidance reviewLast reviewed 28 April 2026

  • Regulated by the FCA
  • UK debt-collection business
  • Cannot enter your home or take goods
  • An approved IVA stops Addies contact
£5,000+ Unsecured debt for IVA eligibility
12 working days Addies's CCA request response window
6 years Statute-barred limit (England & Wales)
5–6 years Typical IVA term, then debt written off

A letter or text from Addies is usually about a consumer-credit balance the original lender has either sold on or referred for collection. This guide covers what Addies can and cannot legally do under the FCA’s CONC rules, the two checks worth running before paying anything, and the realistic options if you cannot pay in full — including how an IVA can legally stop them.

Who Addies are
#

Addies is a UK debt-collection business regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority for consumer-credit collection activity. Like every UK collector they must follow the FCA’s Consumer Credit Sourcebook (CONC), the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and — for any post-default interest or fees — the terms of the original credit agreement. Most UK collectors of consumer-credit debt are also members of the Credit Services Association, the trade body for the industry.

The first practical question is whether Addies now owns the debt or is chasing it for the original creditor:

  • Debt purchaser — they bought the account from the original lender at a discount. Settlement decisions sit with them, including the ability to write off the unpaid balance.
  • Contingent collector — the original creditor still owns the debt and Addies chase on a fee. Settlement discussions sometimes need to be ratified by the original creditor.

Ask Addies in writing which arrangement applies. The answer changes who you negotiate with and what’s on the table.

What Addies can and cannot legally do
#

Addies are debt collectors, not bailiffs. They can:

  • Write to you and call numbers held by the original creditor
  • Apply for a County Court Judgment (CCJ) if the debt is enforceable and they have authority
  • After a CCJ, apply for an attachment of earnings, charging order, or High Court enforcement
  • Sell the debt on if they own it

They cannot force entry to your home, take goods, threaten arrest (the matter is civil, not criminal), continue contacting you after a written request that they stop, or add fees that are not in the original credit agreement.

If an Addies field agent ever turns up at your door, you have no obligation to speak to them, let them in, or sign anything. Politely ask them to leave and follow up in writing.

If Addies isn't your only debt, settling them in full while ignoring the others usually makes things worse. An IVA combines every unsecured debt into one affordable monthly payment from £70 — interest stops, contact stops, and the unpaid balance is written off at the end.

Check if an IVA fits your situation

Two checks worth running before you pay anything
#

  1. Section 77/78 CCA request — written request for the original signed credit agreement, current statement of account, and notice of assignment. Enclose the £1 statutory fee. Addies has 12 working days plus 30 calendar days to comply. While they cannot, the debt is legally unenforceable in court.
  2. Statute-barred check — six years in England and Wales (five in Scotland) since the last payment or written acknowledgement, with no court action in that window, means the debt cannot be enforced through the courts.

Do not make a “goodwill” payment to test the waters. Even £1 can reset the limitation clock.

How Addies tend to operate
#

Like most UK debt collectors, Addies’s playbook runs:

  • Open with a written demand for the full balance, often inviting a settlement at a discount
  • Follow up with phone calls and SMS reminders to numbers held by the original creditor
  • Recommend court action where the credit agreement is well-documented and the limitation period has not run out
  • Hand the file back to the creditor or pass to another collector if the account does not settle

Settlement offers can usually be negotiated downwards by counter-offering in writing. Get every agreement on paper before paying anything.

What happens if you ignore Addies
#

Ignoring the letters does not make the debt go away. Typical escalation:

  1. Increasingly firm letters and calls
  2. A possible field-agent visit (no enforcement powers at the door)
  3. The file passes back to the original creditor or on to another collector
  4. The owner of the debt may issue a county-court claim through the Northampton bulk centre
  5. Default judgment is entered if you do not respond — sits on your credit file for six years

If a claim form arrives, respond before the deadline printed on it — even a holding acknowledgement of service buys you time and prevents a default.

Routes out
#

  • Pay in full with a discount in writing where possible.
  • Affordable repayment plan based on the Standard Financial Statement, confirmed in writing.
  • IVA to combine the Addies debt with every other unsecured debt over a 5–6 year term, with the unpaid balance written off at completion. Eligibility starts at around £5,000 of total unsecured debt.
  • Debt Management Plan for situations where total debt is small enough to clear within a reasonable period.
  • Debt Relief Order for total debt under £50,000 with very low spare income.
  • Bankruptcy where no realistic monthly contribution is possible.

An IVA is often the cleanest answer to an Addies debt when there's more than one creditor in the picture. Use the free 2-minute check to see whether your situation qualifies.

Start the free IVA check

Pitfalls when dealing with Addies
#

  • Don’t ignore CCJ paperwork. A claim form sent to your address starts a court timer; failing to acknowledge service by day 14 results in a default CCJ.
  • Don’t make a token “goodwill” payment before checking dates — it can reset the statute-barred clock.
  • Don’t ring numbers from a text message without verifying the line through Addies’s official channels — phishing using collector branding is common.
  • Don’t agree to a payment plan you can’t afford in the hope of stopping the calls. Pressure tends to increase if you default.
  • Don’t share bank details by phone unless you have independently verified the line.

Frequently asked questions
#

Are Addies bailiffs? No. Addies are debt collectors. They can write, call and sometimes visit, but they cannot force entry or take goods.

Does Addies own the debt? Either may apply. Ask in writing for the name of the legal owner of the account.

Will an IVA include Addies debt? Yes. The debt is unsecured and goes into an IVA on the same basis as any other unsecured debt.

The debt isn’t mine — what should I do? Tell Addies in writing that you do not acknowledge the debt and request proof of assignment plus the original credit agreement under sections 77/78 of the CCA. Until they do, the debt is unenforceable. Identity-theft cases should also be reported to Action Fraud.

Related guides#

Sources

Sources checked for this guide

Stop Addies, properly

See if an IVA writes off your Addies debt

Free, confidential 2-minute check. We compare your debts, income and outgoings against IVA Protocol rules — no credit-file impact, no obligation.

Start the free check