A letter from Cavernham Debt Collection typically relates to a debt the original creditor still owns. Cavernham is a small UK contingent collector — they chase balances on a fee for their clients rather than buying the accounts outright. The economic owner of the debt is normally the underlying creditor, and that affects how settlement and disputes are handled.
This guide covers who Cavernham are, what they can legally do under FCA and CCA rules, the two checks worth running first, and the realistic options — including how an IVA can legally stop them.
Who Cavernham are#
Cavernham Debt Collection is a UK debt-collection business operating on a contingent basis for a range of creditors — typically banks, finance providers, telecoms operators, utilities and other commercial clients. They are regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority for consumer-credit collection activity and must comply with the FCA’s Consumer Credit Sourcebook (CONC), the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and, where membership applies, the Credit Services Association Code of Practice.
Because Cavernham is contingent rather than a debt purchaser, the original creditor still owns the debt in most cases. That means:
- The underlying account remains with the original creditor
- Settlement discussions sometimes need to be ratified by the original creditor
- If Cavernham fails to recover, the file may be returned to the original creditor or sold on to a debt purchaser like Lowell, Cabot or PRA
What Cavernham can and cannot legally do#
Cavernham are debt collectors, not bailiffs. They can:
- Write to you and call you on numbers held by the original creditor
- Recommend that the original creditor takes county-court action
- After a CCJ, support attachment of earnings, charging orders or High Court enforcement on the creditor’s behalf
They cannot force entry, take goods without a court order, threaten arrest (the matter is civil, not criminal), continue contact after a written request to stop, or invent fees that were not in the original credit agreement.
If Cavernham is one of several debts, an IVA combines every unsecured debt — including the underlying creditor's balance — 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 situationTwo checks worth running first#
- Section 77/78 CCA request — written request for the original signed credit agreement and statement of account. Enclose the £1 statutory fee. Until those documents are produced the debt is unenforceable in court.
- Statute-barred check — six years in England and Wales (five in Scotland) since the last payment or written acknowledgement, with no CCJ in that window, means the debt is statute-barred and cannot be enforced through the courts.
Don’t make a token payment to test the waters — even £1 can reset the limitation clock.
How Cavernham operate#
Cavernham, as a smaller contingent agency, work in cycles for their creditor clients — a portfolio is placed for a defined period, they pursue, and what isn’t recovered is returned or onsold. In practice that means:
- The first letter or call sets out the underlying creditor and balance
- Pressure tends to build through letters, calls and SMS
- Settlement offers (including discounts) usually need sign-off from the underlying creditor
- If recovery fails, the account is returned or sold on to a larger debt purchaser
Their leverage is mostly tone and persistence, not legal force — but if the underlying creditor instructs court action, the matter can move quickly to a CCJ.
What happens if you ignore Cavernham#
Ignoring Cavernham does not make the debt go away. The typical escalation:
- More letters and calls
- A field-agent visit may be scheduled (no enforcement powers at the door)
- The file passes back to the original creditor or to a debt purchaser
- The new owner may issue a county-court claim through the Northampton bulk centre
- Default judgment is entered if you don’t respond within 14 days
If a claim form arrives, respond before the deadline. Acknowledgement of service buys you 28 days.
Routes out#
- Pay the original creditor directly if you can identify them — often the simplest route for telecoms and utilities.
- Affordable repayment plan through Cavernham, based on the Standard Financial Statement, with confirmation in writing.
- IVA to combine Cavernham-handled debt with every other unsecured debt over a 5–6 year term — eligibility starts at around £5,000 of unsecured debt.
- Debt Management Plan for situations where total debt is small enough to clear in a reasonable period.
- Debt Relief Order for total debt under £50,000 with very low spare income.
- Bankruptcy for severe situations with no realistic monthly contribution.
An IVA is often the cleanest answer to a Cavernham 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 checkCommon pitfalls#
- Don’t ignore the underlying creditor. Settling with Cavernham without confirmation that the debt is closed at the original creditor’s end can leave a residual balance.
- Don’t agree to a payment plan you can’t sustain — pressure increases on default.
- Don’t share bank details by phone unless you have independently verified the line.
- Don’t pay before checking limitation dates. Statute-barred debts cannot be enforced.
- Don’t ignore CCJ paperwork — defaults are common and stick on your credit file for six years.
Frequently asked questions#
Are Cavernham bailiffs? No. They are debt collectors. Only court-instructed enforcement officers can attempt to take goods, and only after a CCJ.
Who owns the debt? Usually the original creditor — Cavernham chase on a contingent basis. Confirm in writing if it is unclear.
Will an IVA include my Cavernham debt? Yes — Cavernham-handled debt is unsecured consumer credit and goes into an IVA on the same basis as any other unsecured debt.
How do I make Cavernham stop calling? Send a written request that future contact is by post only. Under CONC, Cavernham must comply.
Related guides#
- Lowell Financial — major debt purchaser
- Cabot Financial — major debt purchaser
- Do debt collectors give up?
- How long can I be chased for a debt?
- How do I apply for an IVA?
Sources