A letter from CreditSure usually relates to a balance the original creditor still owns. CreditSure is a contingent UK collector — they chase debts on behalf of banks, telecoms, utilities and consumer-credit lenders for a fee. The original lender keeps ownership of the debt while CreditSure pursues it.
This guide covers who CreditSure are, what they can legally do under the FCA’s CONC rules, the two checks worth running before paying anything, and how an IVA can legally stop them.
Who CreditSure are#
CreditSure is a UK debt-collection business regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority for consumer-credit collection. 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 original credit agreement.
The first practical question is whether CreditSure owns the debt or is chasing it on behalf of the original creditor. The answer changes who you negotiate with:
- Debt purchaser — they bought the account at a discount; settlement decisions sit with them.
- Contingent collector — the original creditor still owns the debt; settlement may need to be ratified by the lender.
Ask CreditSure in writing which they are. Under CONC they must tell you who actually owns the debt.
What CreditSure can and cannot legally do#
CreditSure 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 applies for a County Court Judgment (CCJ)
- After a CCJ, support attachment of earnings, charging orders or High Court enforcement
- Pass the file back to the original creditor or sell it on if recovery fails
They cannot force entry, take goods, threaten arrest (the matter is civil, not criminal), continue contacting you after a written stop request, or add fees outside the original credit agreement.
If a CreditSure representative turns up at your door, they are field agents — not bailiffs — and you have no legal obligation to speak to them, let them in, or sign anything.
If CreditSure is one of several debt problems, 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 situationStep 1 — confirm the debt is yours and is enforceable#
Send a CCA request under sections 77/78 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974. This is your statutory right to a copy of the original signed credit agreement. Send it in writing, enclose the £1 statutory fee, and keep proof of postage.
CreditSure have 12 working days plus a further 30 calendar days to respond. While they are unable to comply, the debt is legally unenforceable through the courts. Many old or bulk-purchased debts cannot be backed by the original signed agreement, in which case a CCA request often ends the matter.
Step 2 — check whether the debt is statute-barred#
Most consumer debts in England and Wales become statute-barred under the Limitation Act 1980 once six years have passed since the last payment or written acknowledgement, and no court action has started. Statute-barred debt cannot be enforced through the courts.
In Scotland the period is five years under the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973, and once a debt is “prescribed” it ceases to exist legally.
If the dates fit, write to CreditSure asking them to confirm the debt is statute-barred. Do not pay anything, even a small “goodwill” amount, before checking — a single payment resets the limitation clock.
What happens if you ignore CreditSure#
The escalation pattern follows the standard contingent-collector playbook:
- More letters and calls, often from withheld numbers
- Possible field-agent visit (no enforcement powers at the door)
- The file passes back to the original creditor or to a debt purchaser like Lowell
- The debt owner may issue a county-court claim through the Northampton bulk centre
- Default judgment is entered if you don’t respond — and 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.
Routes out#
- Pay in full with a settlement discount where possible.
- Affordable repayment plan based on the Standard Financial Statement, confirmed in writing.
- Debt Management Plan — informal monthly payment distributed across all unsecured debts.
- IVA if you owe £5,000 or more in total unsecured debt — the IVA legally stops CreditSure and writes off the unpaid balance at the end of the 5–6 year term.
- Debt Relief Order for total debt under £50,000 with very low spare income.
- Bankruptcy where no realistic monthly contribution is possible.
Always confirm any agreement reached with CreditSure in writing, and never give bank details over the phone unless you are confident the call is legitimate.
An IVA is often the cleanest answer when CreditSure is one of several creditors chasing you. Use the free 2-minute check to see whether your situation qualifies.
Start the free IVA checkCommon pitfalls when dealing with CreditSure#
- Don’t ignore CCJ paperwork. Failing to file an acknowledgement of 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 share bank details by phone unless you have independently verified the line.
- Don’t agree to a payment plan you can’t afford in the hope of stopping the calls.
- Don’t ignore the original creditor. Settling CreditSure without confirmation that the underlying debt is closed can leave a residual balance.
Frequently asked questions#
Are CreditSure bailiffs? No. CreditSure are debt collectors. They can write, call and (sometimes) visit, but cannot force entry or take goods.
Can CreditSure take me to court? The original creditor can, on CreditSure’s recommendation. Most uncontested cases result in default judgments because people don’t respond to the claim form.
Will an IVA include my CreditSure debt? Yes — the debt is unsecured and goes into an IVA on the same basis as any other unsecured debt. Once the IVA is approved, contact must stop.
The debt isn’t mine — what should I do? Write to CreditSure saying you do not acknowledge the debt and requesting proof of assignment plus the original agreement under sections 77/78 of the CCA. Identity-theft cases should also be reported to Action Fraud.
Related guides#
- Lowell Financial — major debt purchaser
- Advantis Credit — contingent collector
- Do debt collectors give up?
- How long can I be chased for a debt?
- How do I apply for an IVA?
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