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Which is better a DRO or an IVA? There is a very simple answer!

Everyone has heard of bankruptcy, but Debt Relief Orders (DROs) and Individual Voluntary Arrangements (IVAs) are less well known.

Here is a comparison of IVAs and DROs, so you can see would be better for you.

DROs and IVAs were the two most common types of personal insolvency in England and Wales in 2023.

Some choices between debt solutions are genuinely hard. When I wrote about comparing IVAs with DMPs, I said they were like apples and pears…there are pros and cons for both.

But for DROs and IVAs, it’s more like chalk and cheese – and luckily the choice turns out to be easy!

An IVA or a DRO - they are very different, like chalk and cheese

Comparing DROs and IVAs

One of the problems about saying anything useful about IVAs is that, in theory, they can vary massively. If I put “it depends” on most lines in the IVA column in the table below, that wouldn’t be at all helpful.

But most IVAs follow a set pattern and that is what I am describing here. I have also tried to give an indication of how often something can be a problem.

DROs IVAs
max debt this is being increased to £50,000 in June 2024 no maximum
own house? no yes – may have to release equity in last year
own car the permitted value of a car is being increased to £4,000 in June 2024 usually not a problem
car on finance often a problem sometimes a problem eg when finance ends during IVA
other assets no more than £2,000 (second-hand value – normal household possessions are ignored) usually not a problem
spare income less than £75 a month according to DRO calculations more than £50 a month according to IVA calculations
can creditors still chase no no
interest frozen yes yes
fee no fee at all £3500+ paid from monthly payments
monthly payments none yes – may change at annual review
duration 1 year usually 5 or 6 years – may be extended.
8% last more than 7 years
failure rate very low – 1% very high – Covid payment breaks make recent numbers hard to assess, but it may be over 20% for IVAs started in the last few years
how public on insolvency register for 1 year on insolvency register until completes
credit record on for 6 years on for 6 years or longer until it completes
borrow money very difficult – must inform lender about DRO if borrow more than £500 very difficult – need permission from IVA firm to borrow more than £500
employment rarely affected rarely affected
can be company director no – being a sole trader is OK yes

Can you have a DRO?

You need to find out if you can have a DRO, not guess from the above table.  What is a DRO? looks at the rules in detail.

The hardest rule for you to assess is the “less than £75 a month spare income” test.

If an IVA firm says your IVA monthly payment would be £100, you may still be able to pass the “under £75 a month spare income” DRO test because the calculations are not the same.

As a rule of thumb, if:

  • you are renting AND
  • your debts are less than the DRO maximum limit of £50,000 AND
  • an IVA firm says you would pay less than £125 a month

you need to talk to a free sector debt adviser about whether you qualify for a DRO. IVA firms are not DRO experts and some are, frankly, trying to sell you an IVA because of the fees they get.

(And if you are renting and you can’t have a DRO you should consider bankruptcy, but that is a whole different article!)

If you can have a DRO it will be better than an IVA – simple!

The two key lines in the table are monthly payments and failure rate.

In a DRO you don’t pay any monthly payments. In an IVA you make payments for at least five years. Say an IVA firm says your payments would be £125 a month – that would be £7,500 over five years.

So obviously you will be much better off in a DRO.

Also a DRO is massively less likely to go wrong and fail. And it finishes after a year, whereas an IVA means stress and monthly payments and annual reviews for 5 years.

The main reason IVAs fail is when someone can no longer afford to make the payments. Five or six years is a long time, things change in your life and the economy – new baby, redundancy, Covid, cost of living crisis, etc. If you start with low IVA payments, say £150 a month, there is very little room to reduce your payments if your income falls or your expenses go up. Your IVA may well fail.

In summary, a DRO finishes quicker, you don’t have to make any payments and it very rarely fails.


iva failure

How many IVAs fail?

Car finance – problems in an IVA

Hercules clearing out the Augean stables

FCA tries to reduce IVA mis-selling

March 22, 2019 Author: Sara Williams Tagged With: DRO, IVA

Comments

  1. V says

    March 22, 2019 at 10:24 am

    Where can I go to arrange a DRO?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      March 22, 2019 at 10:50 am

      You can go to your local Citizens Advice or you can phone National Debtline on 0808 808 4000.

      If a DRO is not a good option for you, the debt adviser can look at what your other choices are.

      Reply
  2. Daniel Griffiths says

    March 22, 2019 at 7:01 pm

    Another great unbiased article

    Reply
  3. Hilary says

    March 25, 2019 at 11:47 am

    As usual your articles are very informative and helpful x

    Reply
  4. S says

    April 8, 2019 at 8:19 pm

    Hi

    I entered into an IVA in January this year with Payplan.
    I have debts around £23k ( one being HMRC).

    I advised Payplan at the time that I would be changing job in March with the same salary.
    My council tax has gone up by £23 a month ( £23 above the figure in my plan) and under new legislation I have to pay 5% of my salary to a pension.

    I now have a negative balance of minus £53 a month on my income / expenditure

    Payplan are now saying my IVA is not suitable but have offered no alternative solution or comments..

    What can I do ?

    Reply
  5. Jan Williams says

    September 12, 2019 at 10:03 am

    Great article. I am going to save it as a reference source. Thank you

    Reply
  6. Issy says

    January 30, 2021 at 7:44 pm

    I’m currently on an Iva finishing in 3 years, recently I’ve had refunds in 5 loans and the debts are clear , can I ask for these to now be removed from the Iva subsequently lower my debt ?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      January 30, 2021 at 9:12 pm

      How large were the refunds?

      Reply
  7. Kelly says

    February 4, 2021 at 5:47 pm

    Hi
    I took a loan out before covid as I was going to buy a van and have a holiday. Then all this shit happened, I lost my job and my ex stopped contributing to his kids. Will a DRO help me with the loan and credit card bills? Any advice appreciated x

    Reply
    • Weatherman says

      February 4, 2021 at 6:56 pm

      Hi Kelly

      It entirely depends on your circumstances. The basic criteria for a DRO are:

      – Under £50 disposable income a month
      – Assets (savings/investments/property) of under £1,000
      – Either no vehicle or a vehicle worth under £1,000
      – Relevant debts of under £20,000 (some debts can’t be included in a DRO, like court fines, or debts that are secured against property)

      If you meet all those criteria you might be able to get a DRO. But really before you decide exactly route you want to go down, you should speak to a debt adviser, who can look at your whole situation and go through your different options and their implications. Call National Debtline on 0808 808 4000

      Reply
      • Sara (Debt Camel) says

        February 4, 2021 at 8:01 pm

        I agree you need debt advice. Loans and credit card debts can go into a DRO – as can utility bills, payday loans, catalogues etc
        But you need an expert like the National Debtline advisers to look at your whole situation and explain your options and the pros and cons of each.

        Reply
  8. Andy Osborne says

    May 31, 2021 at 8:43 am

    Hi, I took out an IVA as advised in June 2019 with debts just over £14k. Thing is, I was never advised by the company about the option of a DRO so signed up and payed £75pcm for the first year which was due to become £50pcm for the following four years.
    Started work at Citizens Advice in October 2019 aware that this would affect my payment, on chatting to colleagues and showing them my plan, they were astonished to see that the DRO was never discussed, particularly since at the time, my monthly PIP award of £255 was used for income but nothing included for adult care costs in expenditure, leaving me with a monthly surplus of £55.
    When I have previously questioned this with the provider, they explained that the PIP was included as income so as to give me a surplus thus making me eligible for an IVA…. At last years review I made a lump sum payment to cover the increase in income due to my employment and my monthly payment was increased to £173pcm. When I questioned the use of PIP as income without any care costs in the expenditure, I received notice that I had overpaid, I had 2 free months and then payments were reduced back to £50pcm.
    I’ve continued with these payments and now my annual review is due. My colleagues at CAB are suggesting I complain about the way in which I was sold the IVA and insist that they would have referred me straight to the DRO unit as the obvious option.
    Any thoughts…???

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      May 31, 2021 at 11:26 am

      It is a shame your colleagues didn’t suggest you let the IVA fail in October 2019, then you could have had a DRO back then. Or that you did not query the IVA then.

      Who is the IVA firm? You can certainly complain about the IVA being mis-sold as it was not explained to you that a DRO was an option. But what redress should you be asking for? You could ask for the IVA to be closed on the basis of the funds paid to date… that would be unusual so early in an IVA but you can argue it is justified because of the IVA mis-selling. I haven’t seen a case like this won but these complaints are only just starting so it is possible it could be.

      Have you had debt advice saying that you would now qualify for a DRO? If you do, then you can simply let the IVA fail now and have a DRO. That would save all the future IVA payments. Also if you have acquired any more debts (utility bill arrears say?) they could go into the DRO. The only downside is (assuming you do qualify for a DRO obviously) is that the DRO marker would be on your credit record for another 6 years, whereas the IVA marker only has another 4 years to go.

      Reply
      • Andy says

        May 31, 2021 at 11:38 pm

        Thanks for the reply… so, I was volunteering at CAB when I took out the IVA with PayPlan. 4 months later a P/T job came up doing exactly what I was already doing so went for it. Still doing the same job now and income would be way over limit for DRO now.
        Thing is, would I have taken a P/T job if I’d been in a DRO rather than an IVA. Well no, is the answer, I’d have ridden that out for a year then maybe taken up work again at a later date. So as my colleagues say to me I’m now paying for something I really wouldn’t have been had I been given the correct advice…???

        Reply
        • Andy says

          May 31, 2021 at 11:40 pm

          Even my initial advice letter has absolutely no mention of a DRO

          Reply
  9. Sam says

    August 19, 2021 at 9:04 am

    Hi,

    I have been in an IVA for a year and I have £16,000 in debt. I am currently paying £350 p/m. From reading your article, I feel that a DRO is a better option. I fit the criteria (renting/ no car etc) however is it a simple process to leave an IVA and start a DRO? When the DRO is finished in a year’s time, would I be able to apply for mortgages?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      August 19, 2021 at 1:18 pm

      In a DRO you have to have less than £75 a month spare after paying all your essential bills.
      If you are managing to pay £350 a month to your IVA, that sound unlikely…
      Is the £350 a month a struggle? Do you have expenses your IVA firm is not taking into account?

      Reply
  10. Paul says

    October 11, 2022 at 1:14 pm

    Hi Im about 14k in debt and 16k with my overdraft. Do they include this as paying that off alone is a chore.
    Disposable income of under £70 I would say that’s about right but how do they prove this? I pay my ex partner for the upkeep of the kids but it’s not anything set in stone by Csa.
    I do have a mortgage with my ex partner still but I pay for the entire upkeep of it
    Can you get a dro with a mortgage?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      October 11, 2022 at 2:16 pm

      You cannot get a DRO when you own a property.

      What sort of debts do you have at the moment?
      The overdraft, are you in this for the whole month, even when you are paid?
      Do you have a mortgage fix at the moment – if so when does this end?

      Reply
  11. Sara L H says

    March 15, 2023 at 12:57 am

    Hi I’m on pip of 283 a month and have an IVA. I wasn’t offered a DRO. Should the pip have been included in my monthly income?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      March 15, 2023 at 8:44 am

      Sorry quite a few questions:
      How far into the IVA are you?
      What was the total amount of debt going into the IVA?
      Are you buying or renting?
      Do you own a car worth over £2000?
      What are your monthly IVA payments and are they affordable?

      Reply
  12. Lou says

    March 28, 2023 at 1:04 pm

    Hi, my husband is currently going through the process of getting an IVA but we have been told that we only have £40 spare income for the payment. The debt is £25,000.
    I rent the property and my husband isn’t on the tenancy as he moved in afterwards.
    We have a Van on lease hire and a car on finance, both of which are business vehicles. They are worth more than £1000 each.
    Would my husband still be eligible?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      March 28, 2023 at 2:45 pm

      This IVA is just for your husband? Or is it for your debts as well? Are you both self employed?

      the 25k – what sort of debts is this?

      Reply
      • Lou says

        March 28, 2023 at 3:01 pm

        It’s just for my husband. It’s fro his tax bill bank loan and credit card.
        Yes we are both self employed

        Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      March 28, 2023 at 3:25 pm

      So if this is just for his debts, your tenancy and any car finance in your name is not relevant.

      I think he should talk to Business Debtline https://www.businessdebtline.org/ on 0800 197 6026 about his situation and whether he would be eligible for a DRO. Cars on finance are complicated, especially for the self employed. This doesn’t mean I am saying he won’t be eligible, just that Business Debtline are the experts in this area.

      Reply
  13. Lilian says

    September 1, 2023 at 5:34 pm

    Has been 6 months that I am paying £100 monthly to IVA(creditfix) which I thought was a good deal at first because I was in debt with more than £6000 and I don’t have any assets just my and small bills but I still got 4 years and half to pay. I didn’t know about DRO and they didn’t mention it either.

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      September 1, 2023 at 6:13 pm

      Are these £100 payments easy to mange? Or is it getting harder with rising prices?

      Reply
      • Lilian says

        September 1, 2023 at 8:11 pm

        Well Sara, I try to administer my money but is not very good to be on the budget most of the time, but it is essential to keep on track obviously would be great to direct this money to something else.

        Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      September 2, 2023 at 10:03 pm

      If you think you will find it difficult to continue to make these payments for the rest of the IVA, then talk to National Debtline on 0808 808 4000 now about whether you would qualify for a DRO.

      Reply
  14. Maria says

    December 17, 2024 at 9:52 am

    How do it work

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      December 17, 2024 at 6:31 pm

      what are you asking about?

      Reply
  15. Carole says

    December 23, 2024 at 9:53 am

    I feel a DRO WOULD BE IDEAL

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      December 23, 2024 at 10:41 am

      Are you going to get one?

      Reply
  16. Molly says

    January 7, 2025 at 12:23 am

    I’m considering whether to go into an IVA (StepChange) to erase government overpayment debts. arrears and council tax totalling £30,000. They saIid I don’t qualify for a DRO because of my excess income of £200. I don’t feel it’s right but I’ve combed through finances but still feel I have nothing left at the end of the month. (Single mum with two children) I already have agreements in place with all creditors but the councils have become aggressive in enforcing these debts by way of DEAs. I’ve been paying off these debts for a few years by myself the IVA seems like another long contract when I just want it all to be over. Is a DRO better in my situation?

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      January 7, 2025 at 10:40 am

      They said I don’t qualify for a DRO because of my excess income of £200.

      who said this? IVA firms will make large fees by getting you to agree to an IVA…

      A DRO is always better than an IVA if you qualify,

      Are you in social housing?

      Reply
  17. Claire says

    May 6, 2025 at 6:48 pm

    Hi, I entered into an Iva last year after some bad advice from an Iva company. My circumstances have changed due to declining health so I am worse off now and my Iva is set to increase by £50 per month for 12 months and then by a further £200 per month after that. I believe I now and probably always did meet the less than £75 a month clause for a DRO However I am slightly worried because my partner has a mortgage on the house we live in all in his name. We have completely separate finances however I am concerned that if I stop paying my Iva to force them to terminate it they could make me bankrupt and make a claim for the house. Any advice is appreciated

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      May 6, 2025 at 7:46 pm

      Why are your IVA payments going up? Have you told the IVA company about your declining health?

      Reply
      • Claire says

        May 6, 2025 at 10:56 pm

        So I was told during the process of sorting the Iva I wouldn’t have to pay more that £150 per month, however on the day it completed I was told it would have to be over 6 years and that it would increase at regular intervals the last 20 months I will be paying

        Reply
        • Claire says

          May 7, 2025 at 7:30 am

          £350 . I have spoken to the company but all they said was if I couldn’t make the payments I would be In breach. After a bit of pushing they offered me a 3 month payment break but this will be added on to the end of the iva

          Reply
          • Sara (Debt Camel) says

            May 7, 2025 at 9:10 am

            Do you have a house with equity? A car that you own worth over £4,000?
            What is the total debt in the IVA?

  18. Claire says

    May 7, 2025 at 4:20 pm

    No, the mortgage is in my partners name only, I don’t own a car as I don’t drive and debts total £23000

    Reply
    • Sara (Debt Camel) says

      May 7, 2025 at 4:41 pm

      Ok I suggest you talk to your local Citizens Advice about a DRO, or phone national Debtline in 0808 808 4000

      Reply

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