How to Respond to a County Court Judgment
What to do if you receive a County Court Judgment (CCJ) — including how to pay, dispute, or apply to set it aside.
개요
A County Court Judgment (CCJ) is issued when a defendant fails to respond to a County Court claim, or admits it, or the court finds in the claimant's favour. Receiving a CCJ is serious — it damages your credit rating for 6 years and can be enforced by bailiffs, attachment of earnings, or a charging order against your property. Acting promptly within 30 days of the judgment can protect your credit record.
이 절차를 사용할 수 있는 사람
- You are likely eligible to use this guide if your situation involves respond to a county court judgment.
- You have a genuine legal basis for the matter (contract, tort, statutory right, etc.).
- You have made reasonable attempts to resolve the matter directly with the other party first.
단계별 절차
Understand What Has Happened
Check the judgment documents carefully. The CCJ will state: the amount owed, whether to pay immediately or by instalments, the date of the judgment, and a case number. If you were not aware of the original claim (e.g. the claim was sent to an old address), you may be able to apply to set the judgment aside. If the claim was properly served and you simply did not respond, your options are more limited.
- The CCJ is registered on the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines — accessible at trustonline.org.uk
- If paid in full within 30 days of the judgment date, you can apply to have it marked 'satisfied' and removed from the register
- If paid more than 30 days after judgment, it is marked 'satisfied' but remains on the register for 6 years
Pay in Full (within 30 days)
If you accept the debt and can pay in full within 30 days of the judgment date, do so and obtain proof of payment. Send a request (form N443) to the court to have the judgment marked as 'satisfied' and removed from the public register. This protects your credit file. If you cannot pay in full immediately, ask the court to vary the payment terms (form N244 — application to vary instalments).
- Pay by bank transfer and keep the receipt — you will need proof for the court
- The court fee to apply to cancel a CCJ (N443) is currently £15
- If paying by instalments, never miss a payment — default can lead to enforcement action
Apply to Set Aside (if you have a Defence)
If you have a genuine defence to the original claim that you did not get a chance to run — for example, the claim was sent to a wrong address, or you were not given adequate notice — you can apply to set aside (cancel) the judgment and defend the claim. Use form N244 (application notice). Under CPR r.13.3, the court will set aside a judgment if you have a real prospect of successfully defending the claim, or there is some other good reason.
- You must act promptly — delay is a factor the court considers
- The application fee for N244 is £275 (for a hearing)
- Prepare a draft Defence explaining why you dispute the debt
- If the judgment was given in default (claimant asked for it because you did not respond), the court has more discretion to set it aside
Challenge the Amount or Seek Instalment Variation
If you accept you owe money but the amount is wrong or you cannot afford the payment terms, use form N244 to apply to vary the instalments to an amount you can afford. The court will consider your income and expenditure. Alternatively, if you dispute part of the amount, you can apply to set aside the judgment in part.
- Complete a budget (income and expenditure statement) to show what you can afford
- Courts generally prefer creditors to be paid something rather than nothing
- You can also apply for a 'time order' under the Consumer Credit Act 1974 for regulated credit agreements
Deal with Enforcement Action
If you do not pay or vary the judgment, the claimant can apply for enforcement: a warrant of control (bailiffs attend your property), an attachment of earnings order (deducted from your wages), a third-party debt order (freezing your bank account), or a charging order (secured against your property). Each enforcement method requires a separate court application by the creditor.
- Contact the creditor immediately if you are struggling to pay — negotiating voluntary payment often avoids enforcement action
- Bailiffs instructed by the County Court are enforcement agents under the Taking Control of Goods Regulations 2013 — they have specific powers and must follow strict rules
- A charging order does not automatically force a sale of your home — a separate order for sale application is needed
- You may be able to apply to suspend a warrant of control if you make a new payment proposal
비용
중요 경고
A CCJ that is not paid within 30 days will remain on your credit file for 6 years — this can affect your ability to obtain a mortgage, credit card, or mobile phone contract.
Ignoring a CCJ will lead to enforcement action. Do not ignore court documents — act on them immediately.
Applying to set aside a judgment is not a way to avoid a genuine debt — you must have a real defence or exceptional circumstances.