Child Support Agency: information for parents with historical debt
Published 14 December 2018
Summary
This guidance is for receiving parents (the parent who has the main day-to-day care of the child) and explains how Child Support Agency (CSA) historical debt still owed to you and the government will be collected or written off.
A strategy on how the government will handle debt built up on CSA cases from the 1993 and 2003 schemes was proposed in the Child Maintenance: a new compliance and arrears strategy consultation, published in December 2017.
The consultation explained that the Child maintenance: client funds account 2015 to 2016 stated that 拢3.1 billion of CSA debt was deemed uncollectable. Some of the debt relates to children who are now adults and some cases involve parents who have moved and not informed CSA, making it difficult to contact them. The older the debt is, the more difficult it is to collect due to its age and often more complex circumstances.
Debt owed to the government and parents
We鈥檒l write off any non-paying debt that is owed to the government (to the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions). This is debt built up under a CSA policy that has now ended. This policy required the paying parent (the parent who doesn鈥檛 have the main day-to-day care of the child) to pay back the government for some of the benefits paid to support their children.
For some cases, before we write off any debt owed to you, we鈥檒l give you a last opportunity to help us collect the debt from the paying parent. If this doesn鈥檛 work, the debt will most likely be written off. For other cases, the debt will automatically be written off.
When we鈥檒l try and collect the debt
We鈥檒l write to you and the other parent about historical debt owed to you if it is:
- over 拢500 and the case is less than 10 years old
- over 拢1,000 and the case 10 years old or over
The following must also apply:
- the case is historical debt only and has no on-going liability
- no payment has been made in the past 3 months
- the debt has built up under the CSA (it may have now moved to the Child Maintenance Service (CMS) as part of a CSA case closure)
You鈥檒l be able to ask us to try and collect this debt.
How to ask us to collect the debt
You鈥檒l need to complete the form sent with the letter or write to us separately if you want us to try and collect the debt. This is called 鈥榤aking representation鈥�.
You should include any additional information that could help us successfully collect the debt owed to you, for example the paying parent鈥檚 employment details or information about their assets.
You must let us know within 60 days of receiving the letter if you want us to try and collect the debt. We will remind you by letter 21 days after the first letter if we haven鈥檛 heard from you in this time.
If we do not hear from you at all after 60 days, we鈥檒l write off the debt and inform the paying parent about this.
If you鈥檝e told us you want us to collect the debt
When we鈥檝e received your representation, we鈥檒l carry out some checks to help us decide if it鈥檚 likely we can successfully collect the debt.
Checks could include locating the paying parent and finding out about their financial status. If you have any information about the paying parent that could help us collect their debt, let us know.
If it鈥檚 unlikely we can collect the debt
If it鈥檚 unlikely that we鈥檒l be able to collect any of the debt, we鈥檒l write it off and send you and the other parent a letter.
If there is a chance we can collect the debt
If there is a chance we can collect the debt, we鈥檒l need to gather more evidence from the paying parent to help us make our decision.
At this point they鈥檒l also be able to 鈥榤ake representation鈥�. This means informing us about any reason why the debt shouldn鈥檛 be collected, and providing evidence to back this up.
After this, we鈥檒l send a letter to you and the other parent to say whether the debt will be collected or written off.
If the paying parent is under sequestration (Scottish bankruptcy), we cannot collect any debt that accrued up to and including the date the paying parent was sequestrated.
Collecting the debt
Once we are confident that we can successfully collect the debt, we鈥檒l verify the amount of debt owed. We鈥檒l then move the case from the CSA computer system to the CMS computer system.
There are several ways in which we can collect the debt. Some examples include:
- making deductions from the paying parent鈥檚 earnings
- sending regular or lump sum deduction orders to the paying parent
- in exceptional cases, sending court orders to the paying parent
When we鈥檒l automatically write off CSA debt
We鈥檒l send a letter to you and the other parent to explain that we鈥檒l automatically write the debt off if it is:
- 拢500 or less and the case is less than 10 years old
- 拢1,000 or less and the case is 10 years old or older
This debt cannot be collected by the CSA.
If the debt is less than 拢65 it will be automatically written off and we will not write to you.
More information
If you need more information about historical debt please contact the Child Support Agency or Child Maintenance Service.