[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to enforce a financial consent order uk

How to Enforce a Financial Consent Order UK (2026): D50K, D11, Attachment of Earnings, Third Party Debt Orders

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Last updated: 12 June 2026

Understanding how to enforce a financial consent order UK is one of the most pressing questions for anyone whose former spouse or civil partner has stopped paying what the court ordered. A sealed financial consent order carries the same weight as any other court order, non-compliance is not a grey area, and the family court has a range of coercive tools at its disposal. This guide walks through every enforcement route available in England and Wales as of mid-2026, including the exact HMCTS forms you need, how to calculate arrears, which method suits your circumstances, and what to expect once your application reaches a judge.

The Law Commission’s ongoing project on the enforcement of family financial orders underscores the policy momentum behind making these remedies more accessible.

Quick Summary, What to Do Right Now

If your former partner has missed payments or refused to transfer property under a financial consent order, you have clear legal options. A consent order approved and sealed by the family court is a binding court order; breaching it exposes the defaulting party to enforcement proceedings and, in serious cases, committal for contempt. A financial order after decree absolute (or after a final order under the no-fault divorce procedure) remains fully enforceable, the divorce itself does not extinguish the order.

Before you file anything, take three immediate steps:

  1. Send a formal written demand. Write to your former partner (or their solicitor) setting out the exact sums owed, the relevant paragraph of the consent order, and a deadline of 14 days. This letter may resolve the matter without court involvement and demonstrates to a judge that you acted proportionately.
  2. Collect your evidence. Gather the sealed consent order, proof of missed payments (bank statements, standing-order records), and copies of all correspondence.
  3. Choose your enforcement route. Decide whether you need a method that recovers a lump sum quickly (third party debt order, charging order, warrant of control) or one that collects regular payments over time (attachment of earnings order). The comparison table later in this guide will help you decide.

The core compliance decision is straightforward: if you are owed a single capital sum, methods that freeze or seize assets tend to be fastest; if arrears have built up on periodical payments (maintenance), an attachment of earnings family order or a judgment summons may be more effective.

Is Your Consent Order Enforceable?, First Checks

Not every financial agreement reached during divorce carries automatic enforcement power. To enforce a financial consent order, you must first confirm that the document you hold is a sealed consent order, meaning it was submitted to the family court, approved by a district judge, and bears the court seal. An unsigned draft, a solicitor’s letter recording heads of agreement, or a mediation memorandum of understanding is not, by itself, enforceable. According to GOV.UK guidance, the order only becomes binding once the court approves and seals it.

Check the order’s wording carefully. Identify the exact paragraphs that have been breached, the due dates for each payment or transfer, and whether any provision has been varied or stayed by a subsequent court order. If the respondent applied to vary the order and a variation was granted, the original terms may no longer apply.

Send a Formal Letter Before Filing

Courts expect applicants to have attempted to resolve the matter before issuing enforcement proceedings. A well-drafted pre-action letter should include the order’s case number, the specific paragraphs breached, a calculation of arrears, and a deadline (typically 14 days) for compliance. If the letter is ignored, it becomes a supporting exhibit in your court application and signals to the judge that enforcement is necessary.

What Evidence to Collect

Prepare the following documents before you complete any form:

  • Sealed consent order. The full order with the court seal visible, not a draft or unsigned copy.
  • Bank statements. Showing missed or short payments, covering the full period of default.
  • Correspondence. All letters, emails and text messages between you and the respondent (or solicitors) about the missed payments.
  • Chronology. A simple table of dates showing what was due, what was paid, and the running balance outstanding.
  • Pre-action letter and any response. Evidence that you attempted to resolve the matter informally.

Pre-Enforcement Checklist and Arrears Calculations

Before completing your enforcement of financial remedy order form, calculate the total sum outstanding. Courts require precise arithmetic, vague estimates will delay your application. Use a simple arrears schedule like the one below.

Date payment due Amount due (£) Amount paid (£) Running balance owed (£)
1 January 2026 1,200 0 1,200
1 February 2026 1,200 600 1,800
1 March 2026 1,200 0 3,000
1 April 2026 1,200 0 4,200
1 May 2026 1,200 0 5,400

Attach this schedule to your application as an exhibit. Ensure each line item matches your bank-statement evidence. If the respondent made partial payments, credit those amounts accurately, any discrepancy will undermine your credibility with the court.

Your full pre-filing checklist should include:

  • Sealed consent order (photocopied, with court seal legible)
  • Completed arrears schedule (as above)
  • Supporting bank statements for the full default period
  • Pre-action letter and proof of service (recorded delivery receipt or email read-receipt)
  • Any response from the respondent or their solicitor
  • Draft statement in support (witness statement setting out the background, the breach, and the remedy sought)

How to Enforce a Financial Consent Order, Forms and Filing

Two HMCTS forms dominate enforcement applications in family proceedings: Form D11 and Form D50K. Which one you use depends on whether you know the specific enforcement method you want or prefer the court to decide.

Step-by-Step: Completing Form D11

Form D11 is the general application notice used within existing family proceedings. It is the correct form when you are asking the court for a specific order, for example, an attachment of earnings order or a third party debt order. You can access the form from the HMCTS forms listing.

When completing Form D11 for enforcement of a consent order, follow this checklist:

  1. Case details. Enter the original case number exactly as it appears on the sealed consent order.
  2. Parties. List yourself as the applicant and your former partner as the respondent.
  3. Order sought. State the specific enforcement method in plain English, for example: “I apply for an attachment of earnings order against the Respondent to recover arrears of periodical payments totalling £5,400 and to secure future payments of £1,200 per month.”
  4. Statement in support. Attach a witness statement exhibiting the sealed order, the arrears schedule, bank statements, and the pre-action correspondence.
  5. Fee. Enclose the correct court fee, check the current HMCTS fees schedule, as fees are updated periodically.

Common mistakes include using the wrong case number, failing to attach the sealed order, and requesting a remedy that does not match the type of obligation breached (for example, seeking an attachment of earnings order for a lump-sum payment, this generally requires a different route).

Step-by-Step: Completing Form D50K

A D50K enforcement application is the correct form when you want the court itself to decide the most appropriate enforcement method. This is useful when you are unsure which method will be most effective, or when you want the court to consider multiple options at the same hearing.

The D50K form asks you to set out the amount owed, the terms of the order that have been breached, and any information you have about the respondent’s financial circumstances (employer, bank details, property ownership). The more detail you provide, the better equipped the judge will be to select the right enforcement tool.

Key practical tips for the D50K:

  • Financial information box. If you know the respondent’s employer, include the employer’s name and address, this allows the court to consider an immediate attachment of earnings order.
  • Property details. If the respondent owns property, provide the address and (if possible) the title number, this supports a charging-order application.
  • Bank accounts. If you know the respondent’s bank and branch, include this, it enables a third party debt order.

File the completed D50K at the family court that made the original consent order. Industry observers expect the D50K to become the more common starting point for enforcement applications, as it gives judges flexibility to tailor the remedy to the debtor’s actual circumstances.

Enforcement Methods for a Financial Consent Order, Compare and Pick

Knowing how to enforce a court order UK requires understanding the strengths and limitations of each available method. The following sections explain the five principal enforcement routes in detail.

Attachment of Earnings Order (AEO)

An attachment of earnings order directs the respondent’s employer to deduct a specified amount from wages and pay it directly to the applicant. It is most effective for recovering arrears of periodical payments (spousal or child maintenance under a consent order) and for securing ongoing compliance.

The process works as follows:

  1. File Form D11 (or D50K) requesting an attachment of earnings order.
  2. The court serves notice on the respondent, who must disclose their earnings and outgoings.
  3. At the hearing, the district judge sets two figures: the normal deduction rate (the regular monthly amount to be deducted) and the protected earnings rate (the minimum the debtor must be left with to cover basic living costs).
  4. The employer receives the order and begins making deductions directly from salary.

Typical timescale: from filing to the first deduction, expect around six to ten weeks, faster if the respondent does not contest the application. The main limitation is that this route does not work if the debtor is self-employed, unemployed, or paid through a company structure that disguises true income. In such cases, a different enforcement method is required.

Third Party Debt Order

A third party debt order (formerly known as a garnishee order) freezes funds held in the respondent’s bank account and, if the court makes the order final, transfers those funds to the applicant. It is a powerful tool for recovering lump sums.

The procedure has two stages:

  1. Interim order. Apply without notice (ex parte) by filing Form D11 with evidence of the debt and the respondent’s bank details. The court can make an interim third party debt order that immediately freezes the relevant account. This can happen within days of filing.
  2. Final order. A hearing is listed (typically four to eight weeks later) at which the respondent and the bank can make representations. If the court is satisfied, it converts the interim order into a final order and the frozen funds are paid to the applicant.

Risks include the possibility that the respondent has already moved funds, that the account holds less than the amount owed, or that the bank asserts a right of set-off. Despite these risks, a third party debt order can be one of the fastest ways to recover money where account details are known.

Charging Order and Order for Sale

A charging order secures the debt against a property owned by the respondent, effectively converting an unsecured debt into one backed by real estate. It is most commonly used for unpaid lump sums.

The process involves two steps:

  1. Interim charging order. The court places an initial charge on the property, usually on a without-notice basis.
  2. Final charging order. At a subsequent hearing (typically four to eight weeks later), the court decides whether to make the charge permanent.

Once a final charging order is in place, you can apply for an order for sale, compelling the property to be sold so that the debt is paid from the proceeds. This is a slower route, the sale process can take many months, and the court must consider factors such as whether the property is the family home and whether children reside there. Nevertheless, for large debts, a charging order provides robust long-term security and is often the only realistic route to recovery where the debtor has assets tied up in property.

Warrant of Control

A warrant of control authorises county court bailiffs to attend the respondent’s address, identify goods of sufficient value, and seize them to satisfy the debt. Certain items are protected from seizure, including tools of the debtor’s trade (up to a prescribed value), essential household items, and goods on hire purchase.

This method is quick to initiate, the court can issue the warrant within days, but its practical effectiveness depends on whether the debtor has seizable goods of meaningful value. It is most useful for moderate debts and as a pressure mechanism to prompt voluntary payment.

Committal for Contempt and Hadkinson Orders

Committal is the most serious enforcement weapon and is reserved for cases where the respondent has deliberately and knowingly refused to comply with the order. The applicant must prove beyond reasonable doubt that the respondent knew of the order, understood its terms, and wilfully disobeyed them. If found in contempt, the respondent can be fined or imprisoned for up to two years.

A Hadkinson order takes a different approach: it bars the respondent from making their own applications to the court (for example, to vary the consent order or to apply in children proceedings) until they comply with the outstanding financial order. This can be a powerful incentive where the respondent is actively engaged in other litigation.

Both routes require specialist legal advice and are not typically a first step. Courts view committal as a remedy of last resort.

Enforcement Method Comparison Table

Enforcement method When to use Time to results & main pros/cons
Attachment of earnings order Debtor in paid employment; you need ongoing payments or arrears recovery 6–10 weeks to first deduction; Pros: regular, automatic deductions; Cons: ineffective for self-employed or unemployed debtors
Third party debt order Known bank account holding funds due to debtor Days for interim freeze, 4–8 weeks for final order; Pros: fast access to funds; Cons: debtor may move money, account may hold less than owed
Charging order (and sale) Security against property for unpaid lump sums Months for charge, potentially years for forced sale; Pros: secures large sums; Cons: time-consuming, costly, sale not guaranteed
Warrant of control Judgment debt where goods can be seized Days to issue warrant, weeks to execute; Pros: direct enforcement; Cons: bailiff fees, protected goods, practical limits on value recovered
Committal (contempt) Deliberate disobedience of a clear order (serious cases only) Weeks to months for hearing; Pros: strongest sanction available; Cons: high evidential threshold, rare, discretionary

Applying to Court, Process, Fees, Bundles and Hearing Expectations

File your enforcement application at the family court that made the original consent order. If the order was made at a Financial Remedy Centre, file there. Include the completed form (D11 or D50K), your witness statement, all supporting exhibits, and a draft order setting out the relief you are seeking.

Typical Fees and Costs Recovery

HMCTS court fees for enforcement applications vary depending on the method chosen and are updated periodically, check the latest fee schedule on GOV.UK before filing. In many cases, the court has the power to order the respondent to pay your reasonable costs of the enforcement application, particularly where the breach was clear and the respondent had no reasonable excuse for non-payment.

What to Expect at the Hearing

After filing, the court will list the matter for a hearing, the timeline varies by court but typically ranges from four to twelve weeks. At the hearing, a district judge will review the evidence, hear from both parties (or their representatives), and decide which enforcement method to order. Be prepared to answer questions about the respondent’s current financial position, employment status, and any known assets. Bring an updated arrears schedule calculated to the date of the hearing. If the respondent does not attend, the court can proceed in their absence, provided proper service of the application has been effected.

Special Situations, Debtor Abroad, Insolvency and Company Debts

Where the respondent has moved overseas, enforcement becomes more complex. You may need to apply for recognition of the English order in the jurisdiction where the debtor’s assets are located, relying on reciprocal enforcement treaties or the relevant Brussels/Lugano framework (where applicable). Specialist cross-border advice is essential.

If the respondent is bankrupt or enters an Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA), certain enforcement routes may be stayed or restricted. However, not all obligations are dischargeable in bankruptcy, periodical payment obligations, for instance, generally survive. Where the debtor owes money through a corporate entity, enforcement may require piercing the corporate veil or pursuing the debt through the civil courts using standard creditor remedies. Early legal guidance is critical in all of these scenarios.

Conclusion, How to Enforce a Financial Consent Order UK: Your Next Steps

The family court provides robust remedies for anyone who needs to enforce a financial consent order in the UK. Whether you choose an attachment of earnings order for ongoing maintenance, a third party debt order to freeze bank funds, a charging order to secure a lump sum against property, or ultimately committal proceedings, the tools exist to compel compliance. To act decisively, send a formal demand letter immediately, prepare your arrears schedule and supporting evidence, complete the appropriate HMCTS form (D11 for a specific method or D50K if you want the court to decide), and file your application at the court that made the original order.

A family enforcement specialist can advise on the method most likely to succeed based on the debtor’s particular circumstances.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact David Wilkinson at Slater Heelis Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK, Apply for a consent order
  2. HMCTS / GOV.UK, Form D50K
  3. Courts.uk, Form D11
  4. Law Commission, Enforcement of family financial orders
  5. Kingsley Napley, How to enforce a court order (family)
  6. Becket Chambers, What to do when your ex refuses to comply
  7. Family Law Week, Practical guide to enforcing financial remedy orders
  8. MediateUK, What happens if a consent order is breached
  9. Watson Morris Family Law, Guide to enforcing financial agreements

Madrid vs national filing China 2026
By Global Law Experts

posted 29 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to Enforce a Financial Consent Order UK (2026): D50K, D11, Attachment of Earnings, Third Party Debt Orders

Send welcome message

Custom Message