When money is tight, knowing which debts to pay first is critical. Paying the wrong debt can lead to serious consequences — including losing your home. The distinction between secured and unsecured debt is the foundation of any debt management strategy.
What Is Secured Debt?
A secured debt is tied to a specific asset — usually your home (mortgage) or car (car finance). If you don't pay, the creditor has the legal right to repossess and sell the asset to recover what they're owed. This makes secured debt a priority — the consequences of not paying are severe and tangible.
- •Mortgage: secured against your home — non-payment leads to repossession
- •Second charge mortgage/secured loan: also secured on property
- •Car finance (HP): vehicle is security — default leads to repossession
- •Some business loans may be secured on property
- •Secured creditors have stronger enforcement rights than unsecured
Can a secured lender take my home if I miss one payment?+
Not immediately. There are legal processes that must be followed, including a notice period and a court order for possession. However, arrears accumulate quickly and the legal process can lead to repossession within months if unaddressed. Contact your lender immediately if struggling.
What Is Unsecured Debt?
Unsecured debt is not tied to any specific asset. Credit cards, personal loans, student loans, medical debts, and catalogue debts are all unsecured. If you don't pay, the creditor can pursue you through the courts for a County Court Judgment (CCJ) and eventually, in serious cases, bailiff action — but they cannot directly repossess your home.
- •Credit cards: unsecured — non-payment leads to default, CCJ, but not repossession
- •Personal loans: unsecured
- •Overdraft: unsecured (though bank may set it off against savings)
- •BNPL debts: unsecured
- •Student loans: unsecured and treated differently (see our student loan guide)
Debt Prioritisation: Which to Pay First
When money is limited, pay priority debts first. Priority debts are those with the most serious consequences: mortgage/rent (loss of home), council tax (prison in extreme cases), gas and electricity (disconnection), court fines (further enforcement). Credit cards and personal loans are lower priority — they can cause credit damage but not immediate loss of home or freedom.
- •PRIORITY 1: Mortgage or rent (loss of home/eviction)
- •PRIORITY 2: Council tax (bailiff action, ultimately prison)
- •PRIORITY 3: Gas and electricity (disconnection)
- •PRIORITY 4: Income Tax / VAT if self-employed (HMRC enforcement)
- •LOWER PRIORITY: Credit cards, personal loans, catalogue debts
- •Minimum payments on lower priority to avoid CCJs while focusing on priority debts
Getting Help With Multiple Debts
If you have both secured and unsecured debts and are struggling to pay, free debt advice is essential. StepChange can prepare a personal budget and recommend the best solution. A Debt Management Plan (DMP) is a common solution for managing multiple unsecured debts at reduced or frozen interest, while protecting secured creditors.
- •StepChange DMP: reduces unsecured payments to affordable level
- •Debt Management Plan does not protect secured debts
- •Always maintain mortgage/rent payments even in a DMP
- •Free debt advice: StepChange 0800 138 1111, Citizens Advice 0800 144 8848
- •Never ignore CCJ claims — respond to court paperwork within 14 days
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