Powered by Lexis+®
Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
CASE STUDY

“It's hard to quantify, right now. But at a guess, I'd say it's probably more than 50% faster, at times. It's literally that quick. We've found to be an essential practical tool. We're very satisfied.”

Walsall Council

Access all documents on Fixed charge

Fixed charge meaning

What does Fixed charge mean?
A fixed charge is a security interest over specific, identifiable assets. The chargor cannot sell or otherwise deal with those assets (or their proceeds) without the charge holder’s consent, and the security attaches on creation. In England and Wales and Northern Ireland, case law (notably Spectrum Plus) distinguishes fixed from floating charges by looking at control and the chargor’s freedom to deal; free dealing usually means a floating charge. In Ireland, similar principles apply, supported by case law and the Companies Act 2014. Fixed charges are commonly taken over land, plant and machinery, shares, intellectual property and receivables (often via a blocked account). They rank ahead of floating charges and unsecured creditors in insolvency. Registration is required to bind an insolvency office‑holder and creditors (E&W/NI: Companies Act 2006 s.859A, 21 days; Ireland: Companies Act 2014, 21 days). Enforcement may involve possession and sale, appointment of a receiver (including an LPA receiver over land in England and Wales), or contractual powers. In Scotland, “fixed charge” is descriptive: equivalent fixed security is created by specific instruments (standard security over heritable property, pledge, assignation in security, and the statutory pledge under the Moveable Transactions (Scotland) Act 2023).
Speed up all aspects of your legal work with tools that help you to work faster and smarter. Win cases, close deals and grow your business–all whilst saving time and reducing risk.

View the related Checklists about Fixed charge

CHECKLISTS
Taking and perfecting floating charges in England and Wales: a comprehensive checklist on suitability, authority, due diligence, documentation, crystallisation, priority, and Companies House registration

This checklist sets out the factors to consider when a company is proposing to grant a floating charge. This checklist proceeds on the basis that an English or Welsh company will grant a floating charge to a lender situated in England or Wales. The company granting the floating charge is the ‘chargor’. The entity receiving the floating charge is the ‘chargee’. The document recording the floating charge is the ‘security document’. For detailed guidance on the nature of floating charges and how they differ from fixed charges, see Practice Note: Fixed and floating charges. For the advantages and disadvantages of taking a floating charge, see Practice Note: Floating charges—advantages and disadvantages. For in-depth considerations when taking a floating charge, see Practice Note: Floating charges. A floating charge may form part of the security package created by a debenture—see Practice Note: Key features of debentures. Debentures typically also include other security interests, such as mortgages, assignments and fixed charges. A floating...

Read More Right Arrow
CHECKLISTS
Buying or leasing property from an administrator: appointment verification, joint authority, title and liability exclusions, floating and fixed charge issues, HM Land Registry requirements (England and Wales)

Administrator appointed by the court Where the court appoints an administrator under paragraph 11 of Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986 (IA 1986), following an application by the company, its directors and/or one or more creditors, the title deeds should include certified copies of: the administration order; and any further order(s) under IA 1986, Sch B1, paras 91–95 appointing a new administrator after the death, resignation or removal from office of the original or any later administrator Administrator appointed by holder(s) of qualifying charge, the company or its directors Where the administrator is appointed by the holder(s) of a qualifying floating charge (IA 1986, Sch B1, para 14) or by the company or its directors (IA 1986, Sch B1, para 22), the title deeds should include certified copies of: the notice of appointment: in a form complying with IA 1986, Sch B1, para 14 and the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules...

Read More Right Arrow
CHECKLISTS
Taking security over IP in the UK: lender checklist on mortgages and charges, ownership, validity, valuation, associated rights, and registration at Companies House and IP registries

Consider the nature of the IP right From a lender’s standpoint, use this checklist to pinpoint key points when taking IP as security and the steps to implement it... Identify the IP right and applicable law; patents, trade marks, registered designs and copyright can be mortgaged or charged... Select security: a legal mortgage (assignment plus redemption and exclusive licence‑back) offers stronger control than a fixed charge; for charges, restrict disposals and hold an executed undated assignment in escrow (verify foreign recognition)... Confirm ownership, term, existing security, licences and third‑party interests; demand warranties and title evidence, especially for unregistered rights... Assess validity and maintenance: search prior rights, check renewals and genuine use, monitor infringement, review litigation; obtain professional opinions where needed... Value the right and routes on default (licensing or sale); add complementary assets if required... Cover associated rights and materials: unregistered marks/goodwill (only with the business), unregistered designs, database right, know‑how/confidential information, domain names, and software/source code with escrow... Register...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related News about Fixed charge

NEWS
Upper Tribunal confirms FTT jurisdiction: landlord’s surveyor’s ‘final and binding’ service charge apportionment void under LTA 1985 s27A (England and Wales)

Original news Windemere Marina Village v Wild [2014] UKUT 0163 (LC) The landlord of a marina development – a mixed scheme on the banks of Windermere – appealed an LVT determination that replaced the apportionment of service costs payable by tenants of 26 dwellings with the tribunal’s own division, displacing the split previously set by the landlord’s appointed surveyor. Permission to appeal was granted because the question raised a point of principle with potentially wide reach. Under the lease of a dwelling at the marina, the tenant is required to contribute a fair share of service expenses, that share to be fixed by the Lessor’s surveyor for the time being, whose decision is stated to be final and binding. The central issue was whether statute renders void an agreement making the landlord’s surveyor’s assessment of the service charge apportionment conclusive and binding. What is the law in this area? The Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, s 27A(6) (LTA 1985) renders void any agreement by a tenant of...

Read More Right Arrow
NEWS
Avanti: High Court clarifies control threshold for fixed charges under English law; rejects total-prohibition requirement, upholds fixed security over satellite assets; HMRC priority and completion-structure implications

Re Avanti Communications Ltd [2023] EWHC 940 (Ch) This marks the first substantial judgment on the divide between fixed and floating charges since the House of Lords’ landmark ruling in Re Spectrum Plus [2005] UKHL 41, which reclassified an apparent fixed charge over book debts as floating because the chargor could freely deploy the charged assets and the security holder therefore lacked the requisite control to constitute a fixed charge. The designation of security as ‘fixed’ or ‘floating’ under English law now carries even greater weight given HMRC (the UK tax authority) ranks as a preferential creditor for certain taxes in insolvency—ie those taxes sit behind fixed charge realisations but ahead of floating charge realisations. That characterisation had a decisive effect on the order of payments in Avanti’s administration: as the charge was properly treated as fixed, the secured creditors recovered in full; had it instead been treated as floating, part of the proceeds would have been payable to HMRC (as preferential creditor) and to unsecured creditors up to...

Read More Right Arrow
NEWS
Pagden v Ridgley: High Court confirms IR 2016 r 18.34 cannot be used to challenge administrator’s fees from fixed charge realisations

Pagden (as Security Trustee under a Security and Intercreditor Deed dated 24 December 2015) and others v Ridgley [2025] EWHC 2674 (Ch) What was the background? Orthios Eco Parks (Anglesey) Ltd and Orthios Power (Anglesey) Ltd (together, the Companies) sat within the Orthios Group. The group obtained capital from Cresta Energy Ltd (Cresta), which put £66m into bonds issued via MPB Eco Parks Ltd (MPB), and from between 300 and 400 retail investors who subscribed £36.4m of bonds. Those bonds were backed by fixed and floating charges over land granted by the Companies, with all such security vested in Mr Colin, as security trustee, under a Security Trust Deed. On 25 March 2022, after an event of default, Mr Colin used his qualifying floating charge to appoint Mr Ridgley as administrator of the Companies. He did so without consulting Cresta beforehand. In late April 2022, Mr Colin executed a letter authorising Mr Ridgley’s sale of the land subject to the fixed charges and agreeing the following: remuneration to Mr...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Practice Notes about Fixed charge

PRACTICE NOTES
United Kingdom Pensions Advice Allowance: scope, scheme applicability, authorised payment conditions, tax and VAT, enforcement, and interaction with adviser charging

What is the Pensions Advice Allowance? Following consultation in 2016/17, the government brought in, from 6 April 2017, the Pensions Advice Allowance. It enables eligible pension scheme members to withdraw a fixed sum from their pension pot tax-free to cover holistic retirement advice. At the member’s instruction, the scheme may therefore reduce the value of the member’s pot by the advice fee and pay the funds straight to the member’s adviser. This measure stemmed from the Financial Advice Market Review, which highlighted an advice gap affecting people who require retirement planning support but cannot meet the cost from net-of-tax income or savings. It is available in addition to other existing advice allowances and payment routes for advice. These include adviser charging, which does not permit pension monies to be used to fund holistic retirement advice. For further details, see Other types of pensions advice measures below. The government’s aim is to help those preparing for retirement to use the Pensions Advice Allowance to fund holistic...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
Share disposals: UK tax grouping consequences, reliefs, degrouping charges and anti-avoidance across corporation tax, capital gains, loan relationships, derivatives, intangibles, stamp taxes/STC, SDLT/LBTT/LTT and VAT

FORTHCOMING CHANGE relating to the modernisation of stamp taxes on shares framework: In 2027, stamp duty and SDRT are set to give way to a unified, self-assessed levy on securities—the securities transfer charge (STC)—to be paid and reported through a new digital portal. In broad terms, the STC’s design will align with the proposals for that tax set out in the 2023 consultation. Finance Bill 2026 (FB 2026) creates a power, commencing on Royal Assent, for secondary legislation that will enable taxpayers to pilot the digital service by self-assessing their stamp taxes on securities obligations and submitting transactions electronically via the service. This will allow reporting and payment to be handled online as part of the modernisation of stamp taxes on shares. For detailed coverage of the modernisation of stamp taxes on securities, see: News Analyses: Budget 2025—Tax analysis—Stamp and transfer taxes Tax update spring 2025—Stamp taxes on shares modernisation Tax update spring 2025—Tax analysis—Stamp and transfer taxes TAMD 2023—Stamp taxes on...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
Administrators, Charged Property and the Moratorium: Fixed versus Floating Charges, Quasi-security and IA 1986 Sch B1 paras 71–72 (England and Wales)

The outcome of an administration will frequently hinge on the worth of the company’s assets and the administrator’s capacity to handle those assets freely so as to secure the best possible result for creditors as a whole. The administrator is granted extensive powers to deal with property, including assets encumbered by various forms of security and quasi-security (for example, hire purchase or retention of title arrangements). A key advantage of administration is the protection created by the moratorium against enforcement by creditors, which permits the administrator to proceed without the constraints the company may have experienced before administration. The administrator may intend to sell or otherwise deploy charged property in order to meet one of the purposes of the administration, while, by contrast, a creditor may wish to enforce its security and recover what it is entitled to from a company it regards as at risk. These competing requirements need to be held in balance between administrator and creditor...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Precedents about Fixed charge

PRECEDENTS
SRA-compliant Fixed-Fee Price and Service Information Notice Template for Law Firms (England and Wales)

1 Legal costs 1.1 The legal costs of [ insert brief description of services, eg obtaining a grant of probate and distributing an estate ] consist of [ two OR three ] principal elements: our fees; outlays we pay on your behalf (often referred to as disbursements) [ ; OR . ] [ costs you may need to pay to another party. ] 1.2 Our charges We apply a fixed-fee structure [ of £[ insert price excluding VAT ] OR ranging between £[ insert price excluding VAT ] and £[ insert price excluding VAT ] depending on [ insert description of the factors that will dictate where in the fixed price range your fees will fall, eg the value and complexity of your matter ] ] . [ If a matter or transaction does not reach completion, we reserve the right to charge for the work undertaken, using our standard charging rate of £[ insert rate...

Read More Right Arrow
PRECEDENTS
Precedent: bank account charge over blocked accounts (chargor-specific monies) for syndicated facilities (England and Wales)

This Deed is made on [ insert day and month ] 20[ insert year ] Parties [ Insert name of Chargor ], being a company incorporated in England and Wales, with registered number [ insert company number ], and whose registered office is at [ insert address ] (the “ Chargor ”); and 1 [ Insert name of Security Agent ], acting as security agent and trustee for the Finance Parties pursuant to the terms and conditions set out in the [ Facilities Agreement OR Intercreditor Agreement OR Security Trust Deed ] (the “ Security Agent ”). Recitals: (A) The Finance Parties have consented to provide loan facilities subject to the terms and conditions set out in the Facilities Agreement (as defined below). (B) As a condition precedent to the loan facilities becoming available, the Chargor must execute this Deed for the purpose of granting security in favour of the Security Agent in relation to the Secured Obligations (as defined below)...

Read More Right Arrow
PRECEDENTS
Fixed charge over blocked bank account deed (lender as account bank) — single-company chargor, specific monies, bilateral — governed by England and Wales law

This Deed is executed on [ insert day and month ] 20[ insert year ] Parties [ insert name of Chargor ], a company incorporated in England and Wales with registered number [ insert company number ], with its registered office at [ insert address ] (the Chargor); and [ insert name of Lender ] of [ insert address ] (the Lender). Recitals: The Lender has agreed to provide a loan facility to the Chargor on the terms and conditions contained in the Facility Agreement (as defined below). As a condition precedent to the availability of that facility, the Chargor must enter into this Deed to create security in favour of the Lender for the Secured Obligations (as defined below)...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Q&As about Fixed charge

Q&As
Commercial lease surrender: s.17 notice re guarantor no assignment?

Section 17 of the Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995 (LT(C)A 1995) provides that: (1) This provision applies where a person (“the former tenant”) has, as a consequence of an assignment, ceased to be the tenant under a tenancy, but either: namely that (a) in the context of a new tenancy, has, under an authorised guarantee agreement, guaranteed his assignee’s performance of a tenant covenant of that tenancy under which any fixed charge is payable; or (b) in relation to any tenancy, still remains obliged by that covenant under that tenancy, notwithstanding assignment...

Read More Right Arrow