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Preferential creditor meaning

What does Preferential creditor mean?
A preferential creditor is a creditor whose specified debts are paid ahead of most others in an insolvency process (administration, liquidation or bankruptcy; sequestration in Scotland). The status is created by statute: in England & Wales and Scotland under the Insolvency Act 1986 and rules; in Northern Ireland under the Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 1989; and in Ireland under the Companies Act 2014. Typical preferential debts include employees’ wages and holiday pay (subject to statutory caps) and certain occupational pension contributions. In the UK, since 1 December 2020 HM Revenue & Customs is a secondary preferential creditor for certain taxes collected from third parties (e.g. VAT, PAYE income tax, employee NICs and student loan deductions), but not for corporation tax. In Ireland, the Revenue Commissioners have preferential status for specified taxes (e.g. VAT and PAYE/PRSI). Preferential creditors rank after fixed charge holders and insolvency expenses, but before floating charge holders and any prescribed part distribution to unsecured creditors, and ahead of ordinary unsecured creditors. The concept is used routinely by insolvency practitioners when assessing creditor ranking and the priority waterfall on winding up. Treatment is broadly consistent across the UK and Ireland, subject to the different statutory sources and categories above.
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View the related Checklists about Preferential creditor

CHECKLISTS
HMRC support and objections in UK Part 26 schemes and Part 26A restructuring plans: practitioner checklist, required information, assessment criteria, and key case law

HMRC guidance on compromises using Part 26 schemes and Part 26A restructuring plans In corporate insolvencies, HMRC commonly ranks as a secondary preferential and/or unsecured creditor (see Practice Note: Waterfall of payments—a comparative guide), a status that often serves as the relevant comparator or alternative to a Part 26 scheme or a Part 26A restructuring plan. On 1 November 2023, HMRC issued guidance covering compromises under Part 26 schemes (see: Schemes of arrangement—overview) and Part 26A restructuring plans (see: Restructuring plan—overview) (see: HMRC publishes guidance on using debt management schemes to restructure finances—LNB News 15/11/2023 13). Practitioners should take account of this guidance whenever a proposed scheme/plan includes HMRC as a creditor. HMRC will only back a restructuring where it considers there is a realistic prospect of success. If HMRC does not consider success realistic, it will engage with the scheme/plan proponent to explore other means of repaying HMRC’s debt, which may involve a formal insolvency process. The debtor must have submitted all outstanding...

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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...

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NEWS
Re Kession Capital: Administration ended for lack of statutory purpose; compulsory winding up ordered; creditor opposition and IR 2016 voting errors decisive (England & Wales)

Hinton and another (as joint administrators of Kession Capital Ltd) v KVB Consultants Ltd (Company Number 08723839) and others [2026] EWHC 785 (Ch) What was the background? Kession Capital Ltd’s joint administrators (the company being in administration) sought directions from the High Court, before Deputy ICC Judge Curl KC, invoking IA 1986, Sch B1, paras 53, 55 and 63. The step followed creditors’ rejection of proposals put forward under IA 1986, Sch B1, para 49(1). They asked the court to ‘hold the ring’ by keeping the company in administration until a Supreme Court appeal on another issue was determined, with a further meeting of creditors thereafter. Twenty‑six unconnected judgment creditors opposed the application. When administration commenced, the company was insolvent and not trading. Its move into administration came after enforcement action by a substantial judgment creditor, Mr Venkiteswaran. The administrators’ proposals adopted the objective in IA 1986, Sch B1, para 3(1)(c)—realisation for distribution to secured or preferential creditors—relying upon a preferential claim of £800 owed to the director...

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NEWS
Re Avanti: England and Wales High Court eases fixed charge characterisation over income-generating fixed assets; Spectrum nuanced; LMA disposals upheld; reduced returns for HMRC and prescribed part

Re Avanti Communications Ltd (in administration) [2023] EWHC 940 (Ch) What are the practical implications of this case? Avanti is poised to carry three major consequences for restructuring lawyers, insolvency litigators, and finance lawyers. First, the ruling lowers the bar for taking fixed security, notably over fixed assets. It confirms that the Spectrum analysis is nuanced, and that absolute control is not a prerequisite for a fixed charge. The assets in Avanti were ‘fixed’ income‑producing capital assets rather than receivables or stock‑in‑trade, leaving charges over such property, in particular, less susceptible to recharacterisation. Second, although the facility documentation was intricate, it drew on Loan Market Association (LMA) templates. Those contracts included permissions for the debtor to dispose of assets where (among other conditions) proceeds were paid through a creditor ‘waterfall’, or where assets had become obsolete. Avanti confirms that these permissions, and other provisions that cede a measure of control back to the debtor, do not automatically reclassify a fixed charge as floating. Third, if it is easier...

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View the related Practice Notes about Preferential creditor

PRACTICE NOTES
CVA Modifications Before Creditors’ Approval: Permissible Changes, Consent Requirements, Process and HMRC Expectations (England and Wales)

Modifications to company voluntary arrangements (CVAs) There is limited statutory direction on how CVA modifications should be approached. Some direction appears in Statements of Insolvency Practice (SIP) 3.2. Alterations to a CVA proposal are acceptable, so long as they do not: reshape the CVA so extensively that it is no longer a CVA at all (for example, a change compelling the company to enter administration would be impermissible) restrict, vary, or diminish a secured creditor’s right to realise its security without that creditor’s express consent reorder distributions so that any preferential creditor loses priority over non-preferential creditors without that creditor’s express consent upset the rule that all preferential creditors share dividends pari passu without the disadvantaged creditor’s express consent Amendments affecting preferential creditors cannot be approved merely because a majority of preferential creditors agree; each affected preferential creditor must consent. Creditors or members may propose modifications before the proposal is considered...

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PRACTICE NOTES
A-Z glossary of UK corporate restructuring and insolvency: key terms, procedures, enforcement and cross-border issues

This glossary sets out numerous expressions frequently encountered in the restructuring arena. Words appearing in the definitions in bold are explained in other entries in this glossary. For further banking terminology, see the principal Banking & Finance Glossary. Restructuring glossary—A Acceleration: Acceleration means the agent, acting on directions from the majority lenders after an event of default, takes formal action, for example calling for early repayment of the facility. Ad-hoc committee: A temporary creditors’ group (often contrasted with a formal committee) that lacks any entitlement to official recognition. Administration: A process under the IA 1986 in which a financially distressed company is operated by an administrator as a going concern before longer-term outcomes, such as break-up and sale, are pursued. Administrator: An Insolvency Practitioner named by the court, a Qualifying floating charge holder, the directors or the company, to take control and fulfil one of the purposes in IA 1986, Sch B1. Administrative receivership: Arises when a company breaches the terms of...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Proprietary claims in corporate insolvency: constructive and Quistclose trusts, knowing receipt/dishonest assistance, unjust enrichment; remedies, defences, and interaction with pari passu, preferences and moratoria (England and Wales)

Proprietary claims Creditors frequently seek to secure proprietary claims, as these confer rights in rem (attaching to the asset itself) rather than personal rights (which bind only the individual). This distinction is especially significant when a company becomes insolvent: assets caught by a proprietary claim are excluded from the distressed company’s estate, allowing the claimant to recover in full, instead of proving as an unsecured creditor in the liquidation/administration and waiting for a dividend (which typically takes many months and is often under 50% — and occasionally almost nothing). In practice, proprietary claims jump ahead of secured and preferential creditors in the priority waterfall because the assets are ring-fenced for the benefit of the proprietary claimant. For payment waterfalls, see Practice Note: Waterfall of payments—a comparative guide...

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PRECEDENTS
Part 26A Companies Act 2006 restructuring plan (short-form template) under English law: claims, set-off, standstill, distributions, supervisors and expert determination

(made pursuant to Part 26A of the Companies Act 2006) Between [ insert name of company ] and its Creditors/Members (as defined in the Restructuring Plan) Dated [ insert date ] 1 Definitions and Interpretation Within the Restructuring Plan, save where the context dictates otherwise or it is expressly stated to the contrary, the following terms shall bear these meanings: Act — refers to the Companies Act 2006 of Great Britain; Admissible Interest — means interest stipulated by a contract, any applicable statute, or other applicable law or judgement; Admitted Claim — the remaining balance, if any, owed by the Company to a Creditor/Member under clause 12.1, after applying set-off in accordance with clause 13.1; Agreed Claim — the sum assessed as payable by the Company in respect of a Creditor’s/Member’s Claim under clause 10; Available Distributable Amount — the amount available for payment by the Company to its Creditors/Members under clause 15; Board — the Company’s board of...

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PRECEDENTS
Creditor Scheme of Arrangement Template (Part 26 Companies Act 2006, England and Wales): Claims Submission, Expert Determination, Set-Off, Security and Dividends

(pursuant to Part 26 of the Companies Act 2006 of Great Britain) Between [ insert name of company ] and its Scheme Creditors (as defined in the Scheme of Arrangement). Dated [ insert date ] 1 Definitions and Interpretation For the purposes of the Scheme, unless the context dictates otherwise or an express provision states differently, the following terms have these meanings: Act – refers to the Companies Act 2006 of Great Britain; Admissible Interest – denotes any interest provided for under a contract, any relevant statute, or any other applicable law or judgment; Admitted Claim – signifies the balance, if any, remaining due from the Company to a Scheme Creditor under clause 10.1 after applying set-off pursuant to clause 11.1; Agreed Claim – the amount determined as owed by the Company in respect of a Scheme Creditor’s Claim in accordance with clause 8; Available Distributable Amount – the sum available for payment by the Company to its Scheme Creditors...

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View the related UK Parliament Acts about Preferential creditor

UK PARLIAMENT ACTS
386 Categories of preferential debts

386  Categories of preferential debts(1)     A reference in this Act to the preferential debts of a company or an individual is to the debts listed in Schedule 6 to this Act [(contributions to occupational pension schemes; remuneration, &c of employees; levies on coal and steel production[; debts owed to the Financial Services Compensation Scheme][; deposits covered by Financial Services Compensation Scheme][; other deposits][; certain HMRC debts])]; and references to preferential