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 Redemption

Redemption meaning

What does Redemption mean?
In legal practice, redemption is the payoff of a loan or debt security in accordance with the agreed terms so that the borrower’s (or issuer’s) obligations are extinguished and any security is released. It may occur at maturity or earlier (early redemption/prepayment), and typically requires payment of principal, accrued interest and any agreed break costs, make‑whole amount or redemption premium, with any required notices given under the finance documents. Across England & Wales and Northern Ireland, redemption of a mortgage or charge results in a release/discharge and updating of the title register. The mortgagor’s equitable right to redeem (the equity of redemption) cannot be unfairly fettered. In Scotland, redemption involves discharge of a standard security under the Conveyancing and Feudal Reform (Scotland) Act 1970; there is no separate equitable doctrine, but a statutory right to redeem applies. In Ireland, mortgage redemption and discharge of a charge follow the Land and Conveyancing Law Reform Act 2009 framework and the borrower’s equity of redemption. The term is a descriptive expression used across lending, security and capital markets. Bonds and notes are redeemed on a redemption date (often at par or premium). “Redemption” is also used for redeemable shares and fund units under the applicable...
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 Redemption

CHECKLISTS
Corporate Mortgages: Practitioners' Checklist on Capacity, Due Diligence, Documentation, Priority and Registration (England and Wales)

Scope of this Checklist This Checklist sets out the points to consider when a company is proposing to grant a mortgage. It proceeds on the basis that an English or Welsh company will be granting a mortgage to a lender situated in England or Wales. In this Checklist: the company granting the mortgage is the 'mortgagor' the party to whom the mortgage is granted is the 'mortgagee' the document recording the mortgage is the 'security document' Preliminary questions before taking security by way of a mortgage Is a mortgage the right method of taking security? A mortgage transfers title to the asset, while preserving the mortgagor's equity of redemption so that, once sums due have been paid in full, title can be transferred back to the mortgagor (note that some mortgages, such as over land, are statutory, meaning there is no transfer of title). The use and possession of the asset will remain with...

Read More Right Arrow
CHECKLISTS
English law debt securities terms and conditions: practitioners' review and negotiation checklist for first-time issuers, covering secured/unsecured, trustee or fiscal agent, bearer or registered, and mini-bonds

What this checklist covers This checklist sets out the principal matters a solicitor guiding a first time issuer must verify and, where appropriate, propose changes to, when reviewing English law terms and conditions governing an issue of debt securities...

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 Flowcharts about Redemption

FLOWCHARTS
Flowchart: Private company share redemption without payment out of capital—process and legal requirements

Flowchart This diagram explains the necessary steps that are to be taken by a private company limited by shares to implement a reduction of capital via the solvency statement process, in accordance with the Companies Act 2006. View or print a full-size PDF version:...

Read More Right Arrow
FLOWCHARTS
Redemption of shares by a private company out of capital: procedural flowchart

View or print a full-size PDF version:...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related News about Redemption

NEWS
English High Court banking and finance round-up (October 2024): mortgagee enforcement costs, LIBOR replacement implied term, letters of indemnity and undisclosed principals, and deed of priority interest and costs

Banking & Finance—October 2024 case round-up Brierley v Otuo and others [2024] EWHC 2549 (Ch) — Security: cost recovery on legal mortgages The court refused the mortgagee’s appeal against a 28 July 2023 order that barred recovery of sale and enforcement costs on specified properties. The decision followed the established rule on legal mortgages set out in Fisher & Lightwood’s Law of Mortgage (paragraph 55.6). Put simply, unless the mortgage contains an express term, there is no implied duty on the mortgagor to pay the mortgagee’s costs, charges and expenses, so they cannot be recovered from the mortgagor personally, save where personal liability has arisen in the particular case. Nevertheless, those costs are rolled into the secured indebtedness and, as against the mortgagor and anyone with an interest in the equity of redemption, they are treated as part of the amount owing under the security and must be satisfied as a condition of redemption......

Read More Right Arrow
NEWS
UKUT: CTA 2009 s 327 (loan relationships) disallows Spens compensatory premium; unamortised discount/issue costs referable post-migration; penalty deductible - UK Care No 1 v HMRC

UK Care No 1 Ltd v HMRC [2026] UKUT 90 (TCC) The appellant, UKC1, was a Guernsey-incorporated company. It served as the issuer of loan notes within a securitisation structure for the BUPA group. Those notes were placed at a discount and incurred transaction expenses. UKC1 recognised the obligation on an amortised cost basis. That accounting treatment reflected the discounted issue price and the associated fees borne at issue time. (CTA 2009, s 327 is inapplicable where fair value accounting is adopted.) In 2016—when BUPA intended to dispose of certain care homes included in the collateral package—BUPA acquired UKC1 and it became resident for UK tax. UKC1 subsequently bought back the loan notes. The terms for early repayment were set by a ‘Spens’ (or ‘make whole’) provision, which required payment of whichever was greater: the principal sum, or the present value of future cash flows, discounted by reference to a named gilt...

Read More Right Arrow
NEWS
UK FCA proposes interim and end-state reforms to payments and e-money safeguarding, creating statutory trusts and CASS-style rules with daily reconciliations, audits and monthly returns

Safeguarding customer funds Under the Payment Service Regulations 2017 and the Electronic Money Regulations 2011, FCA-registered payments firms and electronic money institutions—together, payments firms—must protect customers’ money by maintaining appropriate safeguarding arrangements. This safeguarding framework exists to prevent harm to customers, such as shortfalls or delays in redemption, and to reduce the risk of detriment. The need is acute during a wind-down or insolvency, particularly given that money held by payments firms is not covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. The sums entrusted to such firms are significant and continue to grow: the FCA records that electronic money institutions alone held a combined £18bn of customer funds in 2023, up from £11bn in 2021. Nevertheless, the FCA considers there to be widespread failure across payments firms to implement suitably robust safeguarding practices, and it fears that this leaves customers’ funds at risk. The regulator also expresses concern about recent UK court judgments on how the safeguarding regime operates upon insolvency, including the 2022 decision of the Court of...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Practice Notes about Redemption

PRACTICE NOTES
Primeo Fund liquidation and litigation after Madoff: Cayman Islands and Privy Council rulings on SIPA clawbacks, Herald claims, redemption creditor priority, NAV finality and service-provider liability (HSBC)

Brief history Before it went into liquidation, Primeo Fund (Primeo) operated as an open‑ended mutual investment vehicle. It was sponsored by Bank Austria and domiciled in the Cayman Islands. As is typical, it collected capital from investors and deployed those monies. A significant proportion of investors were Austrian private individuals, subscribing for shares in Primeo. At the outset, between 1993 and 1996, Primeo allocated its portfolio to several external managers, including Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC (BLMIS). The directors’ first allocation mandated that 7.5% of Primeo’s assets be placed with BLMIS. In 1996, reflecting BLMIS’s seemingly strong performance, Primeo bifurcated into two sub‑funds: the existing fund became Primeo Global, while a new vehicle, Primeo Select, was formed to invest solely with BLMIS. By February 2001, a decision was taken to wind down Primeo Global, which had underperformed markedly compared with Primeo Select. Primeo Select maintained a direct relationship with BLMIS until May 2007, when it was reorganised to gain exposure indirectly via Herald Fund SPC (Herald). Under that...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
Mortgage possession claims: rights, duties, mortgagor defences, tenant protections, pre-action protocol and procedure (England and Wales)

FORTHCOMING CHANGE On 27 October 2025, the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 obtained Royal Assent. For guidance on the Act’s effect on residential tenancies in England, see Practice Note: Renters’ Rights Act 2025—key provisions. This Practice Note sets out mortgagee possession claims, including the mortgagee’s right to seek possession and their duties once in possession, the mortgagor’s right to request time to pay under the Administration of Justice Act 1970, the position of any tenants of the mortgagor, the pre-action protocol, and the process for bringing a claim. For guidance on the range of remedies available to mortgagees, see Practice Note: Mortgages and land—enforcement of mortgages and legal charges over land. The right to possession Where a mortgagor has fallen into default, the mortgagee will often wish to sell the property and may first need to secure possession. However, it is also possible to: sell without taking possession: a sale subject to a tenancy can be especially attractive for a commercial property let at a...

Read More Right Arrow
PRACTICE NOTES
UK Takeover Code Rule 37: Share buybacks, dual class share structures and enfranchising non‑voting shares—Rule 9 mandatory offer implications, Panel waivers/dispensations and 2026 reforms

Rule 37—Setting the scene This Resource Note summarises the core features of Rule 37 of the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers (Code). It concerns company share repurchases, companies with dual class share arrangements and the enfranchisement of a company’s non‑voting shares, and the situations in which such structures or arrangements could trigger a mandatory offer under Rule 9 of the Code. It also flags relevant materials, commentary and guidance from the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers (Panel), together with Lexis+® UK analysis and resources, to provide practical direction on interpreting and applying Rule 37. Materials covered in this Resource Note include: Practice Statements issued by the Panel Executive (the body responsible for the day‑to‑day conduct of takeover supervision and regulation) (Executive) giving informal guidance on how the Executive typically interprets and applies the Code Panel Statements published by the Panel (P/S) and Panel Instruments Public Consultation Papers (PCP) and Response Statements (RS) published by the Code Committee Annual Reports published by...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Precedents about Redemption

PRECEDENTS
Precedent deed poll: convertible redeemable loan note instrument for corporate investors (unsecured/subordinated), with conversion, redemption and noteholder provisions - England and Wales law

£ [ insert number ] [ insert rate ]% convertible [ subordinated ] redeemable loan notes 20[ insert year ] [ insert name of issuer ] Dated [ insert day and month ] 20[ insert year ] Parties [ Insert name of issuing company ], incorporated in England and Wales under number [ insert company number ], whose registered office is at [ insert address ] (the Issuer) Background The Issuer has determined to create up to a maximum nominal amount of £[ insert number ] [ insert rate ]% convertible [ subordinated ] redeemable loan notes, to be constituted as set out in this document...

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
Precedent buyer board minutes for exchange on private share purchase: approve SPA and ancillary documents, authority to sign, optional consideration shares/loan notes and listed-company circular (UK)

Board minutes—private M&A—share purchase—exchange—buyer Company no: [insert company number]. [insert company name] [Limited OR plc]. Board meeting at [insert place] on [insert date] at [insert time]. [insert name] chaired, confirmed due notice and quorum. Business: to consider and, if appropriate, approve documents and matters for the Company’s proposed purchase of the entire issued share capital of [insert target name] Limited from [insert seller name] [Limited OR PLC], subject to conditions, including any required shareholders’ approval. Directors declared interests per CA 2006 and the Articles; quorum and voting confirmed. Key documents tabled included the draft sale and purchase agreement, any loan note instrument, disclosure letter, stock transfer form(s), voting power of attorney, circular and proxy (if relevant), verification notes and responsibility documents, consents, irrevocable undertakings, announcement and ancillary papers. The board noted conditions precedent and long‑stop; consideration (cash, loan notes and/or consideration shares); warranties/indemnities with time limits, caps and thresholds, subject to disclosures; post‑completion non‑compete/non‑solicit; and key loan note terms (interest, redemption, guarantee/security, convertibility). RESOLVED...

Read More Right Arrow

View the related Q&As about Redemption

Q&As
Conveyance refers to tithes: abolished or still binding?

Tithes Tithes represent a tenth share of all produce—praedial, personal, and mixed—owed to God and, by extension, to the ministers of His church for their support and maintenance. They fall due annually on everything that, with husbandry, yields increase through the act of God, even if that increase is not realised in each year, the obligation nonetheless arising from such productive potential... Tithe rentcharges The difficulty of gathering tithe in kind, coupled with the variable income it produced, prompted early moves to compound tithes: voluntary arrangements termed ‘moduses’ or compositions real, and those established by local or general statutes referred to as ‘corn rents’ or tithe rentcharges. Then, in 1836, a formal process was set out for commuting all tithes into tithe rentcharges, whether achieved by agreement or enforced by compulsion; in practice, almost all tithes have subsequently been so commuted...

Read More Right Arrow
Q&As
Mortgage by demise: vacating receipt, surrender and HMLR first registration

A mortgage by demise A mortgage by demise is an uncommon variety of mortgage whereby the borrower demises the property to the lender as security for a loan of money. Its arrangement is comparable to a lease, but for an exceptionally long duration (typically 3000 years). The mortgage will contain provisions for redemption. In the ordinary course, upon settlement of the principal amount and the interest, the mortgage will determine and the demised term thereby comes to an end...

Read More Right Arrow
Q&As
Dividend in specie loan notes: CGT disposal now or on redemption?

We proceed on the basis that the company is UK-resident and that the dividend is not being made between companies within the same group for tax purposes. When analysing the tax consequences for the distributing company, the initial enquiry is to determine whether the transaction sits within the statutory rules on loan relationships or, alternatively, within the corporation tax provisions dealing with chargeable gains. In the ordinary course, a loan note held by a company is regarded, for tax purposes, as a loan relationship, and is treated in line with that classification...

Read More Right Arrow