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What is the difference between secured and unsecured creditors?

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Written by Jonathan Munnery, Insolvency & Restructuring Expert Last updated: 16 July 2025 Reading time: 3 mins

How are your creditors affected when your company becomes insolvent?

A creditor is a third party that your company owes money to. It could be a bank, a supplier, HMRC or a landlord. If your business is struggling financially and enters into a formal insolvency process such as Liquidation or Administration, your creditors will be repaid in order according to a defined hierarchy. Your secured creditors are at the top of the payment hierarchy while your unsecured creditors are at the bottom.

Here we explain the difference between secured and unsecured creditors and discuss the return they can expect when a limited company fails.

What is a secured creditor?

A secured creditor is a third party you owe money to that holds security over company assets. That means that if your business becomes insolvent, the creditor can force the sale of those assets to recoup the money they are owed. 

Common examples of secured creditors include:

  • Banks
  • Asset-based lenders
  • Invoice finance providers 

There are two different types of security a creditor can hold:

A fixed charge

A fixed charge is security held on a specific asset, such as a business premises, vehicle, machinery, equipment or even its sales ledger. A fixed charge has to be formally registered with Companies House. If your company fails, a secured creditor will be paid from the money raised by the sale of the asset the charge applies to.  

A floating charge

A floating charge isn’t attached to a specific asset. Instead, the creditor has a claim over a type of asset. For example, the asset type could be stock, cash or work in progress. The charge ‘floats’ over these assets until the company defaults or enters an insolvency process. At that point, the floating charge ‘crystallises’ and becomes a fixed charge. 

Although floating charge holders have security over company assets, they come below fixed charge holders in the payment hierarchy. 

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What is an unsecured creditor?

An unsecured creditor is a third party with no specific rights over a company asset in respect of the money they are owed. They rank towards the bottom of the payment hierarchy and are only above the company’s shareholders. 

Common examples of unsecured creditors include: 

  • Suppliers
  • Landlords
  • HMRC (HMRC is also a preferential creditor for some tax debts)
  • Credit card companies
  • Utility providers
  • Customers 

Concerned about National Living Wage and NI increases?

With the rates of both National Living Wage and employer National Insurance Contributions increasing in recent years, this additional cost of employing staff has added more pressure onto already squeezed cash flows. If you are worried about the impact this is having on your company's finances, talk to the experts at UK Liquidators. As licensed insolvency practitioners we can explain your options and help you plot a way forward. Call today on 0808 253 9878.

What is the order of company creditors in liquidation?

The main difference between secured and unsecured creditors is where they appear in the repayment hierarchy when a company is liquidated. 

When a company enters liquidation, its creditors are grouped into classes and its assets are sold to repay those creditor classes in the following order:

  1. Fixed charge holders
  2. Preferential creditors (employees owed wages and holiday pay)
  3. Floating charge holders
  4. Unsecured creditors
  5. Shareholders 

Each class of creditor has to be paid in full before the liquidator can move on to the next group. The reality is that once the liquidator has paid the secured and preferential creditors, there’s often little left for the unsecured creditors. Once the liquidator has distributed all the funds, they will close the company and any remaining debts, usually those owing to the unsecured creditors, will be written off. 

What steps can unsecured creditors take?

Unsecured creditors are less likely to receive all the money they are owed when a company fails, so they often take action to recover a debt before it gets that far. 

They have a range of powers to recover outstanding debts. They can send payment demands and charge interest on late payments. They can also issue a County Court Judgement (CCJ), use bailiffs to seize company assets, issue a Statutory Demand and even use a Winding Up Petition to force a company into liquidation.

How can we help?

If you have outstanding debt repayments or are dealing with pressure and threats of legal action from your creditors, contact our insolvency practitioners to arrange a free consultation. We will advise you on your options and provide expert guidance on the best route forward.

Jon Munnery Head

Jonathan Munnery

Insolvency & Restructuring Expert | 20+ Years Insolvency Experience

Jonathan is a Partner at Real Business Rescue and member of both the Insolvency Practitioners Association (MIPA) and The Association of Business Recovery Professionals (MABRP). Jonathan has over 20 years’ experience guiding directors through CVL and MVL processes, helping them understand their options and navigate financial distress with clarity and compassion.

IPA Member MABRP Member IPA Regulated

Directors often wait too long before seeking advice. The earlier you call, the more options remain available to you — and the better the outcome for everyone involved.

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