If you have not made a suitable payment arrangement, provided employment details (for an attachment of earnings) or confirmed entitlement to state benefits (for an attachment to Income Support or Jobseekers Allowance) then the council has the power, under a liability order, to use bailiffs to collect any amount of Council Tax due.
This will add more to the costs you have to pay.
The bailiffs recover the debt you owe by removing and selling your goods. They can remove goods up to the value of the money you owe, plus their own costs. The goods will then be sold at public auction. Removal or sale of your goods may be avoided by either making payment in full or agreeing payment via a short-term arrangement with the bailiffs. If you ask, the bailiffs must provide you with a receipt for any monies paid to them or to the bailiff's office.
Bailiffs are not allowed to break open a door but may enter your property if a door is open, or if it is closed and can be opened without using force. They can also enter through an open window. When the bailiffs are inside your property, they can force any internal locked doors.
The bailiff is allowed to remove any of your goods, other than those required to meet your family's and your own basic domestic needs i.e. clothing and bedding, or those goods such as tools, required personally by you in your employment.
You can keep your goods in your property if you have done one of the following:
Before making an arrangement to pay the outstanding debt, the bailiff will normally impound your goods and ask you to sign a Walking Possession agreement to hand over the goods if you do not pay. If the bailiff does return to remove the goods, you do not have to be present.
The bailiff will come to your home with a removal van and remove furniture and belongings (including vehicles) to the value of the outstanding debt plus charges. These will then be put in secure storage prior to being sold at auction.
If the bailiff cannot collect the Council Tax and there are not enough goods to remove, we will tell the magistrates' court so that we can issue a committal summons. This means that you must go to court for an enquiry into your financial circumstances. If you do not go to court, you may be arrested and brought before the court. We will then apply for you to go to prison and if found guilty, you could face a prison sentence of up to three months.
If you don't think that bailiffs have followed the above process, you should contact us.
Accessibility Guideline Notes
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