Business

Charity expects demand for debt help to reach five-year high in 2018

More people across the UK are seeking help because of their mounting debts
More people across the UK are seeking help because of their mounting debts More people across the UK are seeking help because of their mounting debts

DEMAND for help with debts is expected to reach a five-year high across 2018 as people increasingly find themselves struggling with everyday household bills, according to a charity.

National Debtline, which is run by the Money Advice Trust (MAT), predicts it will have received 189,000 calls by the end of 2018 - its highest level of demand in the last five years.

It said callers are increasingly struggling with arrears on everyday household bills, with people facing smaller but trickier debts to deal with.

Half of callers to National Debtline are now struggling to repay debt of £5,000 or less - up from less than a quarter (22 per cent) in 2008.

Three in 10 callers have council tax arrears - up from about one in six (15 per cent) in 2008, with the proportion of callers with rent arrears rising from 6 per cent to 17 per cent, and energy arrears from 9 per cent to 14 per cent in the same period.

People contacting National Debtline increasingly have more money going out on essential spending than they have coming in, it said. Nearly half (48 per cent) of callers now have a budget deficit - up from 27 per cent in 2009, it said.

The charity said it wants to see a single approach across different bodies to reduce problem debt.

MAT chief executive Joanna Elson said: "We need to change how we think about problem debt in the UK.

"Ten years ago a typical caller to National Debtline was struggling to pay credit cards and personal loans.

"Today, callers are struggling with smaller but trickier debts, usually on everyday household bills - and often caused by broken budgets, where the money coming in is simply not enough to cover their essential spending."