What Happens to Debt When You Die? UK Rules Explained (2026)

Three weeks after the funeral, a letter arrives addressed to your dad. It’s from a credit card company. Your hands are shaking before you’ve even opened it — because somewhere you’ve heard that families inherit debt, and you’re terrified this is now yours.

For most people in this exact situation, that letter is not a bill you owe. It’s a claim against an estate — a completely different thing, and one with rules that protect you far more than most families realise.

Here’s exactly when debt becomes yours after someone dies — and the specific situations where it absolutely does not, no matter what a letter implies.

£300

probate fee for estates over £5,000 — free under that

0

£ you owe on a sole debt you didn’t guarantee or co-sign

2 mo

minimum notice period executors can give unknown creditors

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The Short Answer

Debt does not disappear when someone dies, but it almost never transfers to family. It becomes a debt of the estate — paid from whatever the person left behind, not from your own bank account. The only exceptions are debts you were jointly named on, or debts you personally guaranteed. Outside of those two situations, you owe nothing — even if the estate can’t fully pay and debts get written off. For wider options if you’re dealing with debt of your own right now, see our UK Debt Help hub.

Does This Debt Become Yours? Four Scenarios

✓ NOT YOURS TO PAY

A sole debt in their name only

A personal credit card, a sole loan, an individual overdraft. This is paid only from the estate. If the estate has enough money, it gets paid. If it doesn’t, the debt is written off completely. You are never personally chased for it — not by the original creditor, and not by any debt collector who buys it afterwards.

✗ YOURS TO PAY

A joint debt or joint mortgage

If your name was on the agreement alongside theirs — a joint credit card, a joint loan, a mortgage held together — the full balance becomes yours alone the moment they die. This isn’t a 50% split. The whole thing transfers to the surviving named borrower, in full.

✗ YOURS TO PAY

A debt you guaranteed for them

If you signed as a guarantor on a loan that was in their name only — common with car finance or a child’s first tenancy — that guarantee doesn’t end when they die. You become liable for whatever’s left, exactly as the guarantee agreement describes.

✓ NOT YOURS TO PAY

Being a spouse, partner, or child — on its own

This is the misconception that causes the most needless panic. Being married to someone, or being their child, creates zero automatic debt liability by itself. MoneyHelper is explicit on this — relationship alone never makes you responsible for someone else’s debt.

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What If There Isn’t Enough Money in the Estate?

This happens more often than people expect. When it does, the estate is treated as insolvent, and debts get paid in a strict legal order until the money runs out. Anything left unpaid after that simply gets written off — nobody chases the family for the shortfall.

1. Funeral costs

Paid first, before any creditor. UK average runs £4,000–£9,000.

2. Admin costs

Probate fees and professional costs of administering the estate.

3. Secured debts

Mainly the mortgage — secured against the property itself.

4. Everything else

Credit cards, personal loans — paid last, often partially or not at all.

The Thing Most Families Get Wrong

It’s not knowing whether a debt is joint or sole — most people figure that out eventually. It’s paying out money to family before all debts are settled. If you’re the executor and you hand over an inheritance early, then a forgotten creditor shows up later, you can become personally liable for that shortfall — out of your own pocket, not the estate’s. Executors are legally allowed to place a notice in The Gazette giving unknown creditors a two-month window to come forward. Doing this properly protects you completely from late claims after that window closes.

What to Actually Do This Week

1. Use the Tell Us Once service

Available at the register office when you register the death, this single service notifies HMRC, DWP, and several other government departments at once — saving weeks of separate calls.

2. Write to every creditor with a death certificate copy

Ask each one directly whether the account was sole or joint, and get the answer in writing. Don’t rely on memory or assumption — account structure determines everything that follows.

3. Check for life insurance before assuming the worst

If a mortgage or major debt had a linked life insurance or mortgage protection policy, it may be cleared automatically. Check before panicking about a joint mortgage balance.

4. Never pay a debt collector to “be helpful” before checking liability

Debt collectors cannot legally chase you personally for someone else’s sole debt — they can only claim against the estate. If a collector implies otherwise, that’s the moment to escalate, not pay. Already dealing with collectors being pushy generally? Read What Happens If You Ignore Debt Collectors in the UK?

⚠️ If you’re acting as executor and feel overwhelmed by the debts involved, contact StepChange for free, regulated debt advice before distributing any part of the estate.

Frequently Asked Questions

My mum just died and a credit card company is calling me. Do I have to answer?

No, and you don’t owe them anything unless it was a joint card or you guaranteed it. Ask them to put everything in writing addressed to the estate, and direct them to whoever is acting as executor.

Does my credit score get damaged by a parent’s debt?

No. A sole debt that belonged to someone else never appears on your credit file, even if it gets written off. Only debts genuinely in your own name affect your own score.

What happens to a joint mortgage if my partner dies?

The full mortgage becomes your sole responsibility going forward. Check immediately for any mortgage life insurance attached to the policy — many joint mortgages have it specifically to cover this situation.

Can I just refuse to deal with the estate if it has more debt than assets?

Yes. Nobody is forced to act as executor or administrator. You can renounce the role, and someone else (or the Public Trustee in extreme cases) handles winding it down. You still owe nothing personally either way.

How long before I can stop worrying about a forgotten creditor showing up?

If the executor places a formal notice in The Gazette, the protection window is two months from that notice. After that, late creditors can only chase remaining estate assets — not the executor personally, and never the family.

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Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Every estate is different — for advice on a specific situation contact StepChange for free debt advice, or a probate solicitor for estate-specific legal questions. DebtShift is not regulated by the FCA.

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