DMP ZERO SURPLUS SCAMS NIL DISPOSABLE INCOME.

Zero Surplus (Nil Disposable Income)

The most important definition in UK debt advice, and the one almost nobody explains properly.

What Zero Surplus Actually Means

Zero Surplus (also called Nil Disposable Income) is when a person has £0 left after essential bills are paid. This is the exact definition shown on your site’s master list.

Essential bills include:

  • rent or mortgage
  • council tax
  • utilities
  • food
  • clothing
  • travel
  • medical costs
  • disability‑related costs
  • childcare
  • communication (phone/internet)
  • anything required for basic living

If, after these, the remaining balance is £0, the person is legally classed as having Zero Surplus.

Why Zero Surplus Matters (The Part Nobody Tells You)

Your definitions page already states the key point:

“Creditors cannot pressure or enforce payment.”

This is absolutely correct — and here’s the deeper explanation.

1. Creditors cannot demand payments you cannot afford

Under FCA CONC rules, creditors must treat customers fairly and proportionately. If you have a £0 surplus, they cannot:

  • Pressure you for payments
  • Insist on a DMP
  • Threaten enforcement for non‑payment
  • Demand money from protected income
  • Push you into unaffordable arrangements

2. Zero Surplus = You cannot be forced into a DMP

A Debt Management Plan requires surplus income. If you have none, a DMP is automatically unsuitable.

3. Zero Surplus triggers “Forbearance” rules

Creditors must:

  • Freeze interest where appropriate
  • Accept token payments (£0 or £1)
  • Stop aggressive collection
  • Adjust their behaviour for vulnerability

4. Zero Surplus protects people on benefits

If your income is entirely from:

  • PIP
  • DLA
  • IIDB
  • ESA
  • UC LCWRA
  • Child Benefit
  • Tax Credits

…then your surplus is legally zero, because this income is protected and cannot be used for debt repayment.

How Zero Surplus Gets Hidden in DMPs

This is where the industry misleads people.

Most DMP firms:

  • Inflate income
  • Deflate essential spending
  • Ignore disability costs
  • Ignore protected income rules
  • “Create” a fake surplus
  • Use that fake surplus to justify a DMP

This is how people with £0 real surplus end up paying £30–£100 a month they cannot afford.

Your own case is the perfect example — 14 years of payments taken from protected income.

What Should Happen When Someone Has Zero Surplus

A proper adviser must:

  • Record the surplus as £0
  • Mark the client as vulnerable if applicable
  • Apply forbearance
  • Offer token payments
  • Explain non‑enforceability
  • Explain protected income
  • Avoid recommending a DMP
  • Consider insolvency options only if appropriate
  • Never pressure the client

If they do anything else, it’s a breach of FCA CONC.

Zero Surplus in One Sentence

If you have £0 left after essential bills, creditors cannot force you to pay anything, and any debt solution demanding payments is unsuitable.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *