Post-Judgment Enforcement in Leicester: Four Ways to Get Paid
Four enforcement methods. One clear goal: collecting the money you've already won in court. Our Enforcement Pack guides you to the right method for your debtor.
Local court
Leicester
HCEO attendance
No advance notice
Time limit
6 years
High Court transfer
Debts over £600
A court judgment is not automatic payment — enforcement is a separate step
Many creditors in Leicester are surprised to learn that winning a court case doesn't automatically mean getting paid. A judgment creditor in East Midlands must select and apply for an appropriate enforcement method — the court then acts on that application. Leicester's wholesale, textile and manufacturing sectors drive a steady pipeline of enforcement cases. Enforcement applications in Leicester go through the Leicester County Court.
Which Enforcement Method Is Right for Your Debtor in Leicester?
The right method depends on what you know about your debtor. Each card below tells you exactly when to use it — and which court form to file.
High Court Enforcement Officer
Fastest — debts over £600Transfer your judgment to the High Court. An HCEO can attend the debtor's premises without prior notice and has broader powers than County Court bailiffs. No advance warning. Often resolves in days.
Best when: You need fast action and the debt is over £600
Warrant of Control (Bailiff)
County Court — physical assetsCounty Court enforcement agents attend the debtor's address and can seize goods to the value of the debt. Seven days' written notice is required before attendance.
Best when: The debtor has a business premises or physical assets
Attachment of Earnings
Reliable — employed debtors onlyThe court orders regular deductions directly from the debtor's wages. Payments arrive automatically until the judgment is cleared — no further action needed from you. Cannot be used against the self-employed.
Best when: You know the debtor is employed
Third Party Debt Order
Bank freeze — fast when knownFreezes the debtor's bank account and transfers funds directly to you. Decisive and fast when the account holds funds. Requires knowledge of the debtor's bank.
Best when: You know where the debtor banks
How Long Does Enforcement Take in Leicester?
Typical timeframes from application to first contact
Option 1
HCEO (High Court)
N293A
2–7 days
Fastest overall
Option 2
Third Party Debt Order
N349
2–4 weeks
Fast when bank is known
Option 3
Warrant of Control
N323
4–8 weeks
Physical assets
Option 4
Attachment of Earnings
N337
6–12 weeks
Most reliable long-term
Timeframes are typical estimates. Actual processing times depend on court workload and debtor response at Leicester County Court.
All four methods covered
Get your Enforcement Pack — court forms + strategy included
N293A · N323 · N337 · N349 — plus a step-by-step guide to filing in Leicester.
Don't Know the Debtor's Assets?
There is a formal legal process for this — and debtors are legally required to participate.
If you don't know where your debtor banks, works, or whether they own property in or around Leicester, you can apply for an Order to Obtain Information (Form N316 / N316A). This compels the debtor to attend Leicester County Court and answer questions about their finances under oath.
Attend court under oath
The debtor is legally required to attend and answer questions about their employment, assets, savings, property and liabilities. Refusing to attend is contempt of court.
Disclose all assets
The questions cover bank accounts, property, business interests, employment details, and any other financial assets. Lying is a criminal offence.
Choose the right method
The information obtained tells you which enforcement method will work — bank freeze, earnings deduction, High Court transfer or bailiff warrant.
Enforcing Your Judgment in Leicester: Step by Step
Confirm your judgment is still valid
Check the date of your CCJ. Enforcement must begin within six years — if you are approaching that limit, act now. Your judgment creditor number can be found on the original CCJ document or on the MCOL portal.
Investigate the debtor's assets (if needed)
If you don't know enough about the debtor's circumstances to choose an enforcement method, apply for an Order to Obtain Information (N316). Use the responses to select the right method for the debtor's situation in Leicester.
Choose and file your enforcement application
File the relevant form at Leicester County Court. For High Court transfer and HCEO, start with Form N293A. For County Court enforcement, choose N323 (bailiff), N337 (earnings), or N349 (bank freeze). Pay the court fee — this is recoverable from the debtor.
Enforcement agent takes action
Once processed, the enforcement mechanism activates. An HCEO can attend within days. A Warrant of Control gives seven days' notice. An Attachment of Earnings order is served on the employer. A Third Party Debt Order freezes the account immediately pending a hearing.
Related Services for Leicester Creditors
Not started your recovery journey yet? Or need a different type of help?
CCJ Enforcement — Leicester
Focused guide on enforcing your CCJ
Debt Recovery — Leicester
Get a Letter Before Action from £99
Start Enforcement Pack
Build your enforcement documents now
Free Court Form Downloads
N293A, N316, N323, N337, N349
How to Enforce a CCJ — Full Guide
Plain-English guide to enforcement
Help with Court Fees (EX160)
Could you qualify for fee remission?
Judgment Enforcement Hub
Full UK city directory + all methods
Judgment Enforcement FAQ
Common questions from creditors in Leicester
Start Enforcing Your Judgment in Leicester Today
Your judgment gives you legal rights over your debtor. Our Enforcement Pack gives you the documents, forms and step-by-step guidance to use those rights — covering all four enforcement methods, the High Court transfer process, and asset investigation.
No solicitor required · Covers N293A, N323, N337, N349 · Local court: Leicester County Court
This page provides general guidance on judgment enforcement in Leicester. It does not constitute legal advice. For complex enforcement situations, consider seeking advice from a qualified solicitor or contacting Citizens Advice (citizensadvice.org.uk).