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How to Check If You Have a CCJ

The quickest way to check if you have a CCJ is to view your credit report for free through Experian, ClearScore (Equifax), or Credit Karma (TransUnion); any registered county court judgement will appear there. For a definitive check, you can also search the official Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines via TrustOnline for a small fee of £6–£10.

A CCJ can appear on your credit file without warning and seriously affect your ability to borrow, rent, or open a business account. Below, we cover exactly what a CCJ is, how to check for one step by step, how long it lasts, how to get it removed, and whether you can still access business funding with a CCJ on your record.

What Is a CCJ?

CCJ stands for county court judgment. It’s a court order issued in England, Wales, or Northern Ireland when someone fails to repay money they owe. If a creditor, such as a bank, credit card company, utility provider, or even HMRC, believes you haven’t kept up with payments, they can apply to the county court to recover the debt.

Once the court agrees, a CCJ is registered against your name. This means the debt is no longer just between you and the creditor; it’s now a matter of public record. The CCJ, meaning, in practical terms, is that anyone running a credit check on you, lenders, landlords, or employers, can see that a court has ruled you owe money.

You might hear people refer to county court judgments by different names. Some say “county court judgment” (the American spelling), others simply call them CCJs. Whatever the label, the effect is the same: it signals to lenders that there’s been a serious issue with repayment, and it stays visible on your credit file for six years.

It’s worth noting that a CCJ isn’t the same as a criminal conviction. It’s a civil matter. But the financial consequences can be just as disruptive, particularly if you’re a business owner trying to secure funding.

How to Check If You Have a CCJ (For Free)

Many people don’t realise they have a CCJ until they’re turned down for credit. Court paperwork can go to an old address, or you might have simply overlooked a letter. The good news is that there are several ways to run a CCJ check without spending a penny.

Check your credit report

The simplest way to check if you have a CCJ is through your credit file. Three main credit reference agencies operate in the UK: Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion, and each of them will show any registered CCJs against your name.

You can access a free CCJ check through these services:

  • Experian offers a free account that shows your credit report, including any CCJs.
  • ClearScore uses Equifax data and is completely free. It shows CCJs under the “court and insolvency” section.
  • Credit Karma uses TransUnion data and is also free. Any CCJs will appear in your report.

It’s a good idea to check all three, as not every creditor reports to every agency.

Check your post

If a CCJ has been issued against you, you should have received a court claim form (known as an N1 form) by post. This gives you a chance to respond before a judgment is made. If you moved house and didn’t update your address with creditors, you may have missed this entirely.

Search the Register of Judgments directly

You can also run a CCJ register check through the official register (more on this in the next section). This is the most authoritative source, though a basic search does carry a small fee.

If you’ve recently been refused credit or noticed an unexpected drop in your credit score, checking for a CCJ should be one of the first things you do.

Where to Check: Registry Trust and the Register of Judgments

The official record of all CCJs in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland is held by the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines. This register is maintained by an organisation called Registry Trust, which has operated as the custodian of this data since 1985.

The register of judgments is the definitive source. While credit reference agencies pull data from it, the register itself is the master record. If there’s ever a discrepancy between your credit file and the register, the register takes precedence.

How to search the CCJ register

You can search the register by visiting the Registry Trust website at TrustOnline. The process is straightforward:

  1. Go to the TrustOnline website.
  2. Select whether you’re searching for an individual or a business.
  3. Enter the name and address details.
  4. Pay the search fee (currently £10 per search at the time of writing).
  5. Receive results showing any registered CCJs.

While it’s not a free CCJ check in the strictest sense, this is the most reliable and comprehensive way to find out whether a judgment has been registered against you or your company. It also shows the date of the judgement, the amount owed, and whether it has been satisfied (paid).

For business owners, this is particularly important. A CCJ against your limited company is a separate matter from one against you personally, but both can affect your ability to access finance.

How Long Does a CCJ Last?

A CCJ stays on the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines for six years from the date it was issued. During that time, it will also appear on your credit file and can be seen by anyone who runs a credit check on you.

The six-year period applies regardless of whether you pay the debt or not. However, there is one crucial exception: if you pay the full amount within one calendar month of the judgment date, you can apply to have the CCJ removed from the register entirely. In that case, it’s as though it never existed.

After six years, the CCJ is automatically removed from both the register and your credit file. You don’t need to do anything; it simply drops off.

How long does a CCJ stay on your credit file?

The same six-year rule applies to credit reference agencies. Once the CCJ expires, Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion will remove it from your report. Your credit score should begin to recover, though the speed of recovery depends on your wider financial behaviour.

In practice, the impact of a CCJ on your credit score diminishes over time, even before it’s removed. A five-year-old CCJ that has been satisfied carries less weight than a recent, unpaid one. Lenders look at the full picture, not just the presence of a judgment.

How to Remove or Pay Off a CCJ

If you discover a CCJ on your record, you have several options depending on your circumstances:

  • Pay within one month to get it removed completely

As mentioned, paying the full amount owed within one calendar month of the judgment date means you can apply to have the CCJ set aside. You’ll need to apply to the court and provide proof of payment. Once processed, the CCJ is removed from the register and your credit file as if it never happened.

  • Pay after one month, the CCJ is marked as “satisfied”

If you pay the debt after the one-month window, the CCJ won’t be removed, but it will be updated to show as “satisfied.” This is significantly better than leaving it unpaid. Lenders view a satisfied CCJ much more favourably than an outstanding one.

To update the register, you need to apply for a Certificate of Satisfaction from the court. There’s a small court fee involved, and you’ll need to provide evidence that the debt has been paid in full.

  • Apply to have the CCJ set aside

CCJ removal is also possible if you believe the judgment was issued unfairly, for example, if you never received the court paperwork, or if you had a valid defence that wasn’t heard. In these cases, you can apply to the court to have the CCJ “set aside.” If the court agrees, the judgment is cancelled and removed from the register.

This process involves completing an application form (N244), paying a court fee, and attending a hearing. It’s worth seeking legal advice if you’re considering this route.

  • Wait for it to expire

If none of the above options applies, the CCJ will drop off automatically after six years. In the meantime, focus on rebuilding your credit by keeping up with all other payments and avoiding further defaults.

Can You Still Get Funding with a CCJ?

This is the question that matters most to business owners: can you get a loan, invoice finance, or a mortgage with a CCJ on your record? The short answer is yes, though your options will be more limited than if you had a clean credit file. High street banks are unlikely to lend to businesses or individuals with active CCJs. Their automated credit scoring systems typically flag county court judgements as an immediate red flag, leading to an automatic decline.

However, the alternative finance market takes a different view. Many specialist lenders consider the full context, the age of the CCJ, whether it’s been satisfied, the amount involved, and the overall health of your business. A small, satisfied CCJ from several years ago is very different from a large, outstanding one issued last month.

Types of funding available with a CCJ:

Business owners with a CCJ may still be able to access invoice finance, merchant cash advances, short-term business loans, asset finance, and bridging loans. The terms may differ from those offered to borrowers with clean credit, but funding is far from impossible.

This is where Funding Bay can help.

At Funding Bay, we specialise in helping UK businesses access the finance they need, even when the high street has said no. We work with a wide panel of lenders, many of whom take a pragmatic approach to CCJs and other credit issues.

Whether you’re looking for working capital, invoice finance, or a business loan, we can match you with a lender who looks at where your business is going, not just where it’s been.

If you have a CCJ and need funding, get in touch with Funding Bay for a free, no-obligation chat about your options.

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FAQ's

The easiest way is to check your credit report through a free service. Experian lets you view your report via their app, ClearScore shows your Equifax data at no cost, and Credit Karma gives you free access to your TransUnion report. Any registered CCJ will appear on these reports. It’s worth checking all three, as not every creditor reports to every agency.
Yes. According to The Gazette, a CCJ can be issued against someone who didn’t receive the court notification, often because it was sent to an incorrect or former address. Many people only discover they have a CCJ when they’re turned down for credit. If you suspect this may have happened to you, check your credit report or search the official register via TrustOnline.
Yes. CCJs are recorded on the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines, which is maintained by Registry Trust on behalf of the Ministry of Justice. As Registry Trust confirms, the register is publicly accessible and anyone can search it, including lenders, landlords, employers, and members of the public, without needing permission from the person being searched.
A CCJ stays on the register and your credit file for six years from the date it was issued. According to GOV.UK, if you pay the full amount within one month, you can apply to have the CCJ removed entirely. If you pay after one month, the record is marked as “satisfied” but remains visible for the full six years. After six years, it drops off automatically.

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