Tag Archives: debt management

UK household debt

UK Household Debt: Q4 2025

Introduction

The House of Commons Library has just released its latest report and economic indicators on UK household debt. Running until the end of 2025, the economic indicators go back to 2007 and are therefore a useful trend analysis tool.

That said, recent global shocks are likely to reverberate and impact on UK trends in 2026, which are too volatile to predict at this point.

Overall Trends

According to the report, UK household debt peaked in Q3 2008 at 155.8% of income. Since then household debt has been on a downward trend, now standing at 117.5%.

The Standard Variable Rate (SVR), which is the baseline for mortgages, peaked in 2023/24 at 8% and has now been falling to its current rate of 6.6%.

Individual insolvencies have hovered around 30,000 a quarter in England and Wales for the last four years. There are peaks and troughs between 25,000 and 33,000 but no long-term trends in either direction.

Influencing Factors

The report purely gives the numbers and leaves it to the politicians to speculate on why trends have occurred! But at Saascoms we are not politicians, so let’s give it a go…

  • Financial Crash 2008 – led to a contraction in lending, especially in the sub-prime market. Banks and Building Societies have taken a more prudent approach to lending, reducing the opportunity for households to increase debt.
  • Low Interest Rates – from 2009 to 2022 interest rates have been at an all-time low. This has enabled households with mortgages and loans to pay back quicker (reducing debt), reduced lending rates (meaning more manageable debt) and the opportunity for business to lend and invest at low rates (creating jobs).
  • Consumer Confidence – although the financial crash led to low interest rates, it also shattered consumer confidence, which has never really recovered. And just when there were green shoots, Covid and then Ukraine destroyed them. As a result, households have been wary to take on debt due to economic uncertainty.
  • Regulation – the FCA targeted Pay Day Lenders (Wonga), high street retailers (Brighthouse and Perfect Home) and financial products it deemed to have excessive interest rates. This has restricted the ability of households with a low propensity to pay back debt to access loans or credit.

What’s Next?

With government, corporations and households all responsible for managing UK household debt, at Saascoms we believe it’s about having the right tools. Such as Resolution, our self-serve debt management portal which launched last year.

For customers this means managing their debt on a platform which enables payments and setting up payment plans. Also contacting the DCA, conducting an Income and Expenditure review or being signposted to a support organisation.

For clients this means monitoring live payments and producing detailed reports. Plus the option for one to one or one to many communications – all from a single platform.

debt awareness week

Debt Awareness Week – and the psychology of debt conversations

Debt Awareness Week

March 16-22 marks national Debt Awareness Week, an event initiated by StepChange, the national charity helping people become free from debt. StepChange helps people become debt free, repay their problem debts and identify benefits and allowances they may be able to claim.

With 50% of people having experienced problem debt in their lifetimes, Debt Awareness Week is designed to remove the stigma from problem debt and have open conversations.

And it’s the psychology of debt conversations we wish to explore…

most popular credit products

Debtors Struggle to Talk

For many people, discussing debt can trigger feelings including:

  • Shame

  • Anxiety

  • Loss of control

  • Fear of judgement

  • Stress related to personal circumstances

This emotional layer often shapes how customers communicate. Instead of directly explaining their situation, customers frequently use indirect language. Not only is discussing debt stigmatised, but discussing with a third party is even more difficult. Rather than lay out their situation, those in debt may use phrases like:

  • “I’m struggling this month.”

  • “Something unexpected has come up.”

  • “Can I delay this payment?”

  • “I need to speak to someone about my account.”

These statements often act as signals of financial vulnerability or distress. Organisations that recognise these signals early can respond with empathy, flexibility and appropriate support.

What Customers Say Versus What Customers Mean

In financial collections conversations, customers often express their situation indirectly. Here are examples of common messages and the psychological meaning behind them.

“I’ll pay next week.”

Often indicates:

  • Cash flow timing issues

  • Waiting for salary or benefits

  • Short-term financial pressure

The customer is signalling intent to pay, but needs flexibility or a recommendation.

“I can’t afford the full amount.”

This usually reflects:

  • Financial hardship

  • Competing financial priorities

  • Need for a payment plan

Customers making this statement are often seeking a manageable solution rather than avoiding payment. Once again, the collecting agent should recommend solutions.

“Why am I receiving messages about this?”

This message may indicate:

  • Confusion about the account

  • Frustration with communication frequency

  • Concern that an error has occurred

Clarity and transparency are critical in these situations. Chasing customers but not offering solutions can often create tension and animosity between the customer and collecting agency.

“I’m really stressed about this.”

This is a clear indicator that:

  • The issue is affecting the customer emotionally

  • The situation may involve vulnerability

  • The conversation requires sensitive handling

Organisations that respond with empathy can dramatically improve the customer experience. Most customers want to resolve their financial situation, but need guidance and support to do so. Debt Awareness Week is attempting to change this.

Two way messaging

Why Digital Channels Reveal More Honest Conversations

Interestingly, many customers feel more comfortable discussing financial difficulties through digital channels than over the phone. Messaging channels such as SMS, webchat, social media and email allow customers to:

  • Respond at their own pace

  • Avoid direct confrontation

  • Think about their responses

  • Explain situations more openly

Research shows that three quarters of customers prefer non-voice communication channels for interacting with organisations. This shift towards digital engagement provides a valuable opportunity for organisations to better understand customer intent.

Digital conversations generate structured data that can be analysed for:

  • Language patterns

  • Sentiment changes

  • Intent signals

  • Vulnerability indicators

This is where conversational AI becomes particularly powerful.

How AI Detects Psychological Signals in Conversations

Modern conversational AI systems can analyse customer language in real time to detect both intent and emotional signals. Saascoms has analysed millions of conversations and our sophisticated AI models learn to recognise patterns in customer communication. Our award winning software Omnireach is a digital chat platform used by global brands.

For example, Omnireach AI can identify:

  • Payment intent

  • Financial hardship signals

  • Stress-related language

  • Requests for assistance

  • Account confusion or disputes

This enables Omnireach AI to respond appropriately or escalate conversations when necessary. For example:

  • Customers indicating hardship can be prioritised for support.

  • Customers requesting payment flexibility can be offered structured plans.

  • Customers displaying distress can be routed to trained agents.

Rather than replacing human judgement, AI acts as an early warning system for customer needs.

debt consultation

Why Understanding Intent Improves Resolution

When organisations understand the true intent behind customer messages, they can respond more effectively. For example:

A message such as “I can’t pay right now.”

Could lead to very different responses. A traditional response might focus on immediate payment demands. A psychologically informed response would explore:

  • Payment flexibility

  • Temporary arrangements

  • Support options

  • Signposting to financial guidance

This approach leads to faster and more sustainable resolutions.

The Future of Customer Conversations in Credit & Collections

As digital engagement continues to grow, the psychology of customer conversations will become even more important. The future of collections will rely on three key elements:

1. Data-driven insight

Understanding how customers communicate and what signals indicate intent.

2. AI-assisted interpretation

Using conversational AI to detect emotional and behavioural patterns in real time.

3. Human empathy

Ensuring complex or vulnerable situations are handled with care and expertise. Organisations that combine these elements will be able to deliver better customer outcomes while improving operational efficiency.

Final Thought: Listening Is the Most Powerful Tool

Every debt conversation contains more information than the words alone.

Behind each message may be:

  • Financial pressure

  • Emotional stress

  • Confusion about an account

  • Or simply a customer seeking a solution.

The organisations that succeed in modern credit and collections are those that listen carefully not just to what customers say, but to what they mean.

By combining psychology, data insight and intelligent automation, organisations can create conversations that lead to something far more valuable than a transaction.

They lead to Resolution, the self serve debt management platform from Saascoms.

money management skills

Money Management Skills – should they be compulsory at School?

Introduction

Is it time that Money Management Skills became a core part of the teaching curriculum? If Algebra, Chemistry, Drama and Languages are deemed essential, surely the ability to manage finances should be?

In an age of easy credit, consumerism, job volatility, healthcare and pension pressures, negative equity and crypto – surely young adults need to be equipped for today’s financial landscape?

The State of the UK

It’s estimated by Fair4All Finance that 20m people in the UK are financially vulnerable. This is due to a lack of savings or insurance cover (should a financial shock occur) and generally struggling to cover day to day bills.

StepChange debt charity has seen unprecedented demand for its services since Christmas. A key point to highlight is that 60% of clients are in employment!

A Complex Financial Landscape

Does the average person understand Pensions, Income Tax, Savings Tax, Estate Planning, Financial Insurance or even the tax implications of their ‘side hustle?’ Recently we have had Politicians claim they had made an honest mistake when it comes to their taxes.

The reality is that taxation in the UK is complicated, and that’s before we look at personal finance planning…

How do you develop Money Management Skills for life stages?

  • Teens & Twenties – newfound financial freedom. Enjoying consumerism including clothes, holidays, entertainment and possibly a car.
    • But did you stop to think about building a credit score and buying a house at this stage in life?
  • Thirties – settling down. Marriage, house (with mortgage), children, bigger car, and more expensive holidays (limited to school times).
    • Have you considered your pension contributions, emergency fund and building savings for the future?
  • Forties – maturing family. Bigger house required, bigger car, provision for College and University, even more expensive holidays.
    • Did you remortgage to pay for your holiday or house extension? What impact will that have on your retirement plans? If you have any yet.
  • Fifties – golden years. Family all grown up and left home. If you have your health and career now you can enjoy yourself, can’t you?
    • That pension pot is looking low. The mortgage hasn’t come down as quickly as hoped. Personal loans need paying off.
  • Sixties – big decisions to be made. Keep working until old age or cash in to enjoy your time while you have your health?
    • Equity release? How much pension can I afford to cash in? When can I retire? What about care in old age?

Although a brutal portrayal of the financial stages of life, for many people this will resonate. It’s actually quite a positive example as it doesn’t build in bereavement or unemployment. It also doesn’t account for those that are successful and financially secure. It’s geared around an average family (the typical 2+2).

The Financial Advice Landscape

There is an abundance of advice and information to assist people in how to manage their finances. The issue is that those seeking financial advice are usually savvy enough to manage their finances. Those that seek debt advice have already gone over the line.

How does the average person develop Money Management Skills? Aside from Martin Lewis or family and friends – it’s not easy. Financial Advisors tend to seek out people with wealth to invest (as they are paid a commission) and are not attracted to average people. Plus, there is no financial incentive to advise someone on how to reduce credit card debt, cancel subscriptions, switch to a cheaper supermarket etc.

The internet is a wonderful thing, but with cyber scamming, fake news and ‘influencer’ paid posts, who do you trust for advice?

By the time a person is talking to a debt management charity or organisation, the damage has been done.

Money Management Skills

At Saascoms we work closely with the Credit & Collections Industry, our award-winning software supporting both clients and customers in reducing problem debt. Omnireach is our two-way messaging platform and Resolution our self-serve debt management platform.

We believe financial education should start at an early age, from earning and managing pocket money to savings (remember the Nat West Piggy Banks!). we should teach spending within your means, understanding of interest rates, comparing and switching financial products and shopping around – just like you would for a new TV.

More complex subjects should also be tackled including life planning, insurance products to protect from unemployment or illness, savings strategies and pension planning.

We need to equip people with the skills to navigate their financial life. UK pensions are that complicated Financial Advisors take multiple exams to be able to advise on them. That’s an indication of a broken system when an essential financial product is so complicated it requires multiple exams to understand!

Conclusion

At Saascoms we are not a lobbying organisation, but the team, our families and friends have all experienced financial shocks at one time or another. We believe basic Money Management Skills within education would have a positive impact on not just individuals but the nation’s commercial awareness as a whole.