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Preferred Creditor

Preferred Creditors: Definition, Payment Priority, and Types



Key Takeaways


  • Preferred creditors have repayment priority during a bankruptcy proceeding.
  • Employees, tax authorities, and certain government obligations are common preferred creditors.
  • Tort victims may be considered preferred creditors in some jurisdictions.
  • The creditor hierarchy differs between countries, affecting payment priority.
  • Get personalized, AI-powered answers built on 27+ years of trusted expertise.


What Is a Preferred Creditor?


A preferred creditor, also known as a "preferential creditor", is an individual or organization that has priority in being paid the money it is owed if the debtor declares bankruptcy. Preferred creditor status is defined by local laws.

Unpaid wages and taxes often have high priority among debts. Environmental clean-up and tort victims also can receive preferential status.



In-Depth Look at Preferred Creditors


Bankrupt entities do not have enough capital to fulfill all of their financial obligations, meaning that some investors who are owed money will get paid in part or not at all. Usually, a preferred creditor has the first claim to any funds that are available from the debtor.1

In bankruptcy cases in most legal systems, the types of creditors with preferential status are defined by law and commonly include preferred bondholders and sometimes tax authorities.

A preferred creditor can also be an economic development institution. For example, the World Bank might have priority to be repaid a loan it made to a country that experiences a financial crisis, even if this wasn't specified in the terms of the contract.



Important


The claims of preferred creditors may be covered entirely or up to a certain percentage.



Different Categories of Preferred Creditors


Preferred creditors can take many different forms or classes, each with a claim that may take precedence over another claimant depending on the jurisdiction. They include:

Employees: Workers at a bankrupt company who are owed pay for work that has been performed (wages) are the top preferred creditors.

Tax and revenue authorities: Government tax authorities, such as the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States and HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) in the United Kingdom, have the right to be paid for any tax liability before anyone else, after employees.

Environmental remediation: When bankrupt companies are adjudged to have caused environmental damage as a result of their business operations, the clean-up costs might receive preferential treatment by the courts.

Tort victims: Victims of such a "civil wrong" may be given preferred creditor status in some jurisdictions based on their status as an involuntary creditor. Since tort victims did not make the choice to become creditors to a bankrupt entity, they are generally not penalized.2



Dec. 2020


The date the U.K.'s tax authority, HMRC, returned to preferential creditor status after an 18-year stint as an unsecured creditor with little hope of recovering any money owed from insolvent companies entering liquidation.3



Comparing Preferred Creditors to Unsecured Creditors


An unsecured creditor is essentially an individual or institution that lends money without obtaining specified assets as collateral. Unsecured creditors are generally placed into two categories: priority unsecured creditors and general unsecured creditors.

As their name suggests, unsecured priority creditors are higher in the pecking order than general unsecured creditors when it comes to claims over any assets in a bankruptcy filing. That said, when a person or business is unable to repay their outstanding debts, the resources of the economic value they hold are usually not sufficient to reimburse priority unsecured creditors entirely.

In the U.S., the order of creditor and contributory ranking on a debtor's insolvency is as follows:4

Secured claims

Administrative expenses and priority claims

General unsecured claims

Subordinated claims

Equity interests

Meanwhile, in the U.K., the creditor order is:4

Fixed charge holders

Liquidators' fees and expenses

Preferred creditors

Floating charge holders

Unsecured creditors

Interest incurred on all unsecured debts post-liquidation

Shareholders



Key Considerations for Preferred Creditors


In general, preferred creditors take precedence over unsecured creditors. However, in some jurisdictions, as you can see above, preferred creditors are more likely to get paid than secured creditors whose security is floating, while, at the same time, taking a back seat to those with a fixed charge.

Banks and other lenders who hold title over business assets usually fall into the fixed charge category.



What Is the Difference Between Preferred and Unsecured Creditors?


Preferred creditors take priority for payment during bankruptcy, but unsecured creditors are less likely to be paid out of any assets.



Who Are Preferred Creditors?


Preferred creditors are employees, the IRS or other tax authorities, anyone related to environmental remediation, and tort victims.



Will I Be Paid If My Employer Goes Bankrupt?


You will be considered a preferred creditor if your company declares bankruptcy. If you are owed wages, you will be the first preferred creditor on the list of debts to be paid.

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