N349 Third Party Debt Order

Form N349 allows you to apply for a third party debt order (formerly known as a 'Garnishee Order'). This enables you to recover money owed by instructing a third party, typically a bank, to pay you directly from the debtor's account.

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About Third Party Debt Orders

Form N349 — Application for third party debt order, used to be known as a 'Garnishee Order'. This form allows you to apply to a third party (typically a bank) to obtain monies belonging to the defendant.

  • Target bank accounts directly
  • Freezes funds immediately on interim order
  • Can target multiple accounts simultaneously
  • Court hearing required for final order

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More details on how to fill in this form are provided in our enforcement guide.

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How the Third Party Debt Order Process Works

The third party debt order process involves several stages from application to final recovery:

Step 1: Complete Form N349

Fill in the application with debtor and third party details

Step 2: Pay Court Fee

Submit the form with the required fee

Step 3: Court Issues Interim Order

Court freezes funds and notifies third party

Step 4: Final Order Hearing

Court decides whether to make the order final

Timeline

The process typically takes 4–8 weeks from application to final order, including the interim order period and final hearing.

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What Accounts Can and Cannot Be Targeted

Third party debt orders have specific rules about which accounts and funds can be targeted:

Can Be Targeted

  • Bank accounts and savings accounts
  • Building society accounts
  • Business accounts
  • Investment accounts
  • Money held by solicitors
  • Funds held by other financial institutions

Cannot Be Targeted

  • Joint accounts (unless debtor's share is clear)
  • Accounts with less than £1 balance
  • Protected benefits and pensions
  • Money belonging to someone else
  • Accounts already subject to other orders
  • Frozen or disputed funds

Pros and Cons

Advantages

  • Can freeze funds immediately
  • Effective if you know debtor's bank details
  • No need for bailiff visits
  • Can target multiple accounts simultaneously

Disadvantages

  • Need to know third party details
  • Upfront court fee required
  • May not succeed if insufficient funds
  • Complex legal process with hearings

When to Consider Alternatives

A third party debt order may not be suitable if:

  • You don't know the debtor's bank details
  • The debtor is employed (consider attachment of earnings)
  • You suspect the account has insufficient funds
  • The debtor has valuable assets (consider warrant of control)
  • The account is jointly held with unclear ownership

Download Third Party Debt Order Form

The link below will take you to the official form on GOV.UK:

Form N349

Apply to the court for a 'third-party debt order'. Official form for recovering money owed by targeting the debtor's bank accounts.

Download Form N349 from GOV.UK →

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