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Emergency route

When money goes wrong, slow the damage first

A financial first aid checklist for income shocks, unaffordable bills, scams, debt pressure, benefits checks, priority payments and the first 48 hours.

Stop lossProtect cash
PrioritiseHousing and essentials
EvidenceKeep records
SupportUse official routes

Financial first aid is for the moment when the household is not okay: income drops, a bill cannot be paid, a scam may have happened, a debt letter arrives, or panic spending starts. The goal is not optimisation. The goal is damage control.

The first rule is to slow down. Urgency is useful for stopping loss, but dangerous when it pushes rushed borrowing, hidden payments or shame-based decisions.

The first 30 minutes

The first 48 hours

The first month

The simple action order

MomentWhat to doWhy it matters
Scam or fraud riskStop contact, call bank through official channels and keep evidence.Speed matters, but only through trusted routes.
Cannot pay billsRank priority bills first and contact providers.Housing, energy, council tax and essentials carry bigger consequences.
Debt pressureDo not agree unaffordable payments to make calls stop.A sustainable plan beats a promise that fails next month.

Crisis traps

Where this connects on UK Tax Drag

Use this guide as the plain-English route, then open the calculator or worksheet that matches the immediate decision.

Sources

Official sources and further guidance