Hi husnabn
You will have to face telling your husband if you are going to enter into an IVA, primarily because of the jointly owned property, as he will need to agree to any future equity release. However, it strikes me that perhaps an IVA is not really needed at all if you have disposable income of £1,000 and only owe £56,000.
How much are your contractual repayments to creditors each month? I think you should initially explore whether your could reschedule some of the repayments, as you only have 7 individual creditors and this ought to be fairly easy to manage. A debt management company such as Thomas Charles could assist you with this, and the creditors would probably much rather the benefit of regular ongoing repayments from you.
The downside of doing this is that the creditors will probably continue to charge interest, but if keeping the problem from your partner is paramount then this could work, albeit the repayment period may well extend past the five year limit of an IVA.
A payment of £1,000 would seem unusually high, given your income, and I wonder how realistic this is? Have you made provision for all contingencies in your calculations?
Experience of being both an insolvency practitioner (and a wife) tells me that problems shared with your partner are problems which are well on their way to being solved. Whether you enter into a debt management plan or an IVA, you will need ongoing support and understanding from your partner, which will be difficult to obtain if he does not understand the nature of your problems.
I strongly recommend that you take in a deep breath and find the courage to discuss it with him, as he may well have other solutions to suggest - and you do need to move forward with your lives. Your plans to have children should not be put on hold, simply because you have a few debt problems!
Regards, Melanie Giles, Insolvency Practitioner for over 20 years.
View my IVA blog at:
http://melaniegiles.blogs.iva.co.uk