Fredrickson International Limited
Fredrickson International Limited is a UK debt collection company. Companies House records it as an Active private limited company registered at the Lowell group corporate address in Leeds; the FCA register records it as no longer authorised since 27 April 2021.
Who they are
Fredrickson International Limited is registered in England and Wales (Companies House number 02679522) with its current registered office at No. 1 The Square Thorpe Park View, Thorpe Park, Leeds, LS15 8GH. Companies House records its incorporation date as 15 January 1992. The complaints contact email recorded on the firm’s FCA register entry uses the lowellgroup.co.uk domain, and the Companies House registered office is the same address as Lowell Financial Ltd’s; together these facts confirm the firm sits within the Lowell group corporate structure (see the Lowell Financial Ltd entry above for the wider Lowell group context).
Regulatory status
The FCA Financial Services Register records Fredrickson International Limited (Firm Reference Number 730425) as “No longer authorised” with effect from 27 April 2021 per its FCA register entry. The firm remains an Active company at Companies House. Any current debt-collection activity branded as “Fredrickson” should be checked against the contacting firm’s own current FCA-register entry, since the Fredrickson legal entity itself is no longer FCA-authorised and any current collection contact may be acting under a different Lowell group entity’s FCA permissions.
How they may contact you
Debt collection contact in the UK typically comes by letter, phone, text message, or email. Where a contact letter is branded “Fredrickson” or signed off with a Fredrickson reference, check the letter against the Lowell group’s current published contact details (see the Lowell Financial Ltd entry above), since the Fredrickson legal entity itself ceased to be FCA-authorised in April 2021 and current collection activity within the wider Lowell group is typically conducted under a currently-authorised group entity.
Your rights if they contact you
Where the collecting entity is FCA-authorised (you can confirm this against the firm’s name and Firm Reference Number on the FCA register), FCA CONC rules apply. Under those rules you can ask for evidence that the debt exists and that they have authority to collect it. You can ask for forbearance if you are in vulnerable circumstances such as serious illness, bereavement, or financial hardship. If you are not satisfied with how the firm handles your complaint, you can refer it to the Financial Ombudsman Service free of charge. In England, Wales, and Northern Ireland the Limitation Act 1980 provides that most unsecured consumer debts generally become unenforceable in court after six years if no payment has been made and the debt has not been acknowledged in writing during that period; in Scotland the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973 generally provides a five-year period.
Where to get free help
You do not need to deal with debt collection contact alone. Free, confidential debt help is available from regulated UK debt charities and from Citizens Advice. Speaking to a debt adviser is free and will not affect your credit file.
Last verified 26 May 2026 by the Compliance Reviewer.