Business Insolvency Advice Online

Business Insolvency

The first and most important step to take is to acknowledge that you have a problem that you are unlikely to solve on your own. Seeking advice from your accountant, solicitor or Citizens Advice Bureau will help clarify your options and ensure that you stay on the right side of the law. Remember insolvency law can be complicated and varies considerably depending on the nature of your debts and the legal structure of your business.

Liquidation

If your company is placed into liquidation then you will need to send the Council documentary evidence to confirm the date of the liquidation meeting. If we are owed any business rates we will make a claim as an unsecured creditor to the Insolvency Practitioner (the liquidator). We may receive a dividend. If you vacate the property we will make the necessary amendments to your business rate account. If the lease remains with the Insolvency Practitioner no rates are payable until the lease has been surrendered back to the landlord. The Insolvency Practitioner holds annual meetings and will issue reports and statements to all creditors.

Company Voluntary Arrangement

If your company has been placed into company voluntary arrangement (CVA) you will need to send us documentary evidence to confirm the date of the meeting. Once we have received the evidence we will amend your business rates account as necessary, submit a claim and vote by proxy. Any charges from the date of the meeting of the CVA onwards are outside the CVA and are therefore recoverable. If we are owed any business rates up to the date of the meeting these will be covered as part of the proposal of the CVA. The CVA binds the Council only if we are told of the meeting, but the supervisor may invite the Council to join.

Administration

If an administration order is placed on your company we will need a copy of the order as documentary evidence. While the order is in place the Council cannot take any recovery action. We will submit a claim to the Administrator to the date of the order. The Administrator may pay the business rates owing from the date of the order, but is not obliged to. The Administrator looks at your company's finances and usually either lets trade continue with the intention of getting your company back on a sound financial footing or sells it as an ongoing concern. Administration orders can last up to several years, most becoming CVAs or liquidations.

Receivership

If a lender appoints an administrative receiver because of a debt you will be placed in receivership. You will need to send us documentary evidence to confirm the date of the receivership. We will submit a claim up to the date of the receivership and close the account, and then produce a new account for your company from the date of the receivership onwards. This is known as post-receivership. It is payable, but some receivers, who are never personally liable, will not pay because they usually intend to sell the company as a going concern. If the receivership ends your company may or may not be taken off the Companies House Register.

Insolvent Company Details

Companies in difficulty and their creditor meetings. The service is updated daily by the UK insolvency network. Click below for more information.

Who to contact

After consulting these notes you should contact a fully qualified corporate Insolvency Practitioner. Please call us on 0800 092 6350 or e-mail us at and we will put you in contact with an IP in your local area who has experience in commercial matters.

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