Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation (2024)

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What is a Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation?

A Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation (CVL) is the most widely used form of liquidation in the UK. It is generally used when the Company’s directors choose to voluntarily close the business in a way that is efficient and professional.

Generally, a CVL is used when the amount of liabilities is greater than the company’s assets, or the company cannot pay its debts as they fall due, meaning it is technically insolvent. If a director continues to trade a company beyond this point, there is a higher risk that they will be held personally liable for some of the company’s debt.

Advice

One of our licensed insolvency practitioners will conduct a full review of your business and advise you on any risk areas. We will ask you to provide us with the information we need and work with you to plan the orderly closure of your company, including how best to notify your staff, suppliers, bank and others

Formalities

We will prepare all of the documentation to place the company into liquidation and ensure you have met your obligations as a director. We will arrange for all statutory notices to be filed with Companies House and HMRC. We will deal with all correspondence with creditors and others. The company will then be in liquidation

Implementation

The liquidators main job is to realise the company’s assets. We will implement the strategy agreed with you at the outset to sell the company’s assets and collect in any money from your customers. Once complete, any surplus funds will be paid out to creditors in a set order of priority

Closure!

Once the realisation of assets and distribution of funds is complete, we will promptly arrange for the liquidation to be concluded and the company to be dissolved at Companies House. In most cases, this will be within 3-4 months of the company entering liquidation

How does a CVL work?

The first step is to speak with one of our experienced team, who will usually be a Licensed Insolvency Practitioner, who will conduct a full review of your company’s financial position in order to determine whether a CVL is your best option, as there may be other suitable rescue alternatives depending on your circ*mstances. In cases where a CVL is appropriate, you engage the Insolvency Practitioner as your proposed Liquidator who will liaise with your creditors and start the formal side of the process, providing all of the documentation that is needed. The Insolvency Practitioner will arrange for a meeting of shareholders to be called in order to formally place the company into liquidation. The Insolvency Practitioner will also write to your creditors, HMRC, the company’s bankers and others to advise that the company will be placed into liquidation. Our team will advise you whether a creditors meeting will be required, or whether a different route can be used where no creditors meeting is necessary.

Creditors are given notice of the liquidation (and whether there is to be a creditors’ meeting). If there is to be a meeting, in practice it is rare that anybody other than the directors and the insolvency practitioner will attend. The liquidation will also be advertised in the London Gazette (a statutory notices newspaper which banks and other financial institutions will read). Prior to the liquidation, the Insolvency Practitioner will work with the directors to prepare a pack of information that will outline the company’s position and how it has reached the point of insolvency, including a summary of the company’s assets and liabilities. If there is a meeting, the Insolvency Practitioner will conduct the meeting on behalf of the directors and present the information pack. If any creditors do attend, this will often be by telephone conference call and they will be given the opportunity to ask questions, and the Insolvency Practitioner will discuss with you before the meeting if this is likely to happen and what to expect. The Liquidator is appointed if creditors representing more than 50% of the value of claims voting are in favour for the proposed liquidator.

Once the Liquidator is formally appointed, it is their job to realise the assets of the company in order to pay a dividend to the creditors.

Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation (3)

We know that it is often difficult for business owners to make the decision to shut a firm that is experiencing financial difficulties. In many cases, you will have already struggled to manage cash flow, meet the wage bill and keep your creditors at bay, no doubt leaving you feeling stressed and overwhelmed. That’s why our team of experts are on hand to listen to your unique set of circ*mstances before guiding you through the process of a Creditors Voluntary Liquidation.

A Liquidator carries out other functions to ensure the company is closed in an orderly fashion. These include:

Ensuring all

statutory notifications and filings are submitted to Companies House and others

Reporting to creditors

and other stakeholders on the progress of the Liquidation

Processing employees’ claims

to enable payment to them from the Redundancy Payments Service

Agreeing creditors’ claims

and paying dividends from the available assets

Confirming the causes of insolvency

and considering any actions against third parties

Closing the company’s

bank accounts, VAT and PAYE schemes and arranging the dissolution of the company

Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation (4)

It is important to note that Directors of the company must carefully consider and document any decisions made during trading that continues after they realise the company is insolvent. If the directors continue to trade after this point, and a creditor challenges their actions, this can result in a prosecution and financial claim for wrongful trading which may put the Directors personal assets at risk. We will advise you on minimising these risks.

Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation (2024)

FAQs

Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation? ›

A Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation – or CVL – is a formal insolvency procedure which brings about the end of an insolvent company. A CVL can only be entered into under the guidance of a licensed insolvency practitioner who will assume the role of liquidator

liquidator
In law, a liquidator is the officer appointed when a company goes into winding-up or liquidation who has responsibility for collecting in all of the assets under such circ*mstances of the company and settling all claims against the company before putting the company into dissolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Liquidator_(law)
of the company during the process.

What is the process of creditor voluntary liquidation? ›

The liquidator will advertise for claims and establish a final cut-off date for paying the creditors. They will then take final steps to agree to the final receipts and payments. The company will then be struck off the Companies House register. Any liabilities will be then written off.

What happens to creditors in liquidation? ›

When a company enters liquidation, any assets it owns are sold by the liquidator to generate funds for creditors. Once all creditors have been repaid as far as funds allow, any remaining debts are written off.

Which of the following will trigger a creditor's voluntary liquidation? ›

A company entering into a CVL will be insolvent. This can be because either: The company is unable to pay its debts at the time they are due for payment. Liabilities are greater than assets.

How does a creditors voluntary winding up work? ›

Process of a Creditors Voluntary Winding Up

the liquidator will administer the winding up process by paying out creditors with available funds. They will then prepare a final report for creditors, lodge various documents with ASIC and request for the company's deregistration.

How long does creditors' voluntary liquidation take? ›

A general estimate of the timeframe of CVL cases is around 6 to 24 months. For more information about timescales involved with the different Liquidation processes and for expert support, feel free to contact our team today for professional advice.

How long does voluntary liquidation last? ›

When it comes to Creditors' Voluntary Liquidations, the process of placing the company into a CVL can take as little as 14 days. However, completing the liquidation is a process that will often take between 6-24 months depending on the size of the firm and its individual circ*mstances.

Why would you go into voluntary liquidation? ›

A voluntary liquidation is a self-imposed windup and dissolution of a company that has been approved by its shareholders. Such a decision will happen once an organization's leadership decides that the company has no reason to continue operating.

Can you reverse a creditors voluntary liquidation? ›

Reversing a Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation (CVL)

Similar to MVLs, halting a CVL is not easy and requires a court order. If the company has been struck off it is only possible to reverse the liquidation via a process known as 'administrative restoration'.

Does voluntary liquidation affect your credit rating? ›

Your personal credit rating should not be affected by company liquidation, unless you are indebted to the insolvent company and the liquidator is obliged to recovery action against you, such as obtaining at County Court Judgement. Such action would appear on your creditor file for approximately six years.

Who gets paid first in liquidation? ›

Secured creditors (divided into fixed charge holders and floating charge holders)

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