How to Close a Limited Company
A guide to closing a UK limited company, covering the strike-off process, members' voluntary liquidation, tax implications of distributing assets and the steps directors must follow.
Closing a UK private limited company requires following a formal process to ensure all legal, tax and regulatory obligations are met. The two main methods are voluntary strike off and members’ voluntary liquidation (MVL). For a side-by-side comparison of these two routes, see striking off vs liquidation .
Choosing the Right Method
| Factor | Strike Off | Members’ Voluntary Liquidation |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Low (£33 filing fee) | Higher (liquidator fees, typically £1,500+) |
| Speed | Approximately 3 months | 3 to 12 months |
| Suitable for | Companies with few assets and no debts | Companies with significant assets to distribute |
| Tax treatment of assets | Capital distribution if below £25,000 (or income distribution) | Capital gains tax treatment |
| Creditor protection | Limited formal process | Full creditor notification |
Method 1: Voluntary Strike Off
Voluntary strike off (also called voluntary dissolution) is the simplest and cheapest way to close a company. It is suitable for companies that have:
- Stopped trading or never traded
- No outstanding debts (including to HMRC, employees and suppliers)
- No pending legal proceedings
- Minimal assets to distribute
Steps to Strike Off
- Settle all debts — pay all creditors, including HMRC for any outstanding corporation tax , PAYE and VAT
- Close the company’s bank account after distributing remaining funds
- File final accounts and tax returns with HMRC and Companies House
- Deregister for VAT (if applicable)
- Close the PAYE scheme with HMRC (if the company had employees)
- Apply for strike off using form DS01 filed at Companies House
- Notify all interested parties — send copies of the DS01 to all creditors, employees, shareholders, pension trustees and anyone else with an interest
DS01 Requirements
The application must be signed by a majority of the directors . The company must not have:
- Traded or carried on business in the previous 3 months
- Changed its name in the previous 3 months
- Made a disposal for value of any property or rights in the previous 3 months
- Engaged in any activity except what is necessary for the strike-off process
The Strike-Off Process
| Stage | Timeline |
|---|---|
| DS01 filed | Day 0 |
| First Gazette notice | Published within days |
| Objection period | 2 months from Gazette notice |
| Second Gazette notice | After objection period (if no objections) |
| Company dissolved | Approximately 3 months after application |
During the 2-month objection period, any creditor, employee, shareholder or other interested party can object to the strike off. Common objectors include HMRC (if tax returns are outstanding) and The Pensions Regulator (if pension obligations are unresolved).
Method 2: Members’ Voluntary Liquidation
An MVL is used when the company is solvent (able to pay all its debts) but the directors want to wind it up formally and distribute the remaining assets to shareholders.
Why Choose an MVL
- Assets above £25,000 — capital gains tax treatment applies, which can be more tax-efficient than income tax treatment
- Business Asset Disposal Relief (formerly Entrepreneurs’ Relief) may apply, giving a 10% CGT rate on qualifying gains up to £1 million lifetime limit
- Provides a formal process with creditor protection
- Suitable for companies with property, investments or significant cash reserves
Steps for an MVL
- Directors make a Declaration of Solvency — a statutory declaration that the company can pay all its debts within 12 months of the liquidation starting
- Shareholders pass a special resolution (75% majority) to wind up the company voluntarily
- Appoint a licensed insolvency practitioner as liquidator
- Liquidator takes control — realises assets, pays creditors and distributes the surplus to shareholders
- File final accounts with Companies House
- Company is dissolved after the liquidator files the final return
Tax Treatment of MVL Distributions
| Component | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Distribution to shareholders | Treated as a capital distribution (not a dividend) |
| Capital gains tax | Payable on the gain (distribution minus original share cost) |
| Business Asset Disposal Relief | 10% CGT rate on qualifying gains up to £1 million |
| Standard CGT rates | 10% (basic rate) or 20% (higher rate) on non-qualifying gains |
| Annual exempt amount | £3,000 per individual (2024/25) can be offset against the gain |
Distributing Assets Under £25,000
If the company has assets of £25,000 or less to distribute, the directors can apply for a capital distribution without going through an MVL, provided:
- The company applies for strike off using form DS01
- The distribution is made before the company is struck off
- The total distribution does not exceed £25,000
Distributions above £25,000 made outside an MVL are treated as income (dividend income) rather than capital, resulting in a potentially higher tax bill.
HMRC Obligations Before Closing
Before closing, the company must settle all tax affairs:
| Tax | Action Required |
|---|---|
| Corporation tax | File final CT600 return and pay any tax due |
| PAYE | Submit final RTI return, issue P45s to all employees and directors |
| VAT | Deregister and file final VAT return |
| Statutory accounts | File final accounts with Companies House |
After the Company is Dissolved
Once dissolved:
- The company ceases to exist as a legal entity
- Any remaining assets (including bank balances, property or intellectual property) pass to the Crown as bona vacantia
- Directors should ensure all assets have been properly distributed before dissolution
- A dissolved company can be restored to the register within 6 years (by court order) or 6 years (by administrative restoration) if needed
Accounting Entries for Closure
The closing process creates final entries in the company’s accounting records :
| Transaction | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Final creditor payments | Creditors / HMRC payable | Bank |
| Asset realisation | Bank | Assets (at book value) |
| Gain/loss on disposal | P&L | Assets (difference) |
| Distribution to shareholders | Retained earnings | Bank / shareholders’ account |
| Corporation tax on final period | Tax expense | Tax payable |