Company dissolution is the process of removing a company from the Companies House register, after which the company ceases to exist as a legal entity. Dissolution can be initiated voluntarily by the directors or compulsorily by Companies House or a court.

Types of Dissolution

TypeInitiated ByCommon Reason
Voluntary strike offDirectors (form DS01)Company no longer needed; ceased trading
Compulsory strike offCompanies House (Registrar)Failure to file accounts or confirmation statements
Court-ordered winding upCreditors or courtInsolvency or public interest
After voluntary liquidationLiquidatorCompany wound up through MVL or CVL

Voluntary Strike Off (DS01)

The most common method for closing a company that is no longer needed.

Eligibility

The company must not have, in the previous 3 months:

  • Traded or carried on business
  • Changed its name
  • Disposed of property or rights for value
  • Engaged in any activity other than what is necessary for the strike-off process

Process

StepAction
1Settle all debts and close the PAYE scheme
2File outstanding accounts and tax returns
3Majority of directors sign form DS01
4Send copies of DS01 to all stakeholders (creditors, shareholders, employees, pension trustees)
5File DS01 with Companies House (fee: £33 online or by post)
6Companies House publishes a First Gazette notice
72-month objection period begins
8If no objections, Companies House publishes a Second Gazette notice
9Company is dissolved (typically 3 months from application)

Who Must Receive a Copy of DS01

Within 7 days of filing, the directors must send copies to:

  • All shareholders
  • All creditors (including HMRC)
  • All employees and former employees with outstanding claims
  • Pension scheme trustees or managers
  • Any directors who did not sign the application

Compulsory Strike Off by Companies House

Companies House can strike off a company if it has reasonable cause to believe the company is not carrying on business or in operation. This commonly happens when:

Compulsory Strike Off Process

StageAction
1Companies House sends a letter asking if the company is still active
2If no response within 14 days, a First Gazette notice is published
32-month objection period
4If no objection or response, Second Gazette notice
5Company dissolved — removed from register

Objecting to Strike Off

Any person can object to a company being struck off during the 2-month objection period. Common objectors include:

ObjectorReason
HMRCOutstanding tax liabilities or unfiled returns
CreditorsUnpaid debts
EmployeesOutstanding wages or redundancy pay claims
ShareholdersAssets not properly distributed
The Pensions RegulatorUnresolved pension obligations

To object, the person writes to Companies House explaining why the company should not be struck off. If the objection is accepted, the strike-off action is suspended.

What Happens After Dissolution

Company Assets

Any assets remaining at the time of dissolution pass to the Crown as bona vacantia (ownerless property). This includes:

  • Cash in bank accounts
  • Property and land
  • Intellectual property (trademarks, patents)
  • Shares in other companies
  • Debts owed to the company

The Treasury Solicitor (or equivalents in Scotland and Northern Ireland) administers bona vacantia and can sell or dispose of the assets.

Company Liabilities

Dissolution does not extinguish the company’s debts. Creditors can apply to restore the company to the register to pursue outstanding claims.

Restoring a Dissolved Company

A dissolved company can be restored to the Companies House register through two methods:

Administrative Restoration (s.1024)

FeatureDetail
Who can applyFormer directors or shareholders
Time limitWithin 6 years of dissolution
RequirementsCompany was trading at the time of strike off; all outstanding filings delivered
Fee£100 plus the cost of any outstanding filings
Applied toCompanies House (not the court)

Court-Ordered Restoration (s.1029)

FeatureDetail
Who can applyAny person with an interest (including creditors, former directors, shareholders)
Time limitWithin 6 years of dissolution (or longer for personal injury claims)
RequirementsCourt must be satisfied that restoration is just
CostCourt fees plus legal costs (typically £1,000+)

When a company is restored, it is treated as if it had never been dissolved. All filing obligations for the period of dissolution must be met, and any bona vacantia property is returned.

Dissolution and Tax

Before dissolution, the company must settle all tax affairs:

TaxRequirement
Corporation taxFile final CT600 and pay any liability
VATDeregister and file final return
PAYEClose the scheme and issue P45s
DistributionsApply correct tax treatment to any capital distributions

HMRC frequently objects to strike-off applications where tax returns are outstanding.

Accounting for Dissolution

The final accounting records should show:

AccountPosition at Dissolution
AssetsZero (all distributed or transferred to the Crown)
LiabilitiesZero (all settled)
Share capitalReturned to shareholders via distributions
Retained earningsDistributed or eliminated

The company must file its final accounts with Companies House before applying for strike off. These accounts cover the period from the last filed accounts to the date of cessation of trading.