Bankruptcy proceedings
The involuntary counterpart for a company that cannot pay, not to be confused with solvent liquidation.
Bankruptcy proceedingsA company left dormant but not properly liquidated is a continuing liability, not a closed chapter, accumulating filings, penalties and exposure for those who ran it. A solvent liquidation closes it cleanly: dissolution by shareholder resolution, the creditor call and waiting period, debts settled, tax cleared, surplus distributed, and the entity struck from the register, in that order, so nothing is left to come back. We confirm the company is genuinely solvent first, then run the whole wind-down in full.
Solvent wind-down, in the right order.
A solvent liquidation is the orderly, voluntary wind-down of a company that can pay its debts, decided by its shareholders under the Code of Obligations. The company is dissolved, settles its creditors, clears its tax, distributes any surplus, and is struck from the commercial register. It is the clean way to close a company that has served its purpose, leaving no loose ends — quite different from bankruptcy, the involuntary process for a company that cannot pay.
Liquidation is the solvent counterpart to bankruptcy, may follow a distressed sale of the business, and closes the cycle that annual compliance otherwise maintains.
The steps run in a fixed order built around creditor protection: creditors first, the waiting period, then shareholders, then strike-off.
| Step | What happens |
|---|---|
| Dissolution | Shareholders resolve; “in liquidation” added |
| Creditor call | Creditors invited; waiting period runs |
| Settle & clear | Debts paid, assets realised, tax cleared |
| Distribute & strike off | Surplus to shareholders, then removal |
Doing the steps out of order (above all, distributing to shareholders before creditors and the waiting period) is how a liquidation creates liability rather than ending it. We follow the sequence properly, so the closure is clean and final.
Confirm solvency, dissolve, protect creditors, clear tax, then distribute and strike off, in order.
Establishing that the company can genuinely pay its creditors in full before anything begins.
Passing the dissolution resolution and registering the liquidators and the “in liquidation” status.
Publishing the creditor call, settling debts, realising assets, and running the waiting period.
Filing final returns and dealing with the tax position to clearance with the authorities.
Distributing the surplus to shareholders and striking the company from the register.
Cost depends on the complexity of the assets, the number of creditors and the state of the tax position: a clean holding closes more cheaply than a company with complex assets or unresolved matters. Against the accumulating cost and exposure of an abandoned company, a proper liquidation is the cheaper end.
We scope and quote against the company. Pricing is on request.
Discuss the closureA liquidation that closes the company finally rests on:
The tempting shortcut, to stop filing and let a dormant company drift, does not close anything. The obligations continue, penalties accrue, the register may act, and unresolved creditor or tax claims stay attached to those who ran it. A company is only genuinely closed when it has been liquidated properly and struck from the register, with creditors paid and tax cleared. The proper process costs less than the loose ends an abandonment leaves, and it gives finality an abandonment never does. We close companies so they are actually closed, with nothing left to come back.
Confirming solvency, running the wind-down in the right order, clearing the tax and striking the company off, cleanly and finally, is the work this firm does.
Creditors paid, tax cleared, the register entry removed: a company genuinely closed, with no loose obligations.
Creditors and the waiting period before any distribution, so the closure ends liability rather than creating it.
A genuine solvency check at the outset, and the correct insolvency route if the company is not, in fact, solvent.
The involuntary counterpart for a company that cannot pay, not to be confused with solvent liquidation.
Bankruptcy proceedingsSelling the viable business or assets before a wind-down, to preserve going-concern value.
Distressed M&AThe obligations a dormant company keeps until it is properly liquidated and struck off.
Annual complianceTell us the company and its position. A partner confirms solvency, runs the wind-down in full, and strikes it off — with nothing left behind.