What is company administration?
If your company is struggling to pay its debts, and you cannot reach an agreement with your creditors, you will need to appoint an administrator who will seek to prevent your company from being wound up.
If you choose to appoint an administrator, they will notify your creditors and Companies House of their appointment and a moratorium will be put in place to freeze hostile actions by creditors against your company.
Once the moratorium is in place your administrator has eight weeks to decide on the best course of action for your company, and inform creditors, employees and Companies House of their intentions.
The options available to your administrator include:
- The negotiation of a Company Voluntary Arrangement, whereby your creditors are repaid over a fixed period and your company continues to trade.
- Arranging for the business to be sold to another company as a 'going concern'.
- Entering into voluntary liquidation, in which your company assets are sold off until creditors are paid and your company is then closed.
- The closure of the company, if there are no assets that can be sold.
Your administrator will, where possible, attempt to salvage the business and leave you in a position from which you can continue to trade.