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Insolvency glossary

Insolvency comes with a lot of jargon at exactly the moment a director has least patience for it, so here are the key terms in plain English. If a creditor, accountant or letter has used a word you do not recognise, find it here, then follow the link for the full guide. Understanding the language is the first step to feeling back in control of the situation.

Administration
A rescue procedure that puts a company under a Licensed Insolvency Practitioner with a moratorium that stops creditor action while a rescue or sale is arranged.
Bounce Back Loan
A government-guaranteed loan of up to £50,000 taken by many small companies in the pandemic. Not personally guaranteed unless misused.
Compulsory liquidation
A court-ordered winding up of a company, usually following a creditor winding-up petition.
Creditors Voluntary Liquidation (CVL)
The director-led process to close an insolvent company, run by a Licensed Insolvency Practitioner. The most common UK insolvency procedure.
Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA)
A binding agreement to repay creditors over a fixed period, usually three to five years, while the company keeps trading.
Director loan account
A record of money owed between a director and the company. Overdrawn means the director owes the company, which the liquidator can collect.
Personal guarantee
A director's personal promise to repay a company debt if the company cannot. Can put personal assets at risk if the company fails.
Pre-pack administration
A sale of the business arranged before administration and completed on appointment, to preserve a viable business and jobs.
Statutory demand
A formal written demand for a debt, usually giving 21 days to pay before a creditor can present a winding-up petition.
Strike off
Removing a company from the Companies House register using form DS01. Only suitable for a solvent or dormant company with no significant debts.
Time to Pay arrangement
An agreement with HMRC to clear tax arrears in instalments, usually over up to 12 months.
Winding-up petition
A court application by a creditor to close a company over an unpaid debt. The most serious creditor action.
Wrongful trading
Continuing to trade when there is no reasonable prospect of avoiding insolvent liquidation. Can make a director personally liable.