Corporate Insolvency: What It Means and What to Do Next

Corporate insolvency means a company cannot pay all its debts as and when they become due and payable — the test set by section 95A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Once a company is insolvent, Australian law provides four formal responses, each administered by an ASIC-registered practitioner: Small Business Restructuring (Part 5.3B), voluntary administration (Part 5.3A), receivership (Part 5.2) and liquidation (Parts 5.4–5.5). Which one fits depends on three things: whether the business is viable, how much it owes, and how urgent the creditor pressure is.

If you’re reading this at night with a knot in your stomach, take a breath. Insolvency is a legal state, not a verdict on you — and it has a defined set of lawful exits. This page is the map: what insolvency actually means, what your duties are the moment you suspect it, every formal process side by side, and how directors in practice choose between them.

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On this page

Is my company insolvent? The section 95A test

The legal test is short. Under section 95A of the Corporations Act 2001, a person (including a company) is solvent if — and only if — they are able to pay all their debts as and when they become due and payable. A company that is not solvent is insolvent.

Two things follow from that wording:

ASIC’s guidance for directors puts the practical duty plainly: directors must stay continuously informed about the company’s financial position and must prevent the company trading and incurring debts if it is insolvent. See ASIC — Insolvency: a guide for directors.

Warning signs of insolvency

Insolvency rarely announces itself with a single event. It accumulates. ASIC’s guidance for directors lists common indicators, including:

Some of those signs also carry their own legal consequences, which is why they matter beyond the bookkeeping:

If you recognise several of these signs in your company, don’t wait for a court document to make it official. The earlier the position is assessed honestly, the more of the options below remain open.

Your duties as a director once insolvency is suspected

The moment you suspect the company is, or is likely to become, insolvent, your legal position changes. Four things matter most:

  1. Stop incurring new debts you doubt the company can pay. Under section 588G of the Corporations Act, a director can be personally liable for debts the company incurs while insolvent, where there were reasonable grounds to suspect insolvency. Consequences can include compensation orders, substantial civil penalties, disqualification and — where dishonesty is involved — criminal prosecution. Our insolvent trading guide covers the duty, the defences and the consequences in depth.
  2. Keep lodgements current, even if you can’t pay. Lodging BAS and SGC statements on time is what keeps DPN liabilities remittable and preserves your options. Paying is a separate question; lodging protects you either way — see the lockdown DPN guide.
  3. Don’t move assets, prefer favourites or start a “new” entity with the old company’s business. Shifting assets to a related entity for less than market value to defeat creditors is illegal phoenix activity, attracting personal liability and criminal exposure — see ASIC’s guidance on illegal phoenix activity. Payments that favour one creditor over others while insolvent can later be unwound by a liquidator as unfair preferences.
  4. Get qualified advice — quickly, and document it. The law rewards exactly this. The safe harbour in section 588GA protects a director from insolvent trading liability for debts incurred while pursuing a course of action reasonably likely to lead to a better outcome for the company than immediate administration or liquidation. Its conditions include keeping employee entitlements and tax reporting up to date and taking advice from an appropriately qualified adviser — and it only works if you engage it before the position becomes hopeless.

None of this means you must appoint someone tomorrow. It means the decision now has legal weight, and drifting is the one choice that reliably makes everything worse.

Not sure whether your company is actually insolvent, or just squeezed? That’s a question with a knowable answer. Call 0468 061 936 for a confidential, no-obligation conversation, or send an enquiry — we’ll help you assess the position honestly before you decide anything.

The map: every formal insolvency process compared

Every formal corporate insolvency process in Australia sits in Chapter 5 of the Corporations Act 2001, and every one of them is administered by an ASIC-registered practitioner. Here is the whole landscape in one table:

Scales of justice representing the Corporations Act framework governing Australian insolvency

ProcessWho starts itWho controls the companyPurposeTypical durationEffect on a non-lockdown DPN
Small Business Restructuring (SBR) — Part 5.3BThe directors, by appointing a restructuring practitionerDirectors stay in control; the business keeps tradingRestructure the debts of an eligible small company (total liabilities of $1 million or less) through a plan creditors vote on~20 business days to propose the plan, then a 15-business-day creditor voteAppointing the practitioner within 21 days of the notice date remits the penalty
Voluntary administration (VA) — Part 5.3AUsually the directors; a liquidator or a substantially-secured creditor can also appointThe administrator takes control; a moratorium pauses most creditor enforcementSave the company or its business, or deliver a better return to creditors than immediate liquidation~20–25 business days to the second creditors’ meeting (extendable by the court)Appointing the administrator within 21 days of the notice date remits the penalty
Deed of company arrangement (DOCA) — Part 5.3ACreditors, by vote at the second meeting of a VAControl usually returns to the directors, subject to the deed’s terms, with a deed administrator overseeingBind all unsecured creditors to a compromise so the company can continueDeed executed within 15 business days of the vote; deed terms commonly run months to yearsFollows a VA — it was the administrator’s appointment that remitted the penalty
Receivership — Part 5.2A secured creditor (usually under its security agreement); occasionally the courtA receiver controls the secured assets; directors remain in office with reduced powers over those assets [VERIFY: precise division of director powers during receivership — confirm against ASIC receivership guidance]Collect and sell enough secured property to repay the appointing secured creditorVaries with the assets and any sale processNone — receivership is not a remitting action under the DPN rules [VERIFY: confirm receivership is not a remission event under Div 269 Sch 1 TAA 1953.]
Creditors’ voluntary liquidation (CVL) — Part 5.5The directors and shareholders (75% special resolution)The liquidator takes control; the company stops tradingOrderly wind-up of an insolvent company; assets sold, proceeds distributed in the statutory order, company deregistered~2–6 months (simplified) or 6–12 months (standard)Winding up beginning within 21 days of the notice date remits the penalty
Court liquidation — Part 5.4Usually a creditor, by court application (often after an unmet statutory demand); sometimes ASICA court-appointed liquidator; directors have no say in who it isCompulsory wind-up of an insolvent companyMonths to years, depending on complexityOnly if the winding up begins within the 21 days — and the timing is out of the directors’ hands
Members’ voluntary liquidation (MVL) — Part 5.5The shareholders of a solvent company, after the directors declare solvencyThe liquidatorWind up a solvent company and return surplus funds to shareholdersSeveral months, variesNot applicable — an MVL requires the company to be able to pay its debts in full

Three notes on that table:

How to choose: matching the process to your situation

There is no universally “best” process — only the one that fits your company’s viability, debt level and urgency. In practice, the decision usually runs in this order:

  1. Check for a DPN first. If a director penalty notice is sitting in your inbox or letterbox, the 21-day analysis comes before everything else on this page — the deadline runs from the date on the notice, not the date you read it. Start with what to do when a DPN arrives.
  2. Ask the honest viability question. Is the business — not the company shell — capable of trading profitably if the historical debt were dealt with? If yes, a rescue path deserves a serious look. If no, an orderly wind-up is usually the responsible answer, and pretending otherwise just spends money that could fund a cleaner exit. If the business is viable and the position is stressed rather than sunk, an informal business turnaround may resolve it without any appointment.
  3. If viable and total liabilities are $1 million or less — test SBR first. It is generally the cheapest formal rescue, the directors stay in control, and the business keeps trading while creditors vote on a plan. Eligibility also requires tax lodgements to be up to date and employee entitlements paid.
  4. If viable but too large or ineligible for SBR — consider voluntary administration, usually aiming at a deed of company arrangement. VA needs enough funding to trade through the process, and the administrator takes control — but its moratorium buys breathing space no informal option can.
  5. If the ATO is the main creditor and the business is fundamentally sound, the answer may not be a formal appointment at all — a properly structured payment plan or other engagement with the ATO can resolve the pressure. Start with the ATO debt guide.
  6. If the company is stressed but arguably still solvent, with a credible turnaround plan, safe harbour advice under section 588GA may let you pursue the turnaround with protection from insolvent trading liability — provided the statutory conditions are met and you act on qualified advice.
  7. If there is no viable path — choose a CVL now rather than a court liquidation later. Directors who initiate an orderly wind-up keep the timing, choose the liquidator, stop their insolvent trading exposure growing, and generally give employees a faster route to their entitlements than directors who wait to be wound up.

One warning belongs in every version of this decision: do not “solve” insolvency by quietly moving the business into a new entity. Illegal phoenix activity — transferring assets for less than market value to defeat creditors — exposes directors and their advisers to personal liability and criminal prosecution, and liquidators are required to look for it (ASIC — illegal phoenix activity). A lawful fresh start is possible — but it runs through a registered practitioner and market-value transactions, not around them.

Seven options is a lot to weigh alone, and the right one depends on numbers you already have. Call 0468 061 936 — confidential, no obligation — or send an enquiry and we’ll call you back. We’ll tell you straight if none of the formal processes is necessary.

Corporate insolvency vs personal insolvency

Australia runs two separate insolvency systems. Companies are dealt with under the Corporations Act 2001, regulated by ASIC; individuals are dealt with under the Bankruptcy Act 1966 — bankruptcy, debt agreements and personal insolvency agreements — regulated by the Australian Financial Security Authority (AFSA). A company cannot go “bankrupt”, and your company entering liquidation does not make you bankrupt. The two systems connect through personal exposure: debts you personally guaranteed, director penalty notice liabilities and insolvent trading claims are your debts, and if they cannot be paid or settled, they can push a director from the corporate system into the personal one. This is exactly why mapping your personal exposure — guarantees, DPN risk, loan accounts — should happen before choosing the company’s path, not after.

What formal insolvency costs

Fees are set by the practitioner, generally subject to creditor approval, and vary with size and complexity. As typical market ranges only — each linked page explains what drives the number:

Where the company has assets, fees usually come from asset proceeds; where it has none, directors commonly fund the fee. Always obtain written estimates from registered practitioners before any appointment — we can help you obtain and compare them.

Get confidential advice today

Restructure Partners is an Australian restructuring and insolvency advisory. We help directors work out whether their company is actually insolvent, map their personal exposure, compare SBR, voluntary administration and liquidation honestly against the informal options — and, where a formal appointment is the right path, connect them with the ASIC-registered practitioners who administer it. We’ll tell you straight if a formal process isn’t necessary. However far along the pressure is — even if a statutory demand or winding-up application has already arrived — there are still decisions worth making deliberately.

FAQ

What is corporate insolvency?

Corporate insolvency means a company is unable to pay all its debts as and when they become due and payable. That is the test set by section 95A of the Corporations Act 2001 — a company that is not solvent is insolvent. Once a company is insolvent, its directors have a duty to prevent it incurring further debts, and the formal responses available are Small Business Restructuring, voluntary administration, receivership and liquidation.

How do I know if my company is insolvent?

Apply the cash-flow question: can the company pay every debt on time as it falls due — wages, superannuation, BAS, rent, suppliers? Warning signs identified by ASIC include ongoing losses, poor cash flow, creditors unpaid outside usual trading terms, overdue taxes and superannuation, incomplete financial records and problems obtaining finance. If several of these are present, treat the company as potentially insolvent and get advice promptly.

What happens when a company becomes insolvent?

Nothing happens automatically — but the directors’ legal position changes immediately. They risk personal liability for insolvent trading under section 588G of the Corporations Act 2001 if the company keeps incurring debts, and creditors can escalate through statutory demands, winding-up applications, ATO garnishee notices and director penalty notices. The formal responses are Small Business Restructuring, voluntary administration, receivership (initiated by a secured creditor) and liquidation.

Are directors personally liable for an insolvent company’s debts?

Not automatically — a company’s debts belong to the company. The main exceptions are debts the director personally guaranteed, director penalty notice liabilities for unpaid PAYG withholding, GST and superannuation guarantee charge, money the director owes the company, and compensation for insolvent trading under section 588G of the Corporations Act 2001 if the company incurred debts while insolvent.

What is the difference between insolvency and bankruptcy?

In Australia, bankruptcy applies only to individuals, under the Bankruptcy Act 1966, regulated by AFSA. Companies do not go bankrupt — an insolvent company goes into restructuring, administration, receivership or liquidation under the Corporations Act 2001, regulated by ASIC. A company entering liquidation does not make its director bankrupt, although personal guarantees or a director penalty notice can create personal debts that, if unpaid, may lead to personal insolvency.

Can an insolvent company keep trading?

Trading while insolvent exposes directors to personal liability under section 588G of the Corporations Act 2001. There are two lawful ways to keep trading: the safe harbour in section 588GA — pursuing a course of action reasonably likely to lead to a better outcome than immediate administration or liquidation, with strict conditions — or a formal process such as Small Business Restructuring or voluntary administration, where trading can continue under statutory protection.

Who can administer a formal insolvency process in Australia?

Only ASIC-registered practitioners. Registered liquidators administer voluntary administrations, deeds of company arrangement, receiverships and liquidations, and a registered restructuring practitioner administers a Small Business Restructuring. Advisers such as Restructure Partners help directors understand the options and connect them with registered practitioners — they do not perform the appointments themselves.

Does insolvency always mean closing the company?

No. Liquidation closes the company, but Small Business Restructuring and voluntary administration exist precisely so viable businesses can survive insolvency — by compromising debt through a restructuring plan or a deed of company arrangement. The earlier a director acts, the more likely a rescue path is still open.


This page is general information only, not legal or financial advice. Whether your company is insolvent, and which process (if any) fits, depends entirely on its specific circumstances — please seek advice from a qualified professional about your own position before acting. Restructure Partners does not perform formal insolvency appointments; these are carried out by ASIC-registered practitioners. Sources: Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (including ss 95A, 420A, 459E, 588G, 588GA and Parts 5.1, 5.2, 5.3A, 5.3B, 5.4, 5.5); ASIC — Insolvency: a guide for directors; ASIC — Illegal phoenix activity; ATO — Director penalty notices; AFSA — Australian Financial Security Authority.

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