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Link to PDF version of this page May 2008 version 15 - as modified by the Companies Act 2006 When reading these guidance notes, you need to be aware of the following: Some (but not all) of the provisions in the Companies Act 2006 have come into force. Therefore, some provisions in the Companies Act 1985 remain relevant. We have tried as far as possible to make it clear throughout these notes which Act applies. If you would like to find out more you may wish to visit our website at www.companieshouse.gov.uk where you can find out which provisions in the respective Acts are in force. Our website also contains a link to the BERR (The Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform) website www.berr.gov.uk/bbf/co-act-2006/index.html where you can find further information. Some provisions in the new Act are subject to transitional arrangements. We will as far as possible explain these in this guidance and give details on our website. There are two further stages in the implementation of the Companies Act 2006 scheduled for October 2008 and October 2009. We will update any guidance notes affected by those implementations at the time. You may wish also to keep an eye on our website where we will publish more information as the implementation process continues so you can access the most up to date information. Until October 2009, these guidance notes apply only to companies formed in Great Britain (England, Wales and Scotland). The separate system in Northern Ireland is then scheduled to merge into a single system for the whole of the United Kingdom.
This is a guide only and should be read with the relevant legislation.
Introduction This guide will help you to manage a dormant company so that you submit everything that you need to keep the company on the register at Companies House. It will help you to understand the simple - but important - legal obligations that still apply to a company even when it is dormant. For more general guidance about what companies have to send to Companies House, please see the other guides in our guidance series. View our guidance online at www.companieshouse.gov.uk/about/guidance.shtml) If after reading this guide, you are in doubt about your responsibilities, you should consider seeking advice from a solicitor or accountant.
2. What is the difference between a non-trading company and a dormant company? A company can remain dormant for as long as necessary - indefinitely if, for example, its purpose is just to prevent the name being used by another company. However, there are expenses associated with keeping a company on the register. In particular, there is an annual document-processing fee payable on delivery of an annual return. The fee is £15 when you submit it electronically, or £30 when you submit it on paper). While the company is dormant, it must still prepare and submit various other documents including annual company balance sheets to Companies House. The company will have to decide how to meet these expenses and who will run the company and be responsible for ensuring that it meets all the legal requirements. Managing a company is the responsibility of its officers. The officers are the company’s directors and company secretary. All companies must have directors. From 6th April 2008 a private company does not have to have a company secretary unless the company chooses to have one, or its articles of association require it. Public companies must have at least one qualified company secretary. If you do appoint a company secretary you must notify Companies House of the appointment, of any change of details or of the termination of the appointment on the appropriate form e.g. Forms 288a, 288b or 288c. These are available for filing online at www.companieshouse.gov.uk using a suitable Software Package or you can file on paper. The directors and secretary manage the company on behalf of the members. Among other things, they are responsible for holding meetings and ensuring that all the necessary returns, accounts and other documents reach Companies House by the due date. Further information about directors' and secretaries' responsibilities for maintaining their details on the Companies House Register is available in our booklet, 'Directors and Secretaries Guide'. 5. What happens if I do not submit documents to Companies House? When you are appointed as an officer, you take on some important obligations. If you don’t comply with them, there could be serious consequences. The company's officers could be prosecuted because they are personally responsible for ensuring that they submit company information on time. Failing to do so is a criminal offence. In addition, there will always be an automatic civil penalty for submitting accounts late. The Registrar could also assume that the company is no longer carrying on business or in operation and strike it from the register. If the Registrar strikes a company off the register, it ceases to exist and its assets become Crown property. 6. What if I no longer require the company? If you decide that you do not need your dormant company, you can arrange to have it struck off the register. There are two ways of doing this:
For more information on these subjects see our booklets, 'Strike-off, Dissolution and Restoration' and 'Liquidation and Insolvency' (or, 'Strike-off, Dissolution and Restoration (Scotland)' and 'Liquidation and Insolvency (Scotland)' for companies registered in Scotland).
For example, we need to know:
You register most of this information at Companies House when you form the company and, if anything changes, you will need to tell us, usually on the appropriate form. Every company must deliver an annual return to Companies House at least once every 12 months, – see question 6. Also, every year, a company must prepare accounts and send those to us. The safest and most secure way to send statutory information to Companies House is to use our online filing services. WebFiling contains inbuilt checks so that you can be sure you haven’t omitted any key information. For more information on availability and registration details please visit our website www.companieshouse.gov.uk. This chapter includes more information about when and how you need to tell us about changes to the above information. 2. What is a 'registered office'? All companies must have a registered office address, and the company's name must be displayed outside. Please note: If you intend to change the registered office but do not tell us, we will continue to send all reminders and official letters to the old address. You may never receive them and the company may be dissolved without your knowledge if you fail to file accounts and annual returns as the legislation requires.
These forms are available to file on line at www.companieshouse.gov.uk A change of particulars for a director means any of the following: name, address, occupation, nationality and other directorships; and for a company secretary it means name or address. 4. Who are the company members?A company member is a person who has agreed to become a member and whose name the company has entered into its register of members. For a limited company with shares, this means a person who owns shares in the company - a shareholder. For a company limited by guarantee, it means a person who has agreed to contribute to the assets of the company if it is wound up. The company must keep a register of its members. Unless you keep it at the registered office, you must notify Companies House where the company keeps the register, and you must notify any change in its location to Companies House on Form 353. If a company has shares, you must send details of the shareholders to Companies House. You must update the information every year on the Annual Return – see question 6. In addition, if the company has issued debentures, it must keep a register of debenture holders. Any member of the company or any other person has a right to inspect the register. Unless you keep the register at the registered office you must notify Companies House where the company keeps it, and of any change in its location. 5. What other statutory registers are there?There are several other statutory registers that may apply to the company. Although there is no obligation to notify Companies House about the location of any other statutory register, the company secretary is usually responsible for maintaining all the following registers - if they apply to the company:
These registers must be open to inspection by any person on payment of the prescribed fee. Any external requests from outside the company to view the register of members should contain the requester’s name and address, or if an organisation an individual’s name, plus the purpose of the request and whether the information will be shared with anyone else and if so, to whom and for what purpose. It is an offence to make a false statement when providing the details required for disclosure. The company must, within 5 working days, either comply with the request or apply to the court to restrict the access to the Register. It is a form that every company - even those that are dormant - must send to Companies House each year. It is a snapshot of key information about the company, such as directors, secretary, shareholders etc. (The annual return should not be confused with annual accounts - the two are entirely different.) You must complete the annual return accurately to a particular date known as the 'made-up date'. This is a date not later than:
The annual return form and annual document-processing fee must reach Companies House within 28 days after its made up date. The fee is £15 when submitted electronically, or £30 when submitted on paper. To help you meet this filing requirement, we will send a letter to the company’s registered office when your annual return is due. However, you do not have to wait for us to write to you to send in an annual return. It advises on how to file the form electronically by using our Software Filing or WebFiling services as this is the easiest option. Please note: Currently, a small proportion of companies on the register are unable to use our WebFiling Service. These include companies in compulsory liquidation or companies wishing to file in Welsh. As from June 2008 companies will be able to file certain documents in Welsh, using our WebFiling service. For more information please visit our website www.companieshouse.gov.uk If you do not have the facility to file online you can request a paper copy of the annual return form from our Contact Centre on 0870 33 33 636. 7. What is an accounting reference date? The accounting reference date is the date from which the financial year-end is reckoned. It is also the date that determines when accounts are due for delivery to Companies House. For all new companies the legislation sets the accounting reference date as the last day of the month in which the company was incorporated. The subsequent accounting reference dates will automatically be on the same date each year. You can change this date, if you wish to do so but you must notify Companies House of the new date using the change of accounting reference date form (Form 225) which is available for filing on line using Webfiling and many software filing packages. You must submit an acceptable Form 225 before the filing deadline of the accounts for the period that you wish to change. Changing the accounting reference date can be complicated because of the effect it has on the related accounts. For more information on this see our booklet, 'Accounts and Accounting Reference Dates'.8. What annual accounts are required? All limited companies - including dormant companies or those that have not traded - must file annual accounts at Companies House. For dormant companies, this means a balance sheet giving details of assets and liabilities and any relevant notes. The balance sheet and notes must comply with the statutory requirements of the Companies Act 1985 (for financial years beginning before 6 April 2008) or Companies Act 2006 (for financial years beginning on or after 6 April 2008) accordingly, as explained in chapter 3 of this booklet. You must file accounts even if the company has remained dormant from one year to the next - even if it has never traded - and, if the accounts are late, the company will incur a penalty. There is no special treatment for dormant companies. Being dormant does not mean that your company does not have to file accounts or file them on time. To make this easier for companies that have never traded they can submit dormant company accounts on-line by downloading a document template which has in-built checks. Please visit www.companieshouse.gov.uk to access our WebFiling service. 9. When must I file the annual accounts? For financial years starting on or after 6 April 2008 if you are filing your company's first accounts and those accounts cover a period of more than 12 months you must deliver them to Companies House:
or 3 months from the accounting reference date (ARD), whichever is longer. Unless you are filing your company's first accounts the time normally allowed for delivering accounts to Companies House is:
For financial years that start before 6 April 2008 you must normally deliver annual accounts to Companies House within 10 months of a company's accounting reference for a private company, and 7 months for a public company. However, if a company's first accounts cover a period longer than 12 months, the maximum time allowed is 22 months from the date of incorporation (19 months for a public company) or 3 months from the ARD, whichever is longer. We recommend that you send us your accounts promptly to ensure they arrive before the filing deadline. To help you file accounts on time, we send a reminder to the company's registered office 6 to 8 weeks before the accounts are due. Where a filing deadline expires on a Sunday or Bank Holiday the law still requires you to file acceptable accounts by that date. So you should ensure that you send them in time to arrive before such a deadline. If you need to know your filing deadline, contact us on 0870 33 33 636. 10. Who is responsible for preparing the accounts? The directors of every company must prepare accounts for each of its financial years. The company’s board of directors must approve the accounts and have them signed on their behalf before they send them to Companies House within the time allowed for filing (see question 9). 11. Does a company have to lay its accounts before a general meeting? A public company must continue to lay its accounts before its members at an Annual General Meeting. There is no longer a statutory requirement for private companies to lay their accounts before its members at a general meeting. If a private company’s articles currently specify that the company must present its accounts to its members at a general meeting, they may pass a resolution to remove that provision. 12. What are the memorandum and articles of association? These documents govern the company. The memorandum sets out:
The articles set out the rules for running the company's internal affairs. From time to time, it may be necessary to change these documents. You make these changes by special or written resolution (that is proposed as a special resolution). For example, if a company wishes to change its name, it does so by passing a special resolution. Companies House charges a fee of £10 to register the change and issues a change of name certificate. You must register resolutions changing the memorandum and articles of association at Companies House. For more information about resolutions to change the memorandum and articles of association see our booklet, 'Resolutions'; and for company names see our booklet. ‘Company Names’. 13. What other documents must I file at Companies House? Other notices that you may have to file include:
Whenever you complete a document, always quote the company number. It is the company's unique identifier. The number is shown on the company's incorporation certificate or you can find it free of charge using the WebCheck service on our website (www.companieshouse.gov.uk/wck2) CHAPTER 3 Accounts and audit exemption 1. What does 'no significant accounting transactions' mean? As mentioned in chapter 1, a company is dormant if it has had no 'significant accounting transactions' during the accounting period. A significant accounting transaction is one which the company should enter in its accounting records. When considering whether a company is dormant you can disregard the following financial transactions:
2. What are the conditions that a dormant company must meet to be exempt from audit?
A company may not take advantage of dormant company audit exemption if it was at any time in the financial year in question a company that:
A company is not entitled to the dormant company audit exemption unless its balance sheet contains the necessary statements, see our ‘Accounts and accounting reference dates’ guidance booklet for full details. 3. What qualifies a company as a small company? In order to take advantage of the audit exemption, the company must be both dormant and qualify as 'small'. If the company has traded in the past, then in order to qualify as small in a particular financial year it must meet the qualifying conditions in that year and in the preceding financial year. To qualify the company must meet at least two of the following conditions:
4. What exemption is available? Dormant companies that are eligible and wish to take advantage of it can claim exemption from audit. Private companies that are dormant need only prepare and deliver to Companies House an abbreviated balance sheet and notes. You do not have to include a profit and loss account and directors' report in dormant company accounts filed at Companies House; but you must provide a directors' report and possibly a profit and loss to members if the company traded in the previous financial year. Public companies that are dormant must prepare and deliver to Companies House a balance sheet and notes, directors' report and possibly a profit-and-loss account, if the company has traded in the previous financial year. Provided you prepare the accounts so that they comply with the requirements, they do not have to be drawn up by a professional accountant. However, if you are in any doubt about how to prepare a set of accounts, you may wish to consider consulting a professional accountant before preparing the accounts.
The accounts you submit to Companies House will not be returned to you - take any copies that you may need before you submit them. Accounts submitted online have inbuilt checks which will prevent common errors and omissions. If you choose to submit your accounts to Companies House on paper, you must check that you have:
A director must sign the balance sheet below all the statements. We reject more paper accounts because a director has not signed them than for any other reason. 5. What happens if my company starts trading again?The company will cease to be exempt from audit as a dormant company if it:
If either of these happened, you might have to submit full accounts for the financial year in which the company ceased to be exempt, and the directors may need to appoint auditors for the company. However, it may be that the company would qualify for exemptions as a medium-sized or small company. More information about company audit requirements and audit exemption for small companies is covered in our booklet, 'Accounts and Accounting Reference Dates'. Companies House cannot know your company's circumstances and financial arrangements, so we cannot help you prepare a set of accounts. CHAPTER 4 Dormant “Never Traded” Companies 1. Can I obtain a standard form for dormant accounts from Companies House? Do not use this form if preparing accounts in accordance with International Accounting Standards (IAS). When to use Form DCA
2. Companies dormant since incorporation
These companies may be able to file their statutory accounts at Companies House by completing Form DCA. You can complete a form each year for as long as the company remains dormant and meets the above conditions. 3. Companies that have become dormant These companies must be dormant for the current financial year, but will have entered into transactions in earlier periods. These transactions may have resulted in residual balances appearing on the balance sheet in the current year. If so, Form DCA is not suitable as it has no provision for these balances. If there are no residual balances, other than those relating to the issue of subscriber shares, Form DCA may still be suitable. Otherwise, the reporting and disclosure requirements for these companies can be diverse and complex. If you cannot use Form DCA, either because the company has traded in the past and there are residual assets to be shown on the balance sheet, please see our guidance book ‘Accounts and accounting reference dates’ which contains model balance sheet formats. To fill in Form DCA you need to know about the company's share capital. The items mentioned on Form DCA are explained below and more information is in our booklet, 'Share Capital and Prospectuses'. You may deliver documents to the Registrar by hand (personally or by courier), including outside office hours, bank holidays and weekends to Cardiff, London and Edinburgh. You may also send documents by post or by the Document Exchange Service (DX). If you send documents, please address them to:
If you are sending documents by post, courier or Document Exchange Service (DX) and would like a receipt, Companies House will provide an acknowledgement if you enclose a copy of your covering letter with a pre-paid addressed return envelope. We will barcode your copy letter with the date of receipt and return it to you in the envelope provided. Please note: an acknowledgement of receipt does not mean that Companies House has accepted a document for registration. Please note: Companies House does not accept accounts or any other statutory documents by fax. 2.Where do I get forms and guidance booklets?You can submit many forms to Companies House online via our Software Filing or WebFiling services. The service provides a secure system for presenters to submit company information. (www.companieshouse.gov.uk) Alternatively, statutory forms and guidance booklets are available, free of charge from Companies House. The quickest way to get them is through our website or by telephoning 0870 33 33 636. You can also obtain forms from legal stationers, accountants, solicitors and company formation agents - addresses in business phone books. |
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