How To File Accounts To Companies House UK - A Guide Book
How To File Accounts To Companies House UK - A Guide Book
How To File Accounts To Companies House UK - A Guide Book
Contents
Introduction
1. Accounting reference dates
2. Preparing and filing accounts
3. Small and medium-sized company exemptions
4. Audit exemptions for very small companies
5. Audit exemptions for dormant companies
6. Partnership accounts
7. Further information
This is a guide only and should be read with the relevant legislation.
Introduction
This booklet is a guide to the rules governing public disclosure of accounts by all limited
companies.
2. Preparing and filing accounts. There are deadlines by which accounts must be
prepared and delivered to Companies House. If you miss the deadline an
automatic penalty will be levied, without exception. So it is important that you,
your accountants and your auditors are aware of the filing deadline.
CHAPTER 1
Accounting reference dates
Every company has a duty to keep accounting records and must prepare annual
accounts that report on the performance and activities of the company during the year.
The period reported on in the accounts is called the financial year. This starts on the
day after the previous financial year ended or, in the case of a new company, on the
day of incorporation.
The accounting reference period ends on the accounting reference date (ARD) - see
questions 2 and 3 - or a date up to seven days either side of the ARD, if this is more
convenient.
For a new company, the ARD is set using its date of incorporation - see question 3. You
can change the first accounting reference period and subsequent accounting reference
periods by changing the ARD - see questions 4 and 5.
For all new companies, the first accounting reference period is automatically set as the
first anniversary of the last day in the month in which the company was incorporated.
For example, if the company was incorporated on 10 June 1999 its ARD would be set at
30 June, and the first accounts would cover a period from 10 June 1999 to 30 June
2000 - or up to seven days either side of that date. Although the ARD is set on
incorporation, you can change it - see question 4.
Yes, by completing Form 225 and sending it to Companies House. But the change can
only be made to the current or the immediately previous accounting reference period
and you have to register the new ARD before the filing deadline of the accounts. In
other words, if Companies House is expecting accounts for a particular accounting
reference period and they become overdue, it is too late to say that you wanted to
change the ARD. Private companies normally have 10 months and public companies 7
months to send their accounts to Companies House. The period allowed for sending a
company's first accounts is calculated differently and this is explained in chapter 2.
You may change an ARD by shortening an accounting reference period as often as you
like and by as many months as you like. However, there are restrictions on extending
accounting reference periods:
• You may not extend a period so that it lasts more than 18 months from the
start date of the accounting period.
(c) the company is aligning its accounting reference date with that of a
subsidiary or parent undertaking established within the European Economic
Area. Countries comprising the European Economic Area are as follows:
• a branch in Great Britain, and which does not have to publish audited
accounts in its country of incorporation; or
CHAPTER 2
Preparing and filing accounts
This chapter explains the basic rules on filing accounts. It applies to all company
accounts irrespective of whether any filing exemptions apply to the content of the
accounts.
Yes. All limited and unlimited companies, whether or not they are trading, must keep
accounting records.
• a profit and loss account (or income and expenditure account if the company
is not trading for profit);
This booklet cannot go into the detailed information that these documents must contain
- for this see the Companies Act. Certain information may be omitted from the accounts
of medium-sized and small (including very small and dormant) companies prepared
under the special provisions of part VII of the Act. These companies may further
abbreviate the accounts they file at Companies House - see chapter 3. Very small
companies and dormant companies may also be exempt from audit - see chapters 4
and 5.
Please note: For financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2005, the accounts
may be prepared in accordance with international accounting standards.
All limited and public limited companies must send their accounts to the Registrar. If
they are eligible and wish to, medium-sized, small, very small and dormant companies
may prepare and file 'abbreviated accounts' - see chapter 3, 4 and 5.
Unlimited companies need only deliver accounts to the Registrar if, during the period
covered by the accounts, the company was:
A company's first accounts cover the period starting on the date of incorporation, not the
first day of trading. They end on the accounting reference date (ARD) or up to 7 days
either side of that date. ARDs and how to change them are covered in chapter 1.
Subsequent accounts start on the day after the previous accounts ended. They finish on
the ARD or up to 7 days either side of it.
If you are filing your company's first accounts and they cover a period of more than 12
months, they must be delivered to the Registrar within 22 months of the date of
incorporation for private companies and 19 months for public companies or 3 months
from the ARD, whichever is longer. The deadline for delivery to the Registrar is
calculated to the exact day. For example, a private company incorporated on 1 January
2005 with an Accounting Reference Date (ARD) of 31 January has until midnight on 1
November 2006 (22 months from the date of incorporation) to deliver its accounts, not
30 November.
If the first accounts cover a period of 12 months or less, the normal times allowed for
delivering accounts apply (see question 6).
Unless you are filing your company's first accounts (see question 5) the time normally
allowed for delivering accounts to Companies House is:
• for a private company 10 months (or for a public company 7 months) from the
ARD; or
A period of months after a given date ends on the corresponding date in the
appropriate month. For example a private company with an ARD of 30 September has
until midnight on 30 July of the following year to deliver its accounts, not 31 July.
Similarly, a private company with an ARD of 28 February has until 28 December, not
31 December.
If there is no corresponding date, the last day of the month will apply. For example, a
private company with an ARD of 30 April has until midnight on 28 February the
following year to deliver its accounts.
An application may be made to the Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and
Regulatory Reform to extend the time for laying and delivering accounts if there is a
special reason for doing so; for example, if there has been an unforeseen event which
was outside the control of the company and its auditors. The application must be made
in writing, be delivered before the normal filing deadline, and must contain a full
explanation of the reasons for the extension and the length of the extension needed.
There is an automatic civil penalty for late filing. The amount depends on how late the
accounts arrive and whether the company is private or public. The fixed penalties are as
follows:
Private Public
Length of delay
company company
3 months or less £100 £ 500
3 months one day to 6
£250 £1000
months
6 months one day to 12
£500 £2000
months
More than 12 months £1000 £5000
Failing to deliver accounts on time is also a criminal offence for which company
directors may be prosecuted. Late filing penalties are fully explained in our booklet,
'Late Filing Penalties'.
The accounts must be approved by the company's board of directors and signed before
they are sent to Companies House.
• The balance sheet must be signed by a director, with any statements about
accounting or filing exemptions appearing above the director's signature.
* HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) was formed on the 18 April 2005, following the
merger of Inland Revenue and HM Customs and Excise Departments
No. We can give general guidance, but not technical advice on specific accounting
issues. Firstly, giving technical advice is not a role that the Government has given us.
Secondly, it is not practicable: your accounts are subject to complex legal requirements,
and we do not know enough about your company to be confident that we are giving you
proper advice.
The documents and forms you deliver to Companies House are scanned to produce an
electronic image. The original documents are then stored, and the electronic image is
used as the working document.
The remainder of this chapter lays down a few quality guidelines to follow when
preparing accounts and other documents for filing at Companies House.
Section 706 of the Act allows Companies House to reject documents that cannot be
captured electronically, giving a notice saying why they are unacceptable. An
acceptable copy must be delivered within 14 days of the notice (otherwise we treat the
original as not having been delivered).
Every document delivered to the Registrar must state prominently the registered
number of the company, and must comply with any requirements specified by the
Registrar relating to the legibility of that document.
Briefly, documents should be on A4 size, plain white paper between 80gsm and
100gsm in weight with a matt finish. Text should be black, clear, legible, and of uniform
density.
• use bold lettering (some elegant thin typefaces and pens give poor quality
copies);
• remember - photocopies can result in a grey shade that will not scan well;
• include the company number in the top right-hand corner of the first page.
Glossy accounts
If you are producing colour printed glossy accounts, please save them for your
shareholders and others who will appreciate them. We still need black on white with a
matt finish. A typed, unbound version of a printer's proof is ideal, provided it has the
necessary signatures.
• Glossy accounts
• Shading over figure work e.g. to differentiate between the financial year in
question and the previous year
CHAPTER 3
Small and medium-sized company exemptions
Certain small or medium-sized companies may prepare accounts for their members
under the special provisions of sections 246 and 246A of the Companies Act 1985. In
addition, they may prepare and deliver abbreviated accounts to the Registrar.
This chapter explains the exemptions available to small and medium-sized companies.
Certain small companies with a turnover of less than £5.6 million (£250,000 for
companies that are charities) and assets of less than £2.8 million can claim exemption
from audit. This is dealt with in chapter 4.
The period accounts have to cover and the time allowed for sending them to Companies
House is covered in chapter 2.
The exact conditions for qualifying as a small or medium-sized company are given
below.
Please note: The above accounting exemption thresholds apply to financial years
ending on or after 30 January 2004. For earlier financial years, to be a small company,
at least 2 of the following conditions must be met:
If you abbreviate the accounts, you will also need a special auditor's report for filing with
the Registrar, confirming that the company qualifies to produce such accounts.
This report is not needed if the company is exempt from audit - see chapter 4 on very
small companies.
The following table may help you decide whether you qualify to prepare 'small' or
'medium' accounts.
The table applies to small companies. For medium-sized companies simply substitute
'medium-sized' for 'small'.
The company can deliver the accounts which were prepared for its members under the
special provisions of part VII of the Companies Act 1985, or it can deliver an
abbreviated version of these accounts.
The balance sheet (and if appropriate, the directors' report) must contain a statement
that the accounts are prepared in accordance with the special provisions in Part VII of
the Companies Act 1985 relating to small or medium-sized companies, as the case may
be.
• Small Companies may omit certain information from the directors' report
prepared for its shareholders (that is, amount to be paid as dividend, business
review, statement of market value of fixed assets where substantially different
from the balance sheet amount, miscellaneous disclosures and employee
involvement) and the company need not deliver the directors' report to
Companies House.
To qualify as small, a group of companies must meet at least two of the following
conditions:
• aggregate turnover must be £5.6 million net (£6.72 million gross) or less;
• the aggregate balance sheet total must be £2.8 million net (£3.36 million
gross) or less;
• aggregate turnover must be £2.8 million net (£3.36 million gross) or less;
• the aggregate balance sheet total must be £1.4 million net (or £1.68 million
gross);
• its aggregate turnover must be £22.8 million net (£27.36 million gross) or less;
• the aggregate balance sheet total must be £11.4 million net (£13.68 million
gross) or less;
Please note: The above accounting exemption thresholds apply to financial years
ending on or after 30 January 2004. For earlier financial years, to qualify as medium-
sized, a group must meet at least two of the following conditions:
• aggregate turnover must be £11.2 million net (or £13.44 million gross);
• the aggregate balance sheet total must be £5.6 million net (or £6.72 million
gross);
Please Note: For financial years ending on or after 31st December 2006 a small group
is ineligible if any of its members is: a public company, a person (other than a small
company) who has permission under Part 4 of the Financial Services and Markets Act
2000 to carry on a regulated activity, a small company that is an authorised insurance
company, a banking company, an e-money issuer, a Markets In Financial Instruments
Directive (MIFID) investment firm, a UCITS management company or a person who
carries on insurance market activity.
A small parent company which has prepared individual accounts for its members using
the special provisions of section 246(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 1985, may choose
to prepare group accounts under the special provisions of section 248A. However, a
small group cannot file abbreviated accounts at Companies House. Group accounts
prepared under section 248A must contain a statement above the signature on the
balance sheet, confirming that they are prepared in accordance with the special
provisions of Part VII of the Companies Act 1985 relating to small companies.
If a medium-sized company decides to prepare group accounts, they must be full group
accounts.
Format of accounts
The format of the accounts must follow the relevant Schedules to the Companies Act
1985. The provisions relating to small and medium-sized companies are in Schedules
4, 5, 6, 8 and 8A.
For financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2005, the company may opt to
prepare group accounts in accordance with international accounting standards. The
parent company’s account and each of its subsidiary undertakings must be prepared
using the same financial reporting framework, except to the extent that there are good
reasons for not doing so.
The same time applies as for all other accounts. The same penalties are imposed for
late filing. See chapter 2.
CHAPTER 4
Audit exemptions for very small companies
There is total exemption from audit for certain small companies (including very small
charitable companies) if they are eligible and wish to take advantage of it. Some
charitable companies are exempt from audit but must provide an accountant's report on
the accounts (partial exemption). Further details about how to claim exemption are in
this chapter.
Please note: The above audit exemption thresholds apply to financial years ending
after 30 March 2004. For earlier financial years, to qualify for total audit exemption, a
company must:
• qualify as small;
For a charitable company to qualify for total audit exemption it must qualify as small
(see chapter 3), its gross income must not be more than £90,000 and its balance sheet
total must not be more than £2.8 million (£1.4 million for financial years ended on or
before 30 March 2004).
Charitable companies which qualify as small (see chapter 3) and have a gross income
between £90,000 and £250,000 and a balance sheet total of no more than £1.4 million
qualify for partial exemption.
NB. For financial years commencing on or after 27 February 2007 a charitable company
with a gross income of between £90,000 and £500,000 and a balance sheet total of
£2.8 million or less must have an accountant’s report. A charitable company with a
gross income of £90,000 or less needs neither a professional audit nor an accountant’s
report, unless its balance sheet total is more than £2.8 million. A charitable company
with a gross income of more than £500,000 or a balance sheet total of more than £2.8
million must have a professional audit.
(a) A parent company or subsidiary undertaking (unless dormant for the period during
which it was a subsidiary) except where:
• the turnover for the whole group is not more than £5.6 million net or £6.72
million gross; and
• the group's combined balance sheet total is not more than £2.8 million net
(£3.36 million gross).
• Please note: The above audit exemption thresholds apply to financial years ending
after 30 March 2004. For earlier financial years, a parent company or subsidiary
undertaking (unless dormant for the period during which it was a subsidiary) cannot
qualify except where the group qualifies as a small group or would qualify if all the
bodies corporate in the group were companies ; and
• the turnover for the whole group is not more than £1 million net (or £1.2 million
gross); and
• the group’s combined balance sheet total is not more than £1.4 million net (or £1.68
million gross).
(b) A public limited company unless the company is dormant- see chapter 5.
(c) A person who has permission under Part 4 of the Financial Services and Markets
Act 2000 to carry on a regulated activity (other than an appointed representative whose
scope of appointment is limited to activities that are not regulated activities – see
below).
“Regulated activity” does not include:
(e) An appointed representative within the meaning of s.39 of the Financial Services
and Markets Act 2000.
Please note: For financial years ending on or after 31 December 2006 (e) no longer
pplies.(f) A special register body or employers association under the Trade Union and
Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992.
If the company qualifies (see question 2 and 3), unaudited accounts may be delivered to
the Registrar in the form of an abbreviated balance sheet and notes. The balance sheet
must contain the following statements above the director's signature:
(a) For the year ended . . . (date) the company was entitled to exemption under section
249A(1) of the Companies Act 1985. (In the case of charitable companies which are
claiming partial exemption, the reference will be to section 249A(2)).
(b) Members have not required the company to obtain an audit in accordance with
section 249B(2) of the Companies Act 1985;
i. ensuring the company keeps accounting records which comply with section 221; and
ii. preparing accounts which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the
company as at the end of the financial year, and of its profit or loss for the financial year,
in accordance with the requirements of section 226, and which otherwise comply with
the requirements of the Companies Act relating to accounts, so far as applicable to the
company.
(d) The accounts have been prepared in accordance with the special provisions in Part
VII of the Companies Act 1985 relating to small companies.
If the company chooses, it may deliver the unabbreviated accounts prepared for its
members. The same statements must appear on the unabbreviated balance sheet.
(a) the accounts of the company for the financial year in question are in agreement with
the accounting records kept by the company under section 221 of the Companies Act
1985; and
(b) having regard only to, and on the basis of, the information in those accounting
records, those accounts have been drawn up in a manner consistent with the provisions
of the Act as specified in subsection (6) of section 249C, so far as applicable to the
company;
(c) having regard only to, and on the basis of, the information in the accounting records,
the company satisfied the requirements of section 249A(4), for the financial year in
question, and did not fall within section 249B(1)(a) to (f) at any time within that financial
year.
The report must show the name and signature of the reporting accountant.
• any member of a body listed below who, under the rules of that body, is
entitled to engage in public practice, and who is eligible for appointment as a
reporting accountant; or
• any person, (whether or not a member of any such body), who is eligible for
appointment as a company auditor under the rules of that body.
The bodies referred to above are the:
The reporting accountant must be independent and meet the conditions set out in
section 27 of the Companies Act 1989. This means, for example, that he or she cannot
be an officer or employee of the company.
The same time applies as for all other accounts. The same penalties are imposed for
late filing. See chapter 2.
8. Does an audit exempt company still have to send accounts to its members?
Yes. In accordance with the Companies Act 1985, members have a right to receive or
demand copies of accounts and the related reports.
All limited companies, whether they trade or not, must deliver accounts to Companies
House. However, a limited company may claim exemption from audit as a 'dormant
company' if it has not traded during a financial year, and provided it meets certain other
criteria (see chapter 5).
Dormant companies do not need to appoint auditors and can deliver even simpler
annual accounts to Companies House. For more information about dormant company
accounts, see chapter 5.
Companies may decide to revise their articles of association to ensure that these do not
stop them taking advantage of the audit exemptions. Companies with articles based on
the model articles at Table A of the Companies Act 1985 are unlikely to have such
problems. However, the 1948 version of Table A (and other similar earlier provisions)
imposes an obligation to appoint auditors. Companies with such articles may wish to
take legal advice about possible changes.
CHAPTER 5
Audit exemption for dormant companies
Dormant companies can claim exemption from audit and need only prepare and deliver
to Companies House an abbreviated balance sheet and notes. A profit-and-loss
account and directors' report do not have to be included in dormant company accounts
filed at Companies House but a directors' report must be provided to members.
Dormant company accounts can now be filed online using our Software Filing or
WebFiling facilities. Please refer to our website www.companieshouse.gov.uk for more
information.
When considering if a company is dormant you can disregard the following financial
transactions:
• fees paid to the Registrar of Companies for a change of company name, the
re-registration of a company and filing annual returns; and
• it has been dormant since the end of the previous financial year; and
• it does not have to prepare group accounts for that year; and
• a public company; or
• a public company;
• a person (other than a small company [for financial years ending on or after
31 December 2006]) who has permission under Part 4 of the Financial
Services and Markets Act 2000 to carry on a regulated activity;
Dormant accounts filed at Companies House need not include a profit-and-loss account
or directors' report. Model balance sheets are shown at the end of this chapter.
Unaudited dormant accounts are much simpler than those of a trading company but
must show:
• any previous year's figures for comparison - even though there are no items
of income or expenditure for the current year;
(a) For the year ended . . . (date) the company was entitled to exemption under section
249AA(1) of the Companies Act 1985.
(b) Members have not required the company to obtain an audit in accordance with
section 249B(2) of the Companies Act 1985.
• ensuring the company keeps accounting records which comply with section
221; and
• preparing accounts which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the
company as at the end of the financial year, and of its profit or loss for the
financial year, in accordance with the requirements of section 226, and which
otherwise comply with the requirements of the Companies Act relating to
accounts, so far as applicable to the company.
If the company chooses, it may deliver the un-abbreviated accounts prepared for its
members. The same statements must appear on the un-abbreviated balance sheet.
5. Can I obtain a standard form for dormant accounts from Companies House?
Yes, although you do not have to use it. Form DCA, available from Companies House,
is for dormant companies that have not traded since incorporation. This form is
unsuitable for companies that became dormant after trading. However, model balance
sheets and notes for all types of dormant companies are set out at the end of this
chapter.
The same time applies as for all other accounts. The same penalties are imposed for
late filing. See chapter 2.
Any company will cease to be exempt from audit as a dormant company if it:
The formats on the following pages provide a guide to the information you need to
include (unless the company has opted to prepare accounts in accordance with
international accounting standards for financial years beginning on or after 1 January
2005). These formats are designed to reflect all possible assets and liabilities that a
company may have but you only need to include a particular heading if there is an
amount other than nil to be shown. The letters and numbers shown against the
headings and sub-headings are not required to be shown in the company’s balance
sheet.
These model balance sheets are for illustration only, they should not be reproduced
and used for submission to Companies House
If the company has traded in a previous financial year, bear in mind that your previous
year's balance sheet will show the company's financial position as it was then. If there
have been no accounting transactions since, you could just be carrying forward the
figures from last year.
There are two formats - marked A and B - either of which may be followed. The content
of the two formats is identical; they simply present the balance sheet headings in a
different order.
• In format A, net assets must equate to the aggregate of capital and reserves.
Each column of figures must be headed with the date on which the current and previous
financial year ended.
For both formats, the matters to be included in the notes to the balance sheet, if
applicable, can be found at the end of each example below.
When you are preparing your accounts, please follow the guidelines in question 13 of
chapter 2.
DORMANT COMPANY BALANCE SHEET FORMAT A
(b) Members have not required the company to obtain an audit in accordance with
section 249B(2) of the Companies Act 1985.
and
(b) Members have not required the company to obtain an audit in accordance with
section 249B(2) of the Companies Act 1985.
• information relating to any shares which have been allotted during the
financial year;
• details of indebtedness;
• basis on which sums originally in a foreign currency have been translated into
sterling;
• in respect to every item above (other than fixed assets) the corresponding
amounts for the previous year;
• details of any subsidiary undertakings and of shares held in them, and why
group accounts are not required;
• where the company has acted as an agent for any person, the fact that it has
so acted;
• information about financial fixed assets that could have been included at fair
value but which have been included in the accounts in excess of their fair
value, and where no provision has been made for their diminution in value
(applies to financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2005).
In addition, the following information may have to be given about the subsidiary
undertakings:
• the name of the company's ultimate parent company, and (if known) its
country of incorporation;
• details of certain loans, guarantees and other such dealings made by the
company in favour of directors and others.
Note
(a) Any reference to a qualifying partnership in relation to a limited partnership is a
reference to the general partners only.
The partnership regulations will apply to most limited partnerships that have limited
companies as their general partners and are registered under the Limited Partnerships
Act 1907, as these partnerships must have their principal place of business in Great
Britain on registration.
The partnership must prepare and have audited accounts as if it were a company
formed under the Companies Act 1985 so as to conform to Part VII of that Act. The Act
has been amended to take account of the circumstances of qualifying partnerships.
However, the partnership may take advantage of regulation 7, which permits the
accounts to be dealt with on a consolidated basis as group accounts prepared by either:
The accounts may cover any period up to 18 months which may be specified in the
partnership agreement. If a period is not specified in the agreement, the partnership
accounts must be drawn up for each 12-month period ending on 31 March in each year.
The partnership accounts must be prepared within a period of 10 months after the end
of the financial year.
• the name of each partner incorporated in another EEA member state who is
required to publish the partnership accounts in that state.
When a qualifying partnership has its head office in Great Britain and each of the
partners is:
(a) make the latest accounts of the partnership available for inspection by any person,
without charge, during business hours at the head office of the partnership, together
with a certified translation, if the original is not in English; and
(b) supply to any person on request a copy of the latest accounts of the partnership
(together with a translation if the original is not in English). A fee may be charged to
cover the administrative cost of supplying the copy, but no more.
The members of a qualifying partnership may be exempted from the above publication
rules if the partnership accounts are consolidated as group accounts prepared by:
CHAPTER 7
Further information
This is one of a series of Companies House booklets which provide a simple guide to
the Companies Act.
Statutory forms and guidance booklets are available, free of charge from Companies
House. The quickest way to get them is through this website. Alternatively you can
telephone Companies House on 0870 3333636.
If you prefer you can write to our stationery sections in Cardiff or Edinburgh.
Forms can also be obtained from legal stationers, accountants, solicitors and company
formation agents - addresses in business phone books.
The safest and most secure way to send statutory information to Companies House is
to use our online filing services. For more information and registration details please
visit our website www.companieshouse.gov.uk
You may also send documents by post, by the Document Exchange Service (DX) or by
Legal Post (LP) in Scotland. If you send documents, please address them to:
If you use our online filing services you will automatically receive acknowledgement of
receipt via email. 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 a document has been
accepted for registration at Companies House.
Please note: Companies House does not accept accounts or any other statutory
documents by fax.
From the 1 January 2007, companies may deliver the following documents in other
languages if the document is accompanied by a certified translation into English:
• For companies included in accounts of larger EEA or non-EEA groups, the group
accounts and parent undertaking annual report;
From the 1 January 2007, companies may also file voluntary certified translations of any
document subject to the Directive disclosure requirements. This includes:
• Winding up documents;
Cardiff:
Companies House
Crown Way, Cardiff CF14 3UZ
Fax: 029 2038 0900
Edinburgh:
Companies House
37 Castle Terrace, Edinburgh EH1 2EB
Fax: 0131 535 5820
London:
Companies House
21 Bloomsbury Street, London WC1B 3XD
Fax: 029 2038 0900