A private limited company has to/ winds up when the purpose with which the company is fulfilled or if the company has become defunct with NIL assets and no liabilities.
A private limited company has to/ winds up when the purpose with which the company is fulfilled or if the company has become defunct with NIL assets and no liabilities.
According to The Companies Act, 2025
A company is a legal entity and can be close down following the procedures established by the statue only.
The Act lays down the precise procedure to file for closure application for a private limited company. The breakdown is simple and precise with team Ecensus.
As per the current scenario, there are two methods of filing application for winding up
- Active Companies βΒ or the company where there are assets and liabilities, the application is filed under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 216 (IBC) before the National Company Law Tribunal.
- Inactive companies βΒ or the company that has not been working for the past 2 years and did not commence operations within one year of commencement and has no liabilities whatsoever, can file for winding up procedures by filling up the STK-2 form with a certain amount of government fee. The hassle is avoidable, with the ease of accessing information and processing formalities with Ecensus.
Contents
- 1 Methods of Winding-up
- 2 How to do it?
- 3 π Methods to Close a Private Limited Company
- 4 β 1. Fast Track Exit (FTE) / Strike Off (Section 248)
- 5 β 2. Voluntary Liquidation (if company has assets/liabilities)
- 6 β 3. Compulsory Winding Up (by Tribunal)
- 7 π Documents Needed for Strike-Off (STK-2)
- 8 π Timeline
- 9 π« What You Cannot Do During Closure
- 10 π Key Points to Remember
- 11 π§ Conclusion
- 12 How to Close a Private Limited Company?
Methods of Winding-up
There are Three ways to wind up an active Private Limited Company
1. Selling off
It involves transferring the stakes of the company to another person/entity and discharging of shareholders of their rights, shares, and duties. It is selling off of shares of the company.
2. Winding up by the Tribunal
The steps involved are:
- Filing a petition with the tribunal along with the Statement of Affairs of the company. The Tribunal may accept or reject it and may issue a time period of 90 days for passing an order.
- The Tribunal, if felt the need, may issue an order and shall seek filing od objection to Statement of Affairs by the company within 30 days.
- An Official Liquidator is appointed by the Tribunal to review the status quo of the companyβs accounts and is required to submit a Draft Report to the winding-up committee for approval. On approval, the Final Report needs to be submitted to pass the official order of winding up.
- A copy of the order is submitted to the Registrar of Company within 30 days and upon satisfaction, the Registrar approves for winding up and strikes the name of the company from the Register of Companies and sends a notice to Official Gazette of India for publication.
3. Voluntary wind up
The shareholders chose to voluntarily wind up under the following situations:
- The Company passes a special resolution upon expiry of the duration of the existence of the company or if any such events occur in respect to which the articles call for dissolution,
- The company passes a resolution for voluntary winding up of the company.
How to do it?
- Pass a resolution in the Board meeting for a voluntary wind up or in a General Meeting for event s as per Articles of Association. Consent of Trade Creditors is also necessary.
- The company files a Declaration of Solvency that needs to be accepted by creditors and the company has to highlight its credibility in the declaration.
- The Declaration is submitted to the Registrar along with Auditorβs report.
- A Liquidator is appointed to begin the winding-up process and will present a draft report in the general meeting and if the majority agrees, the resolution shall be passed.
- The final report and a copy of the statements are submitted to the Registrar and the application is made with the Tribunal.
- Upon final assessment, the Tribunal shall pass an order for wind up and the copy of that order needs to be deposited with the Registrar within 30 days to avoid payment of penalty.
- The Registrar shall make final checks and will strike off the name of the company from the Register of Companies and notify the Official Gazette of India for publication.
Closing a Private Limited Company in India requires following a legal procedure under the Companies Act, 2013. The process ensures that all liabilities are settled, records are updated with the Registrar of Companies (ROC), and the business is formally struck off.
Here’s a complete and simplified guide to help you close your company legally:
π Methods to Close a Private Limited Company
There are three main ways to shut down a private limited company:
β 1. Fast Track Exit (FTE) / Strike Off (Section 248)
Best for companies with no operations or liabilities
Eligibility:
- No business operations in the last 2 years, OR
- Never started operations after incorporation
- No pending liabilities, assets, or bank accounts
Steps:
- Board Resolution:
Pass a resolution to close the company and authorize a director to file the application. - Clear Liabilities:
Pay off any dues, taxes, and employee salaries. - Close Bank Accounts:
Get a bank account closure letter. - Obtain No Objection Certificate (NOC) from:
- Creditors (if any)
- Shareholders
- Other authorities (if applicable)
- File MCA Form STK-2 with:
- Indemnity Bond (Form STK-3)
- Affidavit by directors (Form STK-4)
- Statement of accounts (certified by CA)
- Board and shareholder resolutions
- PAN, GST, and incorporation certificate copies
- Pay Fees:
βΉ10,000 government filing fee - MCA Review:
If satisfied, the ROC will publish a public notice and strike off the company within 60β90 days.
β 2. Voluntary Liquidation (if company has assets/liabilities)
Under Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) β applicable if:
- The company has assets
- Wants to distribute them among creditors/shareholders
Steps:
- Board Resolution & Declaration of Solvency
- Appoint a Liquidator
- Inform ROC & IBBI
- Liquidator sells assets, clears dues
- Final report submitted β Company dissolved
π§Ύ More complex and costly β typically used for active companies with assets.
β 3. Compulsory Winding Up (by Tribunal)
- Ordered by NCLT (National Company Law Tribunal) if:
- Company is unable to pay debts
- Conducts fraudulent business
- Violation of public interest
Highly legal & time-consuming β usually initiated by creditors, ROC, or government.
π Documents Needed for Strike-Off (STK-2)
Document | Description |
---|---|
β Board Resolution | Approval for closure |
β Shareholder Resolution | 75% majority required |
β Indemnity Bond (STK-3) | Signed by all directors |
β Affidavit (STK-4) | Declaration by directors |
β Statement of Accounts | Not older than 30 days from application, CA certified |
β PAN, COI, MOA/AOA | Company identity documents |
β Bank Closure Proof | From bank |
π Timeline
Action | Timeframe |
---|---|
Preparation & document signing | 1β2 weeks |
Filing & ROC review | 60β90 days |
Final striking-off | ~3 months total (if no objections) |
π« What You Cannot Do During Closure
- Cannot strike off if:
- Company has ongoing litigation
- Has active liabilities or bank accounts open
- Has not filed ROC returns for the past year
π Key Points to Remember
Point | Note |
---|---|
β ROC returns | File all pending ROC filings (e.g., MGT-7, AOC-4) before closure |
β Tax clearance | Clear pending GST, TDS, and income tax |
β DIN Status | Directors remain responsible until company is closed |
β Filing STK-2 | Only after board/shareholder consent and liability clearance |
π§ Conclusion
Closing a Private Limited Company legally ensures:
- No future compliance burdens
- No risk of penalty or disqualification for directors
- Clean exit in MCA records
Would you like:
- A step-by-step checklist PDF?
- Help drafting the board or shareholder resolutions?
- Guidance on STK-2 form filing?
Let me knowβI can walk you through it or even help create templates.