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A statutory demand is one of the most powerful, and frequently misunderstood, tools available to creditors pursuing debt recovery in Hong Kong. Governed by the Companies (Winding‑Up) Rules (Cap. 32H) and refined by Practice Direction 3. 1, it is a formal written demand requiring a debtor company to pay a liquidated sum or face a winding‑up petition. Understanding what is a statutory demand in Hong Kong matters in 2026 more than ever: recent procedural updates, including expanded electronic service options under Practice Direction 3. 1, have changed how creditors prepare, serve and evidence these demands.
This guide provides a practitioner‑level walkthrough of every step, from threshold eligibility and completing Statutory Demand Form 1A through to the critical 21‑day response window, service methods, and the tactical decisions that follow non‑compliance.
Creditor TL;DR, four core steps:
A statutory demand is not available for every unpaid invoice. The Companies (Winding‑Up) Rules (Cap. 32H) set out precise eligibility criteria that a creditor must satisfy before issuing one. The demand must relate to a liquidated debt, a debt for a fixed, ascertainable amount that has already fallen due. Unascertained or disputed claims do not qualify. If the creditor holds a judgment or arbitral award, the position is clearer still, because the quantum has been determined by the court or tribunal.
Secured creditors can also issue a statutory demand, but the demand must state the nature and value of the security held. In practice, most statutory demands are served by unsecured creditors, trade creditors, service providers, landlords and professional firms, because the mechanism is designed to demonstrate a company’s inability to pay its debts and thereby pave the way to a compulsory winding‑up petition.
A creditor should also consider whether the debtor company is incorporated in Hong Kong (or, for overseas companies, whether it has a sufficient connection to the jurisdiction). The court’s jurisdiction to wind up a company is engaged only if certain conditions are met, and the statutory demand forms part of the evidential chain establishing those conditions.
The statutory demand threshold in Hong Kong is prescribed by the Companies (Winding Up and Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance (Cap. 32). The creditor’s debt must exceed the prescribed minimum before a demand can ground a winding‑up petition. Creditors should verify the current threshold on the Hong Kong e‑Legislation portal, as the government periodically adjusts it. Joint creditors may aggregate their claims if they arise from the same transaction or set of dealings, but separate debts owed to different entities generally cannot be combined to meet the minimum.
Special cases include contingent or prospective debts. A creditor whose debt has not yet become due, for example, under a guarantee where the principal debtor has defaulted but payment has not been demanded, may still have standing, but should take legal advice before issuing a demand in those circumstances.
The prescribed form for a statutory demand against a company is Form 1A, found in the Appendix to the Companies (Winding‑Up) Rules (Cap. 32H). The form is available through the Hong Kong e‑Legislation portal. Every field must be completed accurately; errors or omissions are one of the most common grounds on which debtors successfully apply to set aside a statutory demand.
Core fields that require careful attention include:
The form must be dated and signed by the creditor or an authorised representative. Where the demand is issued through solicitors, the solicitors’ name, address and reference should appear.
While the statutory demand form itself is relatively brief, creditors should annex supporting evidence to pre‑empt disputes over the validity of the debt. Best practice includes attaching copies of:
If the demand is in English and the debtor’s directors are known to operate primarily in Chinese, consider providing a Chinese translation, not because Cap. 32H mandates it, but because it removes a potential procedural challenge and demonstrates good faith.
Proper service is the single most litigated aspect of the statutory demand process. If a creditor cannot prove valid service, the 21‑day clock never starts, and any subsequent winding‑up petition may be dismissed. Hong Kong law recognises several methods for service of a statutory demand, each carrying different evidentiary requirements and risk profiles.
Personal service remains the gold standard. This means delivering the demand directly to a director, company secretary or other person authorised to accept service on the company’s behalf. The process server or solicitor’s clerk should record the date, time, location, name of the person served and a brief physical description. A contemporaneous witness statement or affidavit of service should be prepared immediately afterwards. Personal service provides the strongest evidence and is the least susceptible to challenge.
Leaving the demand at the company’s registered office is commonly used when personal service on a named individual proves difficult. The demand is left with a person apparently in charge of the premises, or, if no one is present, in a conspicuous place at the registered office. Evidence should include a dated photograph of the premises, a note of the time the demand was left, and a record confirming the address matches the Companies Registry filing. Industry observers expect that courts will continue to scrutinise this method closely, particularly where the registered office is a serviced‑office address and the debtor argues it never received the document.
Leaving the demand at the principal place of business follows the same procedure. This is useful where the registered office is clearly a dormant address but the company actively operates from another location. Creditors should obtain evidence (such as signage photographs, website screenshots or delivery records) proving the address is genuinely the company’s principal place of business.
Substituted service is available where the court is satisfied that personal service and other standard methods are impracticable. The creditor applies to the court for an order specifying an alternative method, for instance, service by ordinary post, advertisement or delivery to a known address of a director. This method introduces additional cost and delay, because the creditor must file evidence of failed service attempts and obtain the court’s approval before proceeding. An affidavit setting out the attempts made and the reasons personal service was not possible is essential.
Posting by prepaid registered post may be valid for certain types of service under Hong Kong procedural rules, but creditors should approach this with caution in the statutory‑demand context. Proof of posting alone may not be sufficient; proof of delivery (a signed acknowledgement or tracking confirmation) strengthens the position significantly.
Practice Direction 3.1, issued by the Law Society of Hong Kong, has progressively expanded the scope for electronic service in bankruptcy and winding‑up proceedings. Under PD 3.1, electronic service, including service by email, may be accepted where the prescribed conditions are met. The likely practical effect is that creditors can now serve statutory demands faster, particularly on companies that conduct business primarily through digital channels.
Key steps for electronic service under Practice Direction 3.1 include:
Courts retain discretion to reject electronic service if the creditor cannot satisfy the PD 3.1 conditions. The safest approach remains to use electronic service in addition to a primary physical method rather than as the sole channel.
Once a statutory demand is validly served, the debtor company has 21 days to comply. This is a strict calendar‑day period: it begins on the day after effective service and includes weekends and public holidays. If the last day falls on a Sunday or public holiday, the creditor should still treat the 21‑day window as expiring on that date for internal planning, although the debtor may argue that the deadline extends to the next business day. Practitioners should verify the position against the Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance (Cap. 1) provisions on computation of time.
During the 21 days, the debtor has three options: pay the debt in full, reach a settlement or payment arrangement with the creditor, or apply to the court to set aside the statutory demand. The creditor should not remain passive during this window. Early indications suggest that courts view creditors more favourably when they can demonstrate they remained open to negotiation, for instance, by responding to correspondence and considering reasonable instalment proposals, rather than mechanically waiting for the clock to expire.
Creditors should use the 21‑day period to assemble their evidence bundle for a potential winding‑up petition. This includes finalising the affidavit of service, confirming the debt remains outstanding, checking whether any partial payments have been received (which may affect the remaining balance relative to the threshold), and instructing solicitors to prepare the petition and supporting affidavit.
If the debtor pays in full within 21 days, the process ends. If the debtor makes a partial payment that reduces the debt below the statutory threshold, the creditor can no longer rely on the demand as a basis for a winding‑up petition, although other debt‑recovery avenues, such as a summary suit for recovery of money, remain available.
Where the debtor fails to pay, secure or compound the debt to the creditor’s reasonable satisfaction within 21 days, the statutory demand creates a presumption that the company is unable to pay its debts. The creditor may then present a winding‑up petition to the Companies Court. This is a significant step, the petition is a public document, and its presentation can trigger severe commercial consequences for the debtor including the freezing of bank accounts, termination of credit facilities, and reputational damage.
The evidence bundle for a winding‑up petition typically includes:
The petition must be in the prescribed form and filed with the correct court fee. Once filed, the court will set a hearing date and the petition must be advertised in the Gazette. The company, its shareholders and other creditors are then on notice and may appear at the hearing to support or oppose the petition. Creditors should be aware that the court retains discretion to dismiss the petition if it considers the statutory demand was defective, service was not proved, or the debt is genuinely disputed on substantial grounds.
Filing a winding‑up petition is not always the optimal next step, even where the 21 days have elapsed. Creditors should weigh:
The debtor’s most potent defence is an application to set aside the statutory demand. Hong Kong courts will set aside a statutory demand where the debtor demonstrates, among other grounds, that there is a bona fide substantial dispute as to the existence or amount of the debt. This is the most frequently invoked ground and mirrors the principle, long established in Hong Kong insolvency law, that a winding‑up petition is not a legitimate tool for collecting contested debts.
Other recognised grounds for setting aside a statutory demand include:
The debtor must act quickly. While the Companies (Winding‑Up) Rules do not prescribe a fixed deadline to apply to set aside (unlike the 18‑day rule in personal bankruptcy under Cap. 6), delay weakens the debtor’s position, particularly if the creditor has already filed a petition. The application is made by originating summons supported by an affidavit setting out the grounds relied upon, and exhibits proving the bona fide dispute, payment, set‑off or defect.
An affidavit in support of a set‑aside application should cover:
The following step‑by‑step checklist summarises the statutory demand process for creditors pursuing debt recovery in Hong Kong:
| Service Method | When Valid / Accepted | Proof Needed / Risk Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Personal service on director / authorised person | Best practice; effective immediately on date of service (if proven) | Witness statement + signed delivery note; low risk |
| Leaving at registered office / principal place of business | Common for companies; verify address against Companies Registry | Affidavit of leaving + photograph / entry log; medium risk if contested |
| Substituted service (court‑ordered) | Only where personal service is impracticable | Court order + evidence of prior failed attempts; higher cost and delay |
| Electronic service under PD 3.1 | Where PD 3.1 conditions are met; increasingly accepted | Email headers, read receipts, delivery logs; risk if debtor contests receipt |
Not every statutory demand should culminate in a winding‑up petition. Creditors benefit from a structured decision framework before escalating. The key variables to consider include the size of the debt relative to litigation costs, if the debt is only modestly above the statutory demand threshold, the legal costs of a contested petition may consume a significant portion of any recovery. The debtor’s solvency is equally important: if independent enquiries suggest the debtor has minimal assets, even a successful winding‑up order may produce negligible dividends for unsecured creditors.
Reputational and commercial considerations often carry decisive weight. Where the debtor is a current or potential future client, supplier or joint‑venture partner, the commercial damage from presenting a public petition may outweigh the debt itself. In these situations, a statutory demand can function as a powerful negotiating tool, the threat of a winding‑up petition is often more valuable than the petition itself. Structured settlement discussions, possibly supported by mediation, frequently produce faster recoveries at lower cost than contentious proceedings.
Conversely, where the debtor has a pattern of non‑payment, the debt is substantial, and assets are identifiable, escalation to a winding‑up petition, or even pursuing a restructuring or liquidation pathway, may be the most rational course. The statutory demand process is designed to test the debtor’s solvency: if the debtor genuinely cannot pay, the creditor’s interests are best served by formal insolvency proceedings that impose an orderly distribution of assets.
Understanding what is a statutory demand in Hong Kong, and executing each step with precision, can mean the difference between swift debt recovery and a protracted, costly dispute. For creditors, the process is mechanical but unforgiving: complete Form 1A accurately, serve it through a defensible method with full evidence, respect the 21‑day deadline, and make a clear‑eyed decision about whether to file a winding‑up petition or negotiate. For debtors, the stakes are equally high: an unanswered statutory demand creates a presumption of insolvency that is difficult to displace once a petition has been presented. In either position, specialist dispute‑resolution advice from practitioners experienced in Hong Kong insolvency law is essential to protect your interests and avoid procedural missteps.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gregory Payne at Payne Velasco, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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