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Last updated: 17 June 2026
Understanding how to apply for judicial management in Singapore is critical for any company director, creditor or restructuring adviser facing a business that is, or is likely to become, unable to pay its debts. Judicial management is a court‑supervised rescue mechanism governed by section 91 of the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018 (IRDA), under which an independent judicial manager is appointed to manage the company’s affairs with the objective of keeping it alive as a going concern, or, failing that, achieving a better outcome for creditors than an immediate winding up would deliver.
This guide sets out every stage of the judicial management application process, from pre‑filing board resolutions through to the appointment of a judicial manager and post‑order obligations, together with the mandatory court forms (Form CIR‑3 and Form CIR‑4), a full documents checklist, indicative costs and the 2026 developments that practitioners need to watch.
Judicial management sits between informal restructuring, such as a Simplified Insolvency Programme (SIP) or a scheme of arrangement, and compulsory liquidation. Where a company is or is likely to become unable to pay its debts, the court may place it under the management of a qualified insolvency practitioner who takes over the powers of the directors and steers the company toward rescue or an orderly realisation of assets. The statutory gateway is section 91 of the IRDA, which sets out both the eligibility requirements and the procedural framework for applications.
The immediate practical effects of a judicial management order are significant:
A typical scenario involves a mid‑market company whose trading losses have accelerated, whose creditors are threatening winding‑up proceedings, and whose directors believe that a supervised restructuring, renegotiating leases, rationalising operations, or selling the business as a going concern, would deliver a better return than liquidation. The judicial management application is the formal mechanism to obtain court protection while that plan is developed.
The court appoints the judicial manager. Applicants typically nominate a qualified insolvency practitioner in their filing, and the court considers the nominee’s suitability before making the appointment.
Standing to bring a judicial management application under the IRDA extends to several categories of applicant. Knowing who can apply, and under what conditions, is a threshold question that must be settled before any filing work begins.
The following persons may apply:
The court will only make a judicial management order if the applicant establishes, on the evidence, that at least one of the following purposes is achievable:
Before filing, the applicant should ensure the following practical prerequisites are in place: a formal board or members’ resolution authorising the application; engagement of experienced restructuring counsel and a proposed insolvency practitioner; up‑to‑date financial statements and management accounts; a preliminary cashflow forecast; and, where applicable, evidence that less formal restructuring alternatives (SIP, voluntary arrangements) have been explored or are unlikely to succeed. The court expects applicants to have turned their minds to alternatives before invoking its jurisdiction.
The judicial management application process follows a structured sequence. Each step is set out below with the relevant forms, responsible parties, typical time frames and what the court will scrutinise.
The company’s directors should convene a board meeting and pass a resolution authorising the judicial management application. Where the company’s constitution requires it, or where the board is conflicted, a members’ resolution may be needed. At the same time, the company should formally engage restructuring solicitors and identify a suitably qualified insolvency practitioner willing to act as the proposed judicial manager.
Parallel to the board process, management should prepare or update key financial information: audited accounts for the most recent two to three financial years, current management accounts, a 13‑ or 26‑week cashflow forecast, and a preliminary strategic report explaining why judicial management (rather than liquidation or a scheme of arrangement) is the appropriate remedy. Valuations of major assets should be commissioned if not already available. Typical duration: 3–14 days, depending on the complexity of the business and the availability of financial records.
Under the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution (Corporate Insolvency and Restructuring) Regulations 2020, every judicial management application must be made in Form CIR‑3, supported by an affidavit in Form CIR‑4. These forms are prescribed by the subsidiary legislation and are available from the Ministry of Law, Insolvency Office forms pack.
Form CIR‑3 is the originating application itself. It identifies the company, states the grounds relied on and specifies the relief sought (the making of a judicial management order and the appointment of the nominated insolvency practitioner as judicial manager).
Form CIR‑4 is the supporting affidavit. It must be sworn or affirmed by a director or other authorised officer and should exhibit all evidence on which the applicant relies: financial statements, cashflow forecasts, the board resolution, the creditor schedule, and any correspondence demonstrating attempts at informal restructuring. The affidavit is the evidentiary backbone of the application, a poorly drafted CIR‑4 is one of the most common reasons applications fail or are adjourned.
Once the CIR‑3 and CIR‑4 have been filed at the General Division of the High Court, the applicant’s solicitors must serve the application on the company (if the applicant is a creditor), on any person who has appointed or is entitled to appoint a receiver, and on the Insolvency Office where required by the court’s practice directions. Service should be completed promptly, typically within 1–7 days of filing.
The court will fix a first hearing date, which may be heard on an ex parte (without notice) or inter partes basis depending on the urgency and nature of the application. At this hearing, the applicant seeks an interim moratorium and, in some cases, the appointment of an interim judicial manager to preserve the status quo pending the full hearing.
The interim order, if granted, triggers the statutory moratorium: no proceedings may be commenced or continued against the company, no execution may be levied, and no security may be enforced without the court’s leave. This breathing space is central to the purpose of judicial management.
Secured creditors, and in particular holders of floating charges, have the right to appear and oppose the application at this stage. A floating charge holder who objects may argue that the court should instead allow a receiver to be appointed under the charge, or that there is no reasonable prospect of rescue. The court weighs these objections against the evidence filed in the CIR‑4 affidavit. Industry observers expect courts to scrutinise the quality of cashflow evidence and the credibility of rescue proposals with increasing rigour, particularly following the 2024–2026 wave of IRDA‑related practice commentary.
Typical duration: interim hearing is usually fixed 1–21 days after filing (depending on the court’s schedule and the urgency asserted); the return hearing is then set 2–6 weeks later.
At the return hearing, the court considers the application on its merits. If the application is contested, by creditors, floating charge holders or others, the hearing may involve oral evidence, cross‑examination and detailed legal submissions. The court applies the statutory test: is there a reasonable prospect that one of the three purposes of judicial management will be achieved?
Possible outcomes at this stage include:
A contested hearing may take 1–5 sitting days. Judgement may be delivered at the conclusion of the hearing or reserved for a later date, typically within a few weeks.
Upon the making of a final judicial management order, the nominated insolvency practitioner files a formal acceptance of the appointment. The judicial manager then publishes the requisite notices (including in the Gazette), takes control of the company’s property, business and affairs, and assumes the powers of the directors.
Key post‑order obligations include:
The initial judicial management period is set by the court. Extensions are possible but require a further application supported by evidence of continued viability or benefit.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing board/member resolution; retain counsel and IP | Company directors / shareholders / corporate counsel | 3–14 days |
| File application (Form CIR‑3) and affidavit (Form CIR‑4) at High Court; serve parties | Applicant’s solicitors / IP | Day 0 (filing); service within 1–7 days |
| First (interim) hearing, ex parte or inter partes | Court (applicant appears) | 1–21 days after filing |
| Interim moratorium and appointment of interim judicial manager (if made) | Court order | Immediate effect on grant |
| Return / contested hearing | Court, all parties | 2–6 weeks after interim hearing |
| Final order issued; judicial manager assumes control | Court / judicial manager | Effective on date specified; initial period often 30–180 days |
| Post‑order creditors’ meetings and statement of proposals | Judicial manager | Typically 30–90 days after appointment |
Thorough preparation of the documents required for a judicial management application is the single most important factor in securing a favourable outcome. The table below sets out the mandatory filings and the supporting evidence that practitioners should prepare.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Form CIR‑3 (Application for judicial management order) | Prescribed originating application. Filed by the applicant’s solicitors at the High Court. Must identify the company, state the statutory grounds and specify the relief sought. Template available from the Insolvency Office. |
| Form CIR‑4 (Supporting affidavit) | Sworn or affirmed by a director or authorised officer. Must exhibit all evidence relied on: financial statements, cashflow forecasts, creditor schedule, board resolution and rescue plan. |
| Notice of Application / IRDA‑15 (where applicable) | Registry or practice direction form for notifying the Insolvency Office and creditors. Use Ministry of Law Insolvency Office templates. |
| Board resolution / members’ resolution | Signed and dated company minutes authorising the application. Attach as exhibit to CIR‑4. |
| Company financial statements (latest 2–3 years) | Audited accounts preferred. Include management accounts to date. |
| Cashflow forecast and viability plan | 13‑ or 26‑week rolling cashflow forecast with narrative explaining the rescue strategy. Prepared by management or IP. |
| Creditor schedule (secured and unsecured) | Full list of creditors with amounts, type and details of any security held. Include a separate floating‑charge schedule. |
| Valuation or asset schedules | Independent valuer report or management asset register, especially for real property, plant and receivables. |
| Evidence of attempted alternatives | SIP proposals, scheme correspondence, engagement letters, negotiation records, any material showing that less intrusive options were considered. |
| Key stakeholder list | Directors, top 20 creditors, major contract counterparties, with contact details for service purposes. |
A well‑structured Form CIR‑4 affidavit typically follows this outline:
The overall timeline for a judicial management application depends heavily on whether the application is contested. The table below compares the two most common scenarios.
| Milestone | Uncontested (fast track) | Contested |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing preparation | 3–7 days | 7–14 days |
| Filing to interim hearing | 1–7 days | 7–21 days |
| Interim hearing to return hearing | 2–4 weeks | 4–6 weeks |
| Return hearing duration | Half day to 1 day | 1–5 days |
| Judgement | Often same day | Reserved; typically 2–6 weeks |
| Total: filing to final order | 3–6 weeks | 2–4 months |
| Judicial manager’s statement of proposals | 30–90 days after appointment | 30–90 days after appointment |
Several deadlines run from the date of the judicial management order. The judicial manager must submit a statement of proposals to creditors within the period fixed by the court. Creditors’ meetings must be convened to consider and vote on those proposals. Extensions of the judicial management period require a fresh court application supported by evidence of progress. The IRDA judicial management procedure is designed to keep matters moving: courts will not grant indefinite extensions without clear justification.
The court’s practice directions and the Insolvency Office’s administrative requirements also affect scheduling. Applicants should factor in registry processing times, hearing‑slot availability and the time needed to serve all required parties when planning their timetable.
The costs of a judicial management application vary significantly depending on the complexity of the case, the size of the company, and whether the application is contested. The table below provides indicative guidance.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee | Variable, confirm with the Supreme Court Registry | Check the current Supreme Court fees schedule before filing. |
| Legal counsel fees (applicant) | SGD 8,000–80,000+ | Depends on whether application is contested. Ranges are indicative only. |
| Insolvency practitioner / judicial manager fees | Engagement rate plus daily or monthly rate and disbursements | Fees are subject to court approval. The judicial manager may apply to the court for fee determination. |
| Professional disbursements (valuers, forensic accountants) | SGD 2,000–50,000+ | Case‑dependent. Required where asset valuations or forensic analysis is needed. |
| Service and process costs | Modest | Includes process server fees and any required Gazette advertisement costs. |
| GST on professional services | 9% (current rate, confirm before filing) | GST applies to legal and professional services provided in Singapore. |
All figures above are indicative. Applicants should obtain detailed fee estimates from their solicitors and proposed judicial manager before committing to the application. The court has the power to review and approve the judicial manager’s remuneration, providing a degree of cost control throughout the process.
The IRDA judicial management procedure has been subject to ongoing refinement since the Act came into force. Several developments in the 2024–2026 period are relevant to applicants preparing filings in 2026.
Industry observers expect courts to apply heightened scrutiny to the quality of evidence filed in support of judicial management applications, particularly following practitioner commentary emphasising the need for credible, independently supported cashflow forecasts and viability plans rather than optimistic management projections. The likely practical effect is that applicants will need to commission independent financial analyses and present more granular evidence to satisfy the reasonable‑prospect test.
For SGX‑listed companies, the judicial management application process carries additional disclosure obligations. A listed company must announce any filing promptly under the SGX Listing Rules, and the timetable for hearings may need to accommodate market‑sensitive considerations. Early indications suggest that the SGX’s approach to disclosure around insolvency applications is becoming more prescriptive, with listed issuers expected to provide detailed updates on the progress of judicial management proceedings.
Where a company has previously participated in a Simplified Insolvency Programme (SIP), practitioners should document the SIP’s outcome and explain in the CIR‑4 affidavit why judicial management is now the appropriate next step. Courts will want to understand why less intrusive mechanisms did not succeed before granting a more interventionist order.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Imran Rahim, PBM at Gateway Law Corporation, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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