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A scheme of arrangement is the principal court-sanctioned mechanism available under Ghanaian law for restructuring a company’s debts, reorganising its share capital or effecting a binding compromise between a company and its creditors or members. The scheme of arrangement process in Ghana is governed by Section 239 of the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992), which sets out the application procedure, the role of the Registrar’s appointed reporter, the statutory voting thresholds, and the requirements for court sanction. This guide provides directors, CFOs, insolvency practitioners and creditor representatives with a complete, step-by-step roadmap, from initial board approval through to implementation and filing with the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC).
Whether a company is negotiating a debt composition, facing insolvency risk or planning a capital reorganisation, the process described below will help stakeholders determine feasibility, prepare the right documents and anticipate realistic timescales and costs before engaging counsel.
A scheme of arrangement under Section 239 of Act 992 is a formal compromise or arrangement between a company and its creditors (or any class of them), or between a company and its members (or any class of them). Unlike informal workouts, a scheme that receives court sanction becomes legally binding on all members of the affected class, including those who voted against it, once the statutory voting thresholds are met and the Court endorses the arrangement.
Companies use schemes of arrangement in Ghana for several purposes: rescuing a financially distressed business by restructuring unsustainable debt; converting debt to equity; reorganising share capital ahead of a merger or acquisition; and effecting binding compromises with trade creditors, banks or bondholders. The scheme mechanism applies to companies incorporated under Act 992, both public and private, and to external companies registered to operate in Ghana.
Before committing to the scheme of arrangement process in Ghana, directors should ask three threshold questions:
Under Section 239 of Act 992, an application for directions to convene a meeting for the purpose of approving a scheme may be made by the company itself, by any creditor or member of the company, or, where the company is in liquidation or administration, by the liquidator or administrator. The section is broadly permissive: it does not restrict schemes to insolvent companies, so solvent reorganisations are equally available.
Before filing, a company proposing a scheme must satisfy several practical prerequisites:
The critical statutory threshold to keep in mind from the outset is the dual voting test: a scheme must be approved by a majority in number of creditors or members present and voting, representing at least 75 per cent in value of those present and voting, in each class convened by the Court.
A scheme of arrangement does not automatically create a moratorium or stay on creditor enforcement. If creditors are actively pursuing litigation, execution or seizure of assets, the company may need to seek a separate court order for interim relief or consider whether a formal administration procedure, which does carry a statutory moratorium, is more appropriate. Industry observers note that in practice, companies in Ghana often pair a scheme application with an urgent application for injunctive relief to restrain enforcement while the meetings are convened.
The following table summarises each stage of the scheme of arrangement process in Ghana, who is responsible, and realistic time estimates. Detailed guidance for each step follows immediately below.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Board decision and appointment of advisers | Company directors / Board | 1–7 days |
| 2. Prepare scheme proposal, explanatory statement and creditor class schedules | Company advisers (counsel + insolvency practitioner + accountants) | 7–21 days |
| 3. Apply to Court for directions to convene meetings (s.239 application) | Company (via counsel) | 7–14 days (court listing varies by registry) |
| 4. Serve notices and explanatory statement; convene creditor/member meetings | Company (with court-directed notice requirements) | 14–21 days (notice period per court directions and constitution) |
| 5. Voting at class meetings, count and certify results | Meeting chair / scrutineer + insolvency practitioner reporter | 1 day (meeting) + 2–7 days (certification) |
| 6. File results and reporter’s report with Registrar; apply for Court sanction | Company counsel + Registrar referral | 7–28 days |
| 7. Court sanction hearing and order | Court (parties represented) | 2–8 weeks after filing |
| 8. Implement scheme: effect transfers, update registers, file court order with ORC | Company secretarial team + ORC | Immediate to 90 days (per scheme terms) |
Pass a board resolution authorising the preparation and filing of a scheme of arrangement and the appointment of lead counsel, an insolvency practitioner (IP) and, where necessary, financial or valuation advisers.
Prepare the formal scheme document, the explanatory statement required under s.239 of Act 992, and detailed creditor class schedules.
File a s.239 application with the High Court (Commercial Division, where available) seeking directions to convene meetings of the relevant classes of creditors or members.
Convene separate meetings for each class of creditors or members as directed by the Court. Apply the statutory dual voting test under Act 992:
Worked example 1. Four unsecured creditors attend the meeting. Their claims are valued at GH₵600,000, GH₵200,000, GH₵100,000 and GH₵100,000 respectively, a total of GH₵1,000,000. Three creditors (holding GH₵600,000 + GH₵100,000 + GH₵100,000 = GH₵800,000) vote in favour. The value test is satisfied (GH₵800,000 is 80 per cent, exceeding 75 per cent). The number test is also satisfied (three of four is 75 per cent, exceeding 50 per cent). The scheme passes for this class.
Worked example 2. In a secured class, two creditors attend. Bank A (GH₵4,000,000) votes in favour; Bank B (GH₵2,000,000) votes against. The value test is satisfied (GH₵4,000,000 is 66.7 per cent, this does not reach 75 per cent). The scheme fails in this class, even though the number test is met (one of two in favour is 50 per cent, which does not exceed 50 per cent either). Both tests must be satisfied for the scheme to pass.
File the meeting results, reporter’s report and supporting court bundle with the Court and apply for a sanction order.
Complete all implementation steps specified in the scheme and file the court sanction order with the Office of the Registrar of Companies.
The table below lists the core documents needed at each stage of the scheme of arrangement process. Companies should treat this as a working checklist and assign responsibility for each document early in the process.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Draft Scheme of Arrangement | Prepared by company counsel. Sets out terms, effective date, implementation mechanics and treatment of each class. |
| Explanatory statement | Prepared by the company and advisers. Must explain the effect of the scheme on each class and include material financial information. Served with meeting notices. |
| Creditor register and class schedules | Company secretary / finance team. Lists every creditor by name, address, amount, security and proposed class. Critical for vote calculations. |
| Financial statements and cash-flow forecasts | CFO or auditors. Latest audited or management accounts plus a forward cash-flow projection covering at least 12 months. Should not be older than 6 months at the date of the meeting. |
| Board resolution | Signed board minutes authorising the scheme proposal, adviser appointments and access to books. |
| Application to Court under s.239 (with supporting affidavit) | Filed by counsel. Seeks Court directions to convene class meetings and appoint a reporter. |
| Reporter’s (IP) report | Insolvency practitioner appointed on the Registrar’s recommendation. Investigates fairness and files the report with the Court and creditors. |
| Meeting notices and proxy forms | Company secretarial team. Served in accordance with Court directions and the company’s constitution. |
| Evidence of service | Company counsel / secretary. Proof of service on every creditor and statutory body (GRA, regulators). Affidavit or certificate of service. |
| Court bundle for sanction hearing | Prepared by counsel: scheme, meeting minutes, certified voting certificates, reporter’s report, affidavits, evidence of service. |
| ORC filings (sanction order and amended constitution) | Company secretary delivers the court order, and any amended constitution, to the ORC after the Court grants sanction. |
Where foreign creditors are included in the scheme, allow additional time for translated notices, notarised proxy forms and international postage or courier delivery. The Court may specify bespoke service directions for overseas creditors.
An uncontested scheme of arrangement in Ghana typically takes 6 to 14 weeks from board resolution to court sanction. Contested or complex matters, particularly those involving multiple creditor classes, disputed classifications or objecting creditors, can extend to several months.
The key time-sensitive deadlines to track are:
| Scenario | Estimated Additional Time |
|---|---|
| Contested creditor classification | +2–6 weeks (interlocutory hearing) |
| Dissenting creditor objection at sanction hearing | +2–4 weeks (adjournment for evidence) |
| Foreign creditor service requirements | +2–4 weeks (international delivery and translations) |
| Disputed reporter’s findings | +4–12 weeks (supplementary report or replacement reporter) |
The total cost of a scheme of arrangement depends on the company’s size, the number of creditor classes, whether the scheme is contested and the complexity of the underlying financial arrangements. The table below provides indicative cost categories. All figures should be verified with the relevant authority or adviser before budgeting.
| Item | Indicative Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing and hearing fees | Varies, confirm with High Court registry | Fees depend on the Court, the relief sought and the number of applications. Request the current schedule from the registry. |
| ORC / Registrar filing fee | Small fixed fee, confirm with ORC | Payable when delivering the sanction order and any amended constitution. Check the ORC fee schedule for current rates. |
| Insolvency practitioner (reporter) fees | Negotiable / subject to Court approval | Depends on the complexity and duration of the fairness investigation. The reporter is appointed on the Registrar’s recommendation; fees may be agreed between the parties or fixed by the Court. |
| Legal fees (company counsel) | Varies by firm and complexity | Covers drafting, court appearances, creditor negotiations and implementation. Expect higher fees for contested matters. |
| Accounting and valuation fees | Varies | For solvency analysis, fairness opinions, asset valuations and cash-flow modelling. |
| Stamp duty / transfer taxes | Transaction-dependent, confirm with GRA | May apply on share transfers or debt-to-equity conversions effected under the scheme. Obtain tax clearance from the Ghana Revenue Authority. |
Directors should also consider employee-related priority claims (terminal benefits, unpaid wages) which rank ahead of unsecured creditors and may affect the economics of the scheme. Capital gains tax implications on asset disposals or share allotments should be assessed at the drafting stage, not after sanction.
Two significant developments in 2026 have practical implications for companies pursuing a scheme of arrangement in Ghana:
The practical advice for directors is to build an additional due diligence step into the pre-meeting phase: confirm that the company’s ORC filings are up to date, that all beneficial ownership declarations have been submitted, and that no bearer shares remain on the register. Rectifying these issues after the Court hearing will delay implementation and may require a supplementary application.
If a critical deadline is missed, for example, an expired notice period or a late-filed reporter’s report, the usual remedy is to apply to the Court for fresh directions. This will reset the timetable and add cost, so prevention through careful project management is always preferable.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Audrey Naa Dei Kotey at Audrey Grey, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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