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how to wind up a company in Tanzania

How to Wind Up a Company in Tanzania, Step‑by‑step (voluntary & Compulsory)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to wind up a company in Tanzania requires directors, company secretaries and insolvency practitioners to navigate a precise sequence of statutory filings, regulatory notices and court procedures governed principally by the Companies Act and the Companies (Insolvency) Rules. Whether the company is solvent and shareholders simply wish to cease operations, or creditors are petitioning the High Court for a compulsory order, every step carries strict deadlines, prescribed BRELA forms and, since the 2026 Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments), enhanced beneficial‑ownership and anti‑money‑laundering disclosure obligations.

This guide sets out the complete winding up procedure Tanzania 2026 in the order practitioners need it: eligibility checks, procedural steps for both voluntary and compulsory routes, required documents, timelines, costs and the most common pitfalls that delay or invalidate a dissolution.

Overview of the Winding‑Up Process and Who It Applies To

Winding up is the formal process by which a company incorporated or registered in Tanzania ceases to carry on business, realises its assets, settles its debts and is ultimately dissolved and removed from the BRELA register. The Companies Act provides two principal routes:

  • Members’ voluntary winding up. Available where the company is solvent. Directors make a statutory declaration of solvency, shareholders pass a special resolution, and a liquidator appointed by the members realises the assets and distributes any surplus.
  • Compulsory (court‑ordered) winding up. Initiated by petition to the High Court, Commercial Division, typically by a creditor, the company itself, or the Registrar. The court appoints an official liquidator and supervises the process through to dissolution.

A creditors’ voluntary winding up, where the directors cannot make a solvency declaration, follows a similar procedural track to the members’ voluntary route but requires an additional creditors’ meeting and gives creditors a voice in appointing the liquidator. Regardless of route, once a winding‑up resolution is passed or a court order is made, the company must stop trading (except so far as required for beneficial winding up), and the powers of directors effectively cease, passing to the liquidator.

The steps to wind up a company apply to every company limited by shares, company limited by guarantee and unlimited company incorporated under the Companies Act. Foreign companies registered with BRELA as local branches follow a modified procedure that includes additional filings with both the Registrar and their home jurisdiction.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Winding Up

Before any resolution or petition is filed, directors and shareholders must confirm which route is legally available. The choice turns on solvency: can the company pay all its debts within twelve months of the commencement of winding up?

Directors’ Solvency Declaration

For a members’ voluntary liquidation Tanzania, the Companies Act requires a majority of directors (or, where there are only two directors, both of them) to make a statutory declaration that they have conducted a full inquiry into the company’s affairs and have formed the opinion that the company will be able to pay its debts in full, together with interest, within a period not exceeding twelve months from the commencement of the winding up. The declaration must be made at a board meeting and must be accompanied by a statement of the company’s assets and liabilities as at the latest practicable date before the declaration.

It must be delivered to the Registrar before the date of the shareholders’ meeting at which the winding‑up resolution is proposed.

A director solvency declaration made without reasonable grounds exposes the declarant to personal liability for the company’s debts. The High Court has scrutinised solvency declarations closely, and industry observers expect this scrutiny to intensify under the 2026 compliance framework. Directors should ensure that the declaration is supported by current audited or management accounts and an independent cash‑flow forecast.

When Compulsory Winding Up Is Initiated

A compulsory liquidation Tanzania petition may be presented to the High Court on any of several statutory grounds, including: the company is unable to pay its debts (the most common ground); the company has resolved by special resolution that it be wound up by the court; it is just and equitable that the company be wound up; or the Registrar certifies that the company has failed to comply with statutory requirements. A creditor whose debt exceeds the prescribed statutory minimum and who has served a statutory demand that remains unsatisfied for twenty‑one days is deemed to have established inability to pay debts.

Steps to Wind Up a Company in Tanzania

The winding up procedure Tanzania 2026 divides into two distinct procedural tracks. The table below summarises the key milestones and durations before each track is explained step by step.

Step Who does it Typical duration
Directors prepare signed Declaration of Solvency and financial statements Directors / Company secretary (members’ voluntary) 1–2 weeks (varies by company complexity)
Shareholders pass special resolution to wind up Shareholders at general meeting or by written resolution Convene within statutory notice period, 14–28 days
File resolution and BRELA forms; publish Gazette and newspaper notice Company secretary / Liquidator File within 14 days of resolution; Gazette publication within 14 days
Appoint liquidator and issue public notices to creditors Members (voluntary) or Court (compulsory) Liquidator appointed on date of resolution or court order; creditor adverts within 7–14 days
Liquidator calls creditors, realises assets and pays debts Liquidator 3–18+ months depending on asset complexity
Liquidator files final accounts and convenes final meeting Liquidator Typically 1–3 months after final realisation
BRELA deregistration and dissolution Liquidator / Registrar of Companies Registry update within weeks of final return; formal dissolution follows per statute

Members’ Voluntary Winding Up, Step‑by‑Step

1. Hold a Board Meeting and Execute the Declaration of Solvency

The directors convene a board meeting at which they review up‑to‑date financial statements, ideally audited, and a twelve‑month cash‑flow forecast. If satisfied that the company can discharge all debts within twelve months, a majority of directors sign the statutory declaration of solvency. The declaration and the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities are then filed with BRELA before the shareholders’ meeting is held.

2. Convene a General Meeting and Pass a Special Resolution

The company gives notice of a general meeting in accordance with its articles and the Companies Act. At the meeting, shareholders pass a special resolution that the company be wound up voluntarily. The resolution must also appoint a liquidator and fix the liquidator’s remuneration. A written resolution signed by the requisite majority may be used where the articles permit. Minutes are signed and the resolution is filed with the Registrar.

3. File the Resolution with BRELA and Publish Statutory Notices

Within fourteen days of the passing of the special resolution, the company must file a copy of the resolution with BRELA, currently via the BRELA Online Registration System (ORS), together with the prescribed forms, including BRELA Form 345 (the return filed by the liquidator in a members’ voluntary winding up). Within the same period, a notice of the resolution must be published in the Government Gazette and in at least one newspaper circulating in the area of the company’s registered office. Proof of publication should be retained as it will be required at later stages.

4. Appoint the Liquidator and Notify Creditors

The liquidator’s appointment takes effect from the date of the resolution. The liquidator files notice of appointment with the Registrar and publishes an advertisement inviting creditors to submit proofs of debt within a stated period, typically not less than twenty‑one days. Appointing a liquidator who is a qualified insolvency practitioner or an advocate with relevant experience is strongly advisable, although the Companies Act does not currently restrict the appointment to licensed practitioners.

5. Realise Assets, Adjudicate Claims and Distribute Proceeds

The liquidator takes custody of the company’s assets, collects outstanding debts, adjudicates creditor claims and sells assets where necessary. The order of distribution follows the statutory priority: secured creditors, costs of winding up, preferential debts (including employee wages and TRA tax arrears), unsecured creditors and finally, any surplus to shareholders. The liquidator must keep proper books and accounts throughout and comply with the Companies (Insolvency) Rules on creditor meetings and reporting.

6. Convene the Final Meeting and File the Final Return for BRELA Deregistration

Once all assets have been realised and distributions made, the liquidator prepares a final account showing how the winding up has been conducted and the property disposed of. The liquidator convenes a final general meeting, giving at least one month’s notice by advertisement in the Gazette. Within one week of the meeting, the liquidator files the final account and a return of the meeting with the Registrar. On receipt of these documents, the Registrar proceeds to dissolve the company and remove it from the register.

Compulsory (Court‑Ordered) Winding Up, Step‑by‑Step

1. File a Winding‑Up Petition with the High Court

The petitioner, usually a creditor, but sometimes the company itself, a shareholder or the Registrar, files a petition in the High Court (Commercial Division). The petition must be supported by a verifying affidavit and must set out the grounds relied upon. Where the ground is inability to pay debts, evidence of an unsatisfied statutory demand served at least twenty‑one days earlier is typically attached.

2. Obtain an Interim Order and Provisional Liquidator Appointment

The court may, on hearing the petition or at any time before the final order, appoint a provisional liquidator to preserve the company’s assets. The court also sets a hearing date and directs that the petition be advertised in the Gazette and a newspaper so that other creditors and interested parties may appear.

3. Advertise the Petition and Notify Creditors

The petitioner publishes the required advertisement within the time directed by the court. Any creditor or contributory wishing to support or oppose the petition must file notice and appear at the hearing. The court‑appointed liquidator (or provisional liquidator) concurrently begins identifying creditors and issuing notices inviting proofs of debt.

4. Court Issues the Winding‑Up Order and Gives Directions

If the court is satisfied that the grounds are established, it makes an order that the company be wound up. The winding‑up is deemed to commence on the date the petition was presented. The court gives directions for creditor meetings, proof of debts and the preparation of a distribution plan. The liquidator administers the estate under the supervision of the court, filing periodic accounts and reports.

5. Dissolution by Court Order and Registry Update

After the liquidator has realised all assets and made final distributions, the liquidator applies to the court for an order dissolving the company. The court order is filed with BRELA, and the Registrar strikes the company off the register. The company ceases to exist as a legal entity from the date of dissolution.

Documents Required for Winding Up a Company in Tanzania

The documents required for winding up fall into two categories: those the company must prepare before the process begins and those generated during the liquidation itself. The table below lists every key document, who issues it and practical notes on format and validity.

Document Notes
Directors’ Declaration of Solvency Signed by a majority of directors; states the company can pay debts within 12 months. Must be filed with BRELA before the shareholders’ meeting (members’ voluntary only).
Special resolution to wind up Passed at general meeting or by written resolution; recorded in minutes and signed by the chairperson. Filed with the Registrar within 14 days.
Statement of assets and liabilities Accompanies the solvency declaration; prepared as at the latest practicable date. Include bank statements, asset registers and receivables schedule.
BRELA Form 345 Prescribed return for members’ voluntary winding up, filed by the liquidator via the BRELA ORS portal. Check the BRELA website for any additional prescribed forms.
Gazette notice and newspaper advertisement Published in the Government Gazette and a widely circulated newspaper. Retain proof of publication (certified copy of Gazette page and newspaper clipping).
Liquidator appointment letter and acceptance Issued by the appointing authority (members or court). The liquidator signs acceptance and files notice with the Registrar.
Creditors’ proofs of debt Claim forms submitted by each creditor, supported by invoices, contracts or affidavits. The liquidator maintains a register of all claims received.
Final liquidation accounts Prepared by the liquidator showing how assets were realised and proceeds distributed. Presented at the final meeting and filed with the Registrar and TRA.
TRA final tax returns and clearance Final income tax, VAT and PAYE returns filed with the Tanzania Revenue Authority. Obtain and retain the TRA clearance certificate or confirmation of nil liability.
Court petition and supporting affidavit (compulsory only) Filed in the High Court, Commercial Division. Must detail grounds, attach statutory demand (where applicable) and be verified by affidavit.

Companies planning a voluntary liquidation Tanzania should begin assembling these documents well before the board meeting. Missing or incomplete filings are among the most common causes of delays in BRELA deregistration. For guidance on BRELA’s online filing system, see the BRELA ORS step‑by‑step guide.

Liquidation Timeline and Key Deadlines

How long does winding up a company take in Tanzania? The answer depends on the route, the complexity of the company’s affairs and the speed of creditor responses. However, several deadlines are fixed by statute and cannot be extended without risk of penalties or invalidation.

Deadline / milestone Statutory window Route
File solvency declaration with Registrar Before the date of the shareholders’ meeting Members’ voluntary
File special resolution with BRELA Within 14 days of passing Both voluntary routes
Publish Gazette and newspaper notice of resolution Within 14 days of resolution Both voluntary routes
Creditors submit proofs of debt Not less than 21 days from liquidator’s advertisement All routes
Liquidator files periodic accounts with Registrar At intervals not exceeding 12 months All routes
Notice of final meeting published in Gazette At least 1 month before the final meeting Members’ voluntary
File final account and meeting return with Registrar Within 1 week of the final meeting Members’ voluntary
Advertise court petition in Gazette and newspaper Within time directed by the court (typically 7–14 days) Compulsory

A straightforward members’ voluntary winding up of a dormant or asset‑light company can, in practice, be completed in three to six months. Complex liquidations involving disputed claims, real property or ongoing litigation routinely take twelve to twenty‑four months or longer. Compulsory winding up timelines are heavily dependent on court scheduling and the volume of creditor claims, with industry observers noting that the Commercial Division’s caseload can add several months to the procedural calendar.

Directors and company secretaries should build a compliance calendar at the outset, marking every statutory filing deadline. Failure to meet even one of these deadlines can result in penalties, personal liability for directors, or an application by a creditor to convert the voluntary liquidation into a compulsory winding up. Companies that have not yet registered for VAT or need to confirm their TRA status should consult the guide on how to register for VAT in Tanzania before filing final returns.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

The total cost of how to wind up a company in Tanzania varies significantly depending on the route, the size of the company’s estate and whether disputed claims require legal proceedings. The table below provides indicative cost categories. All amounts should be verified directly with BRELA, the High Court Registry and TRA before budgeting, as fee schedules are updated periodically.

Item Typical range Notes
BRELA filing fees (resolution, Form 345, final return) Varies, check current BRELA fees schedule Payable via BRELA ORS or at BRELA offices; fees differ by form type.
Government Gazette publication Varies by notice length Separate charge for each required Gazette notice; newspaper advert is an additional cost.
Liquidator professional fees Typically 3 %–10 % of total realisations, or a fixed retainer Market range; varies by complexity. Obtain a written fee proposal before appointment.
Legal fees (advocate / company secretary) Varies by scope of work Drafting petition, attending court hearings, preparing statutory declarations.
Court filing fees (compulsory winding up) Varies, check High Court fee schedule Petition filing fee plus hearing‑day fees; subject to periodic revision.
Outstanding tax liabilities (income tax, VAT, PAYE) Varies by liability TRA arrears rank as preferential debts and must be settled before unsecured creditors. Penalties and interest accrue on late filing.

Outstanding tax obligations deserve particular attention. TRA treats unpaid corporate income tax, VAT and PAYE as preferential debts in a liquidation, meaning they must be paid ahead of ordinary unsecured creditors. The liquidator should file all outstanding TRA returns as early as possible and request confirmation of the company’s tax position to avoid delays at the final dissolution stage.

What Changed in the Winding Up Procedure Tanzania 2026

The 2026 Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments) introduced several changes that directly affect how to wind up a company in Tanzania. The most significant relate to beneficial‑ownership transparency and anti‑money‑laundering compliance:

  • Enhanced beneficial‑ownership disclosure. Directors and liquidators must now ensure that the company’s beneficial‑ownership information held with BRELA is accurate and up to date at every stage of the winding‑up process, including at the point of filing the final return for deregistration. Any discrepancy must be corrected before the Registrar will accept dissolution filings.
  • AML/BO verification by liquidators. Liquidators are expected to verify the identity of all beneficial owners as part of the asset‑realisation and distribution process. Early indications suggest that BRELA and the Financial Intelligence Unit are co‑ordinating enforcement to flag companies that attempt to dissolve without completing BO verification.
  • BRELA ORS updates. The Online Registration System has been updated to require digital upload of beneficial‑ownership declarations alongside winding‑up forms. Companies that still hold paper‑only BO records will need to digitise and upload them before the deregistration process can proceed.
  • Tighter penalties for non‑compliance. The 2026 amendments increase penalties for directors who fail to maintain accurate BO records, and these penalties apply even where the company is in the process of being wound up.

The practical effect is that directors should collect and verify all beneficial‑ownership documentation at the earliest stage, ideally before the board meeting at which the solvency declaration is made, and ensure that the company’s BRELA online profile is fully up to date. Liquidators accepting appointment should include BO verification as a standard item in their initial workplan.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

Procedural errors during winding up can result in personal liability for directors, penalties from regulators, or a court setting aside the entire liquidation. The most frequently encountered pitfalls are:

  • Defective solvency declaration. Filing a declaration of solvency without adequate supporting financials or without reasonable grounds exposes directors to personal liability for the company’s debts. High Court judgments published on TanzLII have invalidated voluntary winding‑up proceedings where the declaration was found to be reckless or unsupported.
  • Late Gazette and newspaper publication. Missing the statutory fourteen‑day window for publishing the winding‑up notice in the Government Gazette is a common and costly error. Late publication may render the resolution ineffective and give creditors grounds to petition for compulsory winding up.
  • Incomplete creditor notification. Failing to advertise properly or overlooking known creditors can lead to claims surfacing after distributions have been made, reopening the liquidation.
  • Failure to file final TRA returns. Overlooking outstanding income tax, VAT or PAYE obligations with TRA results in penalties, interest and potential enforcement action, including a refusal by the Registrar to deregister the company.
  • Ignoring 2026 beneficial‑ownership requirements. Attempting to file for dissolution without updated BO records on the BRELA ORS portal will result in rejection of the filing and potential penalties under the 2026 amendments.
  • Appointing an unqualified liquidator. While the Companies Act does not prescribe formal licensing for liquidators, appointing a person without insolvency experience frequently leads to procedural errors, delays and increased costs.
  • Inadequate record‑keeping during liquidation. The liquidator must maintain detailed books and accounts. Poor records make it impossible to prepare the final account required for the final meeting and Registrar filing.
  • Not convening the final meeting. Skipping the final meeting or giving inadequate notice (less than one month via Gazette advertisement) prevents the Registrar from completing BRELA deregistration.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ernestilla Bahati at Ernestilla, Mafita & Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Business Registrations and Licensing Agency (BRELA), Official Site
  2. Tanzania Legal Information Institute (TanzLII)
  3. Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), Official Site

FAQs

What are the procedures for winding up a company in Tanzania?
The core procedures involve directors making a solvency declaration (if voluntary), shareholders passing a special resolution, filing with BRELA, publishing notices in the Government Gazette and a newspaper, appointing a liquidator, realising assets, paying creditors in statutory order and filing final accounts. For compulsory winding up, the process starts with a petition to the High Court.
A straightforward members’ voluntary winding up of a dormant company can be completed in three to six months. Complex liquidations involving disputed claims or significant assets typically take twelve to twenty‑four months. Compulsory proceedings are subject to court scheduling and may take longer.
At minimum: a directors’ declaration of solvency with a statement of assets and liabilities, a special resolution passed by shareholders, BRELA Form 345, a Gazette and newspaper notice, and a liquidator appointment letter. Full financial statements and TRA returns should also be prepared. See the documents table above for the complete checklist.
Directors must ensure the solvency declaration is made on reasonable grounds, co‑operate fully with the liquidator, refrain from disposing of company assets after the resolution is passed and comply with beneficial‑ownership disclosure requirements. A director who makes a solvency declaration without reasonable grounds faces personal liability for company debts.
A foreign company registered with BRELA as a local branch can be deregistered in Tanzania, but the process requires additional filings with both the Tanzanian Registrar and the company’s home jurisdiction. The winding‑up procedure applies to the Tanzanian operations only; assets and liabilities outside Tanzania are dealt with under the law of the company’s place of incorporation. For background on registering a company in Tanzania as a foreigner, see the related guide.
Missing a statutory deadline, for example, the fourteen‑day window for publishing the Gazette notice or the one‑week window for filing the final return, can result in penalties imposed by the Registrar, personal liability for directors and, in extreme cases, an application by creditors to convert the voluntary liquidation into a compulsory winding up by the court.
Engaging a qualified advocate or insolvency practitioner is advisable at the earliest stage, particularly where the company has significant debts, disputed creditor claims, real property or employee obligations. Legal advice is essential for compulsory liquidation Tanzania proceedings, where the petition must comply with High Court procedural rules. A directory of qualified practitioners can be found via the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
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How to Wind Up a Company in Tanzania, Step‑by‑step (voluntary & Compulsory)

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