When an Australian company cannot pay its debts, directors, creditors and insolvency practitioners face a binary fork: accept (or propose) a Deed of Company Arrangement (DOCA) that compromises claims in exchange for a faster, potentially larger return, or push the company straight into liquidation for an orderly wind-up and asset realisation. The question of DOCA vs liquidation Australia has always turned on which pathway leaves creditors with more dollars in hand after professional fees, tax and time are stripped out. The 2026 insolvency reforms, which adjusted small-business restructuring eligibility, streamlined creditor voting mechanics and recalibrated priority treatment, have materially shifted that calculation.
This article sets out a head-to-head, dimension-by-dimension comparison so directors and creditors can make the choice with confidence, and know exactly when to instruct insolvency counsel.
To be clear at the outset: voluntary administration is not the same as liquidation. Voluntary administration is a holding pattern, governed by Part 5. 3A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), in which an external administrator investigates the company’s affairs and presents creditors with options: execute a DOCA, return to directors’ control, or resolve that the company be wound up. Liquidation is one possible outcome of administration, but it is also a standalone pathway (creditors’ voluntary liquidation or court-ordered winding up under Part 5. 4). The two processes differ in purpose, timeline, cost structure and, critically, in the recoveries they deliver.
The sections below explain each option, compare them side by side, and provide a clear decision framework grounded in the 2026 reform landscape.
Voluntary administration begins when a company’s directors resolve, under s 436A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), that the company is insolvent or is likely to become insolvent. An external administrator (a registered liquidator acting as voluntary administrator) is appointed to take control. The administrator’s core task is to investigate the company’s business, property and affairs, and to recommend to creditors whether the company should enter a DOCA, return to the directors, or be wound up. A Deed of Company Arrangement vs liquidation choice is therefore the central decision creditors face at the conclusion of voluntary administration.
A DOCA is proposed by the company’s directors (or a third party) and put to creditors at the second creditors’ meeting, typically held within 25 business days of the administrator’s appointment, though the court may extend this period under s 439A. The administrator must provide creditors with a report that includes an opinion on whether the DOCA would produce a better return for creditors than immediate liquidation.
For the DOCA to be approved, creditors must pass a resolution by both a majority in number and a majority in value of creditors voting at the meeting, the dual-majority test. Once executed under s 444A, the DOCA binds all unsecured creditors, whether or not they voted in favour and whether or not they were aware of the meeting. Secured creditors are only bound if they voted in favour or if their security is dealt with under the deed. The administrator becomes the “deed administrator” and oversees compliance.
This binding effect is what makes a DOCA powerful: it can force a compromise on dissenting unsecured creditors, provided the required majorities are achieved. However, any creditor who believes the DOCA is unfairly prejudicial or was procured by improper conduct may apply to the court under s 445D to have it set aside or varied.
DOCAs take many forms. The most common structures include:
The critical question for creditors at the meeting is whether the proposed DOCA will deliver a better net return than the alternative, liquidation. This requires modelling the likely realisations in liquidation (after liquidator fees, priority creditors and realisation discounts) against the DOCA offer. In practice, the administrator’s s 439A report includes this comparison, but creditors should independently verify the assumptions.
A DOCA suits companies with ongoing revenue, salvageable goodwill, or directors willing to inject personal funds. It also suits creditors who prefer a defined payment over the uncertainty and delay of liquidation realisations. Where the company has no viable business and the DOCA merely delays the inevitable wind-up, liquidation will usually produce a better or equivalent result at lower total cost.
Liquidation is the terminal process. A liquidator is appointed to realise the company’s assets, investigate its affairs (including potential insolvent trading, voidable transactions and unreasonable director-related transactions), pay creditors in the order prescribed by the Corporations Act, and then deregister the company. Liquidation can arise through three pathways:
In an insolvency context, the CVL and court-ordered pathways are most common. The liquidator’s duties are governed by Part 5.4B and include realising assets at the best price reasonably obtainable, adjudicating proofs of debt, and distributing proceeds according to the statutory priority waterfall: secured creditors (from their security), then employee entitlements (wages, superannuation, leave, partly underwritten by the Fair Entitlements Guarantee), then unsecured creditors on a pari passu basis.
Liquidation recoveries depend on the realisable value of assets after forced-sale discounts (commonly 20–40 % below book value for plant, equipment and stock), the quantum of priority claims (employee entitlements and the liquidator’s own remuneration rank ahead of unsecured creditors under s 556), and the costs of investigation and litigation. In many small-company liquidations, unsecured creditors receive little or nothing because the asset pool is consumed by priority claims and professional fees.
However, liquidation provides recovery mechanisms that a DOCA does not: the liquidator can pursue insolvent trading claims against directors under s 588G, recover unfair preferences under s 588FA, and void uncommercial transactions under s 588FB. These litigation recoveries can materially increase the pool available to unsecured creditors, but they are uncertain, costly to pursue and can take years to resolve.
Can you get your money back if a company has gone into liquidation? In principle, yes, but the amount depends entirely on the size of the asset pool relative to priority and secured claims. According to ASIC data, the median dividend to unsecured creditors in Australian liquidations has historically been nil. Liquidation is therefore most attractive where significant director misconduct or voidable transactions exist, where assets are straightforward to realise, or where a DOCA on offer is plainly inadequate.
The table below compares the two pathways across ten decision dimensions. Use it as a quick reference; detailed analysis of each dimension follows in the next section.
| Dimension | DOCA (Voluntary Administration) | Liquidation |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | Company is insolvent or likely to become insolvent; directors resolve to appoint administrator (s 436A) | Insolvent company (CVL or court order); also available to solvent companies (MVL) |
| Creditor voting & approval | Dual majority (number + value) at second creditors’ meeting | No approval needed, liquidation is a resolution or court order |
| Control / continuity of business | Company may continue to trade under deed administrator supervision | Business ceases; assets realised for distribution |
| Timing to first distribution | Often 1–6 months after DOCA execution (lump sum) or staged over 12–36 months | Typically 6–18 months; complex matters may take 2–5+ years |
| Expected recovery (unsecured) | Typically 10–60 cents in the dollar (varies by DOCA terms) | Median historically nil; 5–30 cents where assets exist |
| Professional fees | Administrator + deed administrator fees (time-based); generally lower total cost if DOCA is straightforward | Liquidator fees (time-based); higher where litigation pursued (insolvent trading, preferences) |
| Tax treatment | ATO debt may be compromised within DOCA; GST applies to trading; CGT on any asset disposals | ATO claims rank as unsecured; GST on asset sales; CGT crystallised on realisation |
| Director liability exposure | Reduced, DOCA can settle or release claims against directors (if creditors agree) | Increased, liquidator investigates and may pursue insolvent trading claims (s 588G) |
| Enforceability / dispute risk | Binding on all unsecured creditors; can be set aside if unfairly prejudicial (s 445D) | Court-supervised distribution; disputes arise from proof adjudication and preference claims |
| Fall-back if pathway fails | DOCA terminates → company automatically enters liquidation | No fall-back, liquidation is the terminal pathway |
Three practical takeaways emerge from this comparison:
The following analysis breaks down the six dimensions that most frequently determine whether a DOCA or liquidation produces the better creditor recovery in Australia. Use each dimension to stress-test the specific proposal or scenario you are evaluating.
Tax treatment varies materially between the two pathways. Under a DOCA, the company may continue to trade, generating GST obligations and income tax liabilities on any profits earned during the deed period. ATO debts incurred before administration can be compromised within the DOCA, the ATO participates as an unsecured creditor and is bound by the deed’s terms like any other unsecured creditor. Capital gains tax crystallises on any asset disposals under the DOCA, though roll-over relief may apply in limited restructuring scenarios.
In liquidation, the ATO’s pre-liquidation debts rank as unsecured claims under s 556. GST applies to asset sales conducted by the liquidator. PAYG withholding obligations for employee entitlements retain their statutory priority. Creditors receiving distributions in liquidation do not generally face income tax on amounts received, those amounts represent a return of previously owed debts, not income. The same principle applies to DOCA dividends. Directors should obtain specific ATO advice where the company has significant tax liabilities, as the ATO’s voting position at the creditors’ meeting can determine whether a DOCA is approved.
Professional fees consume a significant share of available funds in both pathways. The table below summarises typical ranges.
| Cost item | DOCA (typical range) | Liquidation (typical range) |
|---|---|---|
| Administrator / liquidator remuneration | $20,000–$80,000+ (time-based; varies by complexity) | $15,000–$100,000+ (time-based; higher where litigation pursued) |
| Legal fees | $5,000–$30,000 (DOCA drafting, creditor meeting, court applications) | $10,000–$100,000+ (preference recovery, insolvent trading proceedings) |
| Priority ranking of fees | Administrator fees rank ahead of unsecured creditors under the deed | Liquidator fees rank under s 556 ahead of unsecured creditors |
| Net impact on creditor pool | Generally lower total cost if DOCA is funded by external contribution | Higher total cost where investigation and litigation are required |
In small-company matters, administration and deed administration fees can absorb a large proportion of the available assets. Industry observers expect the 2026 reforms’ streamlined processes to reduce the fee burden for small-business DOCAs by shortening the statutory timetable, though the effect on larger administrations will be modest. Creditors should always request a detailed fee estimate from the administrator before voting on a DOCA.
Speed matters to creditors. In a DOCA funded by a lump-sum director contribution, the first (and sometimes only) distribution can occur within one to six months of the deed being executed. Staged-payment DOCAs extend the timeline to 12–36 months but provide certainty of instalment dates written into the deed terms.
Liquidation is slower. Simple asset realisations (selling stock, collecting debtors) can be completed in 6–12 months, but more complex matters involving property sales, litigation recoveries or adjudication of disputed proofs can extend to two to five years or longer. Each additional month of administration costs erodes the pool available for distribution. For creditors with cash-flow constraints, a DOCA offering a smaller but faster payment often has a higher present value than a larger but remote liquidation dividend.
Directors face personal exposure under s 588G of the Corporations Act for insolvent trading, incurring debts when the company is insolvent or becomes insolvent by incurring the debt, and when there are reasonable grounds to suspect insolvency. In liquidation, the liquidator has a statutory duty to investigate whether directors engaged in insolvent trading, and may bring proceedings to recover compensation.
A DOCA can include a term releasing directors from these claims, effectively buying peace in exchange for the director’s financial contribution to the deed fund. This release only binds creditors if the DOCA is approved by the required majorities. For directors with significant personal exposure, proposing a DOCA with a meaningful contribution and a release clause is often the rational strategy. Creditors, in turn, must weigh the certainty of the director’s DOCA contribution against the uncertain and delayed recovery from insolvent trading proceedings in liquidation.
A DOCA is enforceable as a binding deed. If the deed administrator or a creditor believes the company has breached its DOCA obligations, the deed administrator may convene a meeting of creditors to consider terminating the deed and resolving that the company be wound up. Creditors can also apply to the court under s 445D to have the DOCA terminated or varied if it operates unfairly.
In liquidation, disputes arise in different forms: creditors may challenge the liquidator’s adjudication of their proof of debt, the liquidator may bring preference or voidable transaction claims against third parties, and the liquidator’s remuneration may be challenged by creditors who consider it excessive. These disputes add cost and delay but can also materially increase the pool. When a DOCA is terminated for breach, the company automatically passes into liquidation, so the DOCA pathway carries a built-in safety net, albeit one that resets the clock on creditor recoveries.
The 2026 insolvency reforms introduced several changes to DOCA creditor voting that affect bargaining power and creditor recovery outcomes in Australia. Key adjustments include clarified voting thresholds for small-business restructuring DOCAs, streamlined meeting procedures that reduce the window between administrator appointment and the second creditors’ meeting, and amended priority mechanics that recalibrate how employee entitlements and certain statutory charges interact with DOCA proposals.
The likely practical effect for creditors is that DOCAs for eligible small businesses can now be proposed and voted on faster, with lower administration costs, making them comparatively more attractive than liquidation for companies meeting the reformed eligibility criteria. For larger companies outside the small-business restructuring pathway, the dual-majority voting threshold remains unchanged, but the 2026 reforms clarified certain procedural ambiguities around proxy voting and related-party vote discounting that had created uncertainty in prior case law.
The 2026 insolvency reforms relevant to the DOCA vs liquidation Australia decision fall into three categories:
When a DOCA is terminated, whether for breach of its terms or by court order under s 445D, the company passes automatically into liquidation. The 2026 reforms did not change this fall-back mechanism, but the streamlined administration costs mean that less value is consumed before the DOCA-or-liquidation decision is made, leaving a marginally larger pool for creditors regardless of which pathway is ultimately chosen.
Use the triggers below to guide the DOCA vs liquidation Australia decision. Each bullet represents a single actionable condition.
Choose a DOCA when:
Choose liquidation when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Maximising the cents-in-the-dollar return | DOCA, where external funding exceeds estimated liquidation dividend |
| Speed and certainty of payment | DOCA (lump-sum or short-dated instalments) |
| Pursuing director misconduct claims | Liquidation, liquidator has statutory investigation powers |
| Recovering voidable preferences from third parties | Liquidation, only a liquidator can bring s 588FA/FB claims |
| Preserving jobs and ongoing supply relationships | DOCA (trade-on structure) |
| Enforcing security quickly | Liquidation (or receiver appointment outside administration) |
The restructuring vs liquidation decision is one of the highest-stakes choices a company and its creditors will face. Instructing insolvency counsel is essential, not optional, in the following situations:
Bring the following to your initial consultation: the company’s latest financial statements, a complete creditor list with amounts owed, details of all security interests (PPSR registrations), director loan accounts, recent bank statements, and any DOCA proposal or administrator’s s 439A report. Search for an Australian insolvency lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paul Hutchinson at Modus Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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