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what are the steps for winding up a company in tanzania

What Are the Steps for Winding Up a Company in Tanzania (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 58 minutes ago

Understanding what are the steps for winding up a company in Tanzania is essential for directors, company secretaries and in-house counsel who need to close a Tanzanian entity in full compliance with the Companies Act. The process involves a series of tightly sequenced legal actions, from the initial solvency assessment and directors’ declaration, through special resolutions and Gazette publication, to the appointment of a liquidator and final BRELA deregistration. Failure to follow these steps correctly can expose directors to personal liability, delay creditor settlements and leave the company in regulatory limbo. This 2026 guide reflects the latest BRELA Companies (Forms) updates and the Written Laws amendments that have strengthened transparency and corporate governance obligations for companies entering liquidation.

Quick Answer: The Steps for Winding Up a Company in Tanzania

Before examining each stage in detail, the following summary provides the core procedural map that applies to most Tanzanian company wind-ups under the Companies Act (Revised Edition, 2023):

  1. Determine solvency status. Directors must assess whether the company can pay all its debts in full within twelve months. This decision dictates whether the winding up proceeds as a members’ voluntary process (solvent) or a compulsory/creditors’ process (insolvent).
  2. Directors make a declaration of solvency (members’ voluntary route only). This statutory declaration, accompanied by a statement of assets and liabilities, must be made within thirty days immediately preceding the date of the resolution to wind up.
  3. Pass a special resolution. Members resolve to wind up the company voluntarily, requiring the threshold prescribed by the Companies Act.
  4. Publish a Gazette notice. The resolution must be advertised in the Government Gazette within the period prescribed by the Act.
  5. Appoint a liquidator. In a members’ voluntary winding up, members appoint the liquidator. In a compulsory winding up, the High Court appoints one.
  6. Liquidator realises assets, settles debts and convenes final meeting. The liquidator collects debts, pays creditors in statutory priority order and distributes any surplus to members.
  7. File final returns with BRELA and obtain deregistration. After the final meeting, the liquidator files the requisite returns, including Form 345, and the Registrar proceeds to dissolve the company and remove it from the register.

Each of these steps is explored in full below, with practical checklists, form references and timelines current to 2026.

The Primary Compliance Decision: Solvent or Insolvent?

The first, and most consequential, decision when winding up a company in Tanzania is determining whether the company is solvent or insolvent. This assessment shapes every subsequent step, dictates the statutory route and determines who controls the liquidation process.

How to Assess Solvency

Tanzanian law applies two complementary tests when directors evaluate solvency. The balance-sheet test asks whether the company’s total assets exceed its total liabilities, including contingent and prospective liabilities. The cash-flow test examines whether the company can pay its debts as they fall due in the ordinary course of business. Directors should commission up-to-date financial statements and, where necessary, independent valuations before making the assessment. The Companies Act requires that the declaration of solvency in Tanzania include a statement of the company’s assets and liabilities as at the latest practicable date before the declaration is made.

Consequences of the Wrong Decision

If directors make a declaration of solvency without reasonable grounds for believing the company can pay its debts, they may face personal liability. Signing a false declaration is an offence under the Companies Act, and creditors or a court-appointed liquidator may pursue directors for losses arising from wrongful or fraudulent trading. The TanzLII Law Reform Report on insolvency has highlighted the need for more rigorous accountability in this area. Industry observers expect the 2026 Written Laws amendments to increase scrutiny of directors’ conduct during the pre-winding-up period. In practice, if there is any doubt about solvency, directors should obtain professional legal and accounting advice before proceeding.

Members’ Voluntary Winding Up in Tanzania, Step-by-Step

A members’ voluntary winding up is the standard route for closing a solvent company. It allows directors and shareholders to retain control of the process without court intervention. The following step-by-step procedure reflects the requirements of the Companies Act and current BRELA filing practice.

Step 1: Declaration of Solvency

A majority of the directors, or, where there are only two, both of them, must make a statutory declaration of solvency. The declaration states that the directors have made 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 winding up. This declaration must be made within thirty days immediately preceding the date of the resolution to wind up, as required by the Companies Act.

The declaration must be accompanied by a statement of the company’s assets and liabilities as at the latest practicable date before the making of the declaration. It should be sworn before a Commissioner for Oaths or a Notary Public. If the declaration is not made and delivered to BRELA before the resolution is passed, the winding up is not treated as a members’ voluntary winding up but defaults to a creditors’ voluntary winding up, with materially different consequences.

Step 2: Passing the Special Resolution

The company must convene a general meeting at which members pass a special resolution to wind up voluntarily. The resolution requires the majority threshold prescribed by the Act, typically seventy-five per cent of votes cast in person or by proxy. Notice of the meeting must comply with the minimum notice period set out in the company’s articles of association and the Companies Act. For private companies with a small number of shareholders, the procedure may be streamlined by written resolution where the articles permit.

Step 3: Liquidator Appointment and Registration

At the same general meeting, or at a subsequent meeting, the members appoint a liquidator. From the date of the liquidator’s appointment, the directors’ powers cease except to the extent that the company in general meeting or the liquidator sanctions their continuance. The appointment must be filed with the Registrar at BRELA, and the liquidator must publish notice of the appointment in the Government Gazette.

Step 4: Final Meeting and Filing for Dissolution

Once the liquidator has fully wound up the company’s affairs, realised all assets, paid all debts and distributed any surplus, the liquidator convenes a final general meeting. At this meeting, the liquidator presents a final account showing how the winding up has been conducted and how the company’s property has been disposed of. Within one week of the final meeting, the liquidator files a return of the meeting and a copy of the final account with BRELA using the prescribed forms, including Form 345. The Registrar then proceeds to dissolve the company and remove it from the register.

Required Documents for BRELA Filings, Members’ Voluntary Winding Up

Document When Filed Who Signs
Declaration of solvency (with assets/liabilities statement) Before the resolution, delivered to BRELA prior to passing Majority of directors (or both, if only two)
Special resolution to wind up voluntarily Within fourteen days of passing Company secretary or authorised officer
Notice of liquidator appointment Within fourteen days of appointment Liquidator
Form 345, final return and account Within one week of the final meeting Liquidator

Compulsory Winding Up in Tanzania, Courts and Creditors

Where a company is insolvent, or where other statutory grounds apply, the winding up proceeds by order of the High Court. Compulsory winding up in Tanzania is typically initiated by a creditor’s petition, although the company itself, a contributory, or the Registrar may also petition in prescribed circumstances.

Grounds for a Compulsory Winding-Up Petition

The most common ground is that the company is unable to pay its debts. Under the Companies Act, a company is deemed unable to pay its debts if a creditor to whom the company owes more than the prescribed statutory minimum has served a written demand and the company has failed to pay, secure or compound the debt within twenty-one days. Other grounds include the company passing a special resolution that it be wound up by the court, the company not commencing business within a year of incorporation, or if the court considers it just and equitable to wind up the company.

Creditor Petition Checklist

A creditor seeking a compulsory winding-up order should prepare the following:

  • Petition to the High Court. The petition must set out the nature and amount of the debt, the grounds for winding up and evidence that a statutory demand was served and not complied with.
  • Statutory demand. A copy of the written demand served on the company, together with proof of service.
  • Supporting affidavit. An affidavit verifying the facts stated in the petition.
  • Company search. A current company extract from BRELA confirming the company’s registration status and registered office.
  • Evidence of debt. Contracts, invoices, judgments or other documents establishing the debt.

Court Hearing and Provisional Liquidator

Once the petition is filed and advertised, the matter is listed for hearing before the High Court. The court may appoint a provisional liquidator to preserve the company’s assets pending the hearing. If satisfied that the grounds are established, the court makes a winding-up order and appoints an official liquidator. The Company Insolvency Rules 2005 Tanzania govern the procedural mechanics of court-supervised liquidations, including proof of debt, creditor meetings and distribution.

How Creditors Are Notified and Prove Their Debts

Following a winding-up order, the liquidator advertises for creditors to submit proofs of debt within a specified period. Creditor meetings are convened to consider the liquidator’s proposals for realising assets and settling claims. The so-called “10-10-10” rule, a practical convention used in some insolvency proceedings, refers to the typical scheduling cadence: ten days’ notice for creditor meetings, ten days to lodge proofs of debt and ten days for adjudication of claims. While this is not a statutory rule under Tanzanian law, it reflects the kind of procedural discipline that experienced liquidators follow to keep proceedings on track.

Notices, Gazette Publication and BRELA Filings (2026 Forms)

Publication requirements are among the most frequently overlooked steps when winding up a company in Tanzania. The Companies Act mandates that certain notices be published in the Government Gazette at key stages of the process. The 2026 BRELA Companies (Forms) updates have streamlined some filing requirements but have also introduced stricter formatting standards for Gazette notices.

Gazette Notice Requirements

The following events must be advertised in the Government Gazette:

  • Special resolution to wind up. The resolution must be advertised within fourteen days of being passed.
  • Appointment of liquidator. Notice of the liquidator’s appointment must be published promptly after the appointment takes effect.
  • Final meeting notice. Before convening the final meeting, the liquidator must advertise the date, time and purpose of the meeting in the Gazette at least one month in advance.

Each Gazette notice must include the company’s full registered name, registration number, the nature of the event (resolution, appointment or meeting) and the name and contact details of the liquidator. Industry observers note that BRELA’s 2026 forms update has introduced clearer templates for these notices, reducing the incidence of rejection due to formatting errors.

Key BRELA Forms for Company Winding Up

Form Purpose Filed By
Form 345 Return by liquidator, final account and return of final meeting Liquidator
Notice of special resolution Notification of resolution to wind up voluntarily Company (secretary or authorised officer)
Notice of liquidator appointment Registration of the liquidator with the Registrar Liquidator
Declaration of solvency Directors’ statutory declaration (members’ voluntary only) Directors

Forms are available from the BRELA offices in Dar es Salaam and from the BRELA website. As of 2026, BRELA accepts physical filings at its offices and, for certain prescribed forms, electronic submissions through its online portal. Practitioners should confirm the current submission method for winding-up documents directly with BRELA, as the digital transition is ongoing.

Liquidator Appointment in Tanzania: Powers and Key Duties

The liquidator is the central figure in any winding-up process. Whether appointed by the members in a voluntary winding up or by the High Court in a compulsory winding up, the liquidator assumes control of the company’s affairs and carries out the orderly realisation of assets and settlement of liabilities.

Who Can Be a Liquidator?

The Companies Act does not restrict the role to any particular professional category, although in practice liquidators are typically qualified accountants, advocates or corporate recovery specialists. In a compulsory winding up, the court has discretion to appoint the Official Receiver or a private-sector insolvency practitioner. The fees payable to liquidators have historically been governed by the Companies (Winding Up Fees) Rules, 1939, although these rules are now largely outdated and practitioners should confirm the current fee position with BRELA and the court.

Liquidator’s First 30 Days, Practical Checklist

  • Take custody of company assets. Secure all physical and intangible assets, bank accounts, records and contracts.
  • Notify banks and financial institutions. Instruct all banks to freeze company accounts and redirect authority to the liquidator.
  • Advertise for creditors. Publish notices in the Gazette and at least one national newspaper inviting creditors to submit proofs of debt.
  • Review the company’s books and records. Prepare an initial report on the company’s financial position.
  • File notice of appointment with BRELA. Ensure the appointment is registered and advertised in the Gazette.
  • Communicate with employees. Notify employees of the winding up and their entitlements under the Employment and Labour Relations Act.

Reporting to the Registrar and Creditors

Throughout the winding up, the liquidator must report periodically to creditors and, in a compulsory winding up, to the court. The liquidator must convene creditor meetings when required, submit interim reports on asset realisations and distributions, and keep detailed records of all transactions. At the conclusion of the process, the liquidator prepares and files the final account with BRELA, including Form 345, which serves as the formal return of the final meeting and the basis for BRELA deregistration.

Director Interaction with the Liquidator

Once a liquidator is appointed, directors must cooperate fully. They are required to deliver all company property, books and records to the liquidator and to attend meetings and provide information as requested. Failure to cooperate may constitute an offence and can result in personal liability. Directors should not enter into new transactions, dispose of company assets or make payments after the commencement of winding up unless expressly authorised by the liquidator.

Tax, Employee and Creditor Practical Checklists

A company cannot complete the winding-up process in Tanzania without addressing its obligations to the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), its employees and its creditors. Neglecting any of these areas can delay BRELA deregistration indefinitely.

TRA Tax Clearance

Before making any final distribution to members or filing for dissolution, the liquidator should apply to TRA for a tax clearance certificate. This requires filing all outstanding tax returns (income tax, VAT, PAYE, withholding tax and any sector-specific levies), paying all assessed taxes and resolving any pending disputes or audits. Industry observers expect TRA clearance to become a formal precondition for BRELA deregistration in future regulatory updates, and best practice already treats it as such.

Employee Redundancy and Termination

Winding up constitutes a redundancy event. The company, through the liquidator, must comply with the Employment and Labour Relations Act, including payment of notice periods, accrued leave, severance pay and any provident fund or pension entitlements. Employee claims rank as preferential debts in the statutory priority of distribution.

Priority of Claims in Distribution

Priority Category of Creditor
1 Costs and expenses of the winding up (including liquidator’s fees)
2 Preferential debts, employee wages, salaries and entitlements
3 Secured creditors (paid from the proceeds of their security)
4 Unsecured creditors
5 Members/shareholders (surplus only)

Timelines, Likely Durations and Common Delays

A straightforward members’ voluntary winding up, where the company has few creditors, limited assets and clean books, can be completed in three to six months. More complex solvent liquidations typically take six to twelve months. Compulsory winding ups, particularly those involving contested creditor claims, litigation, asset tracing or multi-jurisdictional issues, can extend to eighteen months or longer, and some cases take two years or more before the company is finally dissolved.

The most common sources of delay include unresolved tax disputes with TRA, ongoing litigation in which the company is a party, difficulty in realising assets (particularly land and property), contested creditor claims, and administrative backlogs at BRELA. Practitioners advise beginning the tax clearance process and creditor notification as early as possible to minimise bottlenecks. The likely practical effect of the 2026 BRELA forms updates will be to reduce processing times for deregistration filings, provided documents are submitted in the correct format.

Practical Document Checklist for Company Secretaries and Boards

The following checklist summarises the key documents and actions required when winding up a company in Tanzania. Company secretaries and boards should use this as a planning tool from the earliest stages of the decision to liquidate:

  1. Up-to-date audited or management financial statements (balance sheet and profit-and-loss account).
  2. Directors’ declaration of solvency, statutory declaration with attached statement of assets and liabilities (sworn before a Commissioner for Oaths).
  3. Board resolution authorising the directors to make the declaration of solvency and to convene a general meeting.
  4. Notice of general meeting to members (complying with the notice period in the articles and the Companies Act).
  5. Special resolution to wind up voluntarily (minutes of general meeting recording the vote).
  6. Resolution appointing the liquidator (minutes recording the appointment, liquidator’s consent and agreed terms of engagement).
  7. Gazette notice of the special resolution (to be published within fourteen days).
  8. Gazette notice of the liquidator’s appointment.
  9. BRELA filing, notice of resolution and notice of liquidator appointment.
  10. TRA tax clearance application and supporting documents (all outstanding returns and assessments).
  11. Employee redundancy notices and calculations (notice pay, accrued leave, severance, provident fund).
  12. Liquidator’s advertisement for creditors (Gazette and newspaper).
  13. Form 345, liquidator’s return of final meeting and final account (filed with BRELA within one week of the final meeting).
  14. Confirmation of BRELA deregistration and dissolution.

Note: This checklist is provided for general guidance only. The specific forms, timelines and requirements applicable to any particular company should be confirmed with a qualified Tanzanian legal practitioner and with BRELA directly.

Comparison Table: Members’ Voluntary vs Compulsory Winding Up

Feature Members’ Voluntary (Solvent) Compulsory (Insolvent)
Who initiates Directors and members (shareholders) Creditor, company, contributory or Registrar (by petition to the High Court)
Solvency requirement Directors must make a statutory declaration of solvency Company is unable to pay its debts; no solvency declaration
Liquidator appointed by Members in general meeting High Court
Court involvement Generally none (unless disputes arise) Full court supervision throughout
Main BRELA filings Declaration of solvency, special resolution, liquidator notice, Form 345 Court order filed with BRELA, liquidator notice, Form 345
Typical timeline 3–12 months 6–24 months or longer
Key risks False declaration of solvency; incomplete creditor notification Contested claims; director liability for wrongful trading; prolonged litigation
Governing subsidiary rules Companies Act (voluntary winding-up provisions) Companies Act + Company Insolvency Rules 2005 Tanzania

Key Legislative Dates and Their Practical Impact

Date / Law Summary Practical Impact for Winding Up
Companies Act (Revised Edition, 2023), BRELA upload Consolidated statutory text governing company formation, management and winding up Primary framework for all procedural steps, declaration of solvency, special resolution, liquidator duties and dissolution
Companies (Winding Up Fees) Rules, 1939 Historical fee scale for liquidators and court officers Still referenced in practice; fees should be confirmed with BRELA as the rules predate modern practice
Company Insolvency Rules, 2005 Procedural rules for court-supervised insolvency proceedings Governs proof of debt, creditor meetings and distribution in compulsory winding ups
BRELA Companies (Forms) updates, 2026 Updated forms and stricter formatting standards for filings and Gazette notices Affects how Form 345 and other returns are completed and submitted; electronic filing expanding

Conclusion

Winding up a company in Tanzania requires careful planning, strict compliance with the Companies Act and close coordination with BRELA and TRA. Whether proceeding through a members’ voluntary route or a court-supervised compulsory process, the steps for winding up a company in Tanzania follow a logical sequence: assess solvency, resolve, publish, appoint, liquidate and deregister. Each stage carries specific filing obligations, statutory deadlines and potential liabilities for directors who fail to comply. Companies and their advisors should engage qualified Tanzanian legal counsel early in the process to ensure every step is completed correctly and on time. For guidance from a qualified company law practitioner, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information on the steps for winding up a company in Tanzania and does not constitute legal advice. Laws, forms and regulatory requirements are subject to change. Readers should seek professional legal advice tailored to their specific circumstances before initiating any winding-up procedure.

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. BRELA, The Companies Act (Revised Edition, 2023)
  2. BRELA, Form 345 (Winding-up schedule / forms repository)
  3. Lex Africa, Insolvency Guide (Tanzania section)
  4. DarState Attorneys, Winding Up & Dissolution of Company in Tanzania
  5. MiaMia, How to Close or Wind Up a Company in Tanzania
  6. Breakthrough Attorneys, Company Voluntary Winding Up
  7. TanzLII, Review of Legal Framework Governing Insolvency in Tanzania
  8. Lexadin, Company Law Reforms in Tanzania

FAQs

What are the steps for winding up a company in Tanzania?
The core steps are: assess solvency, make a declaration of solvency (if solvent), pass a special resolution, publish a Gazette notice, appoint a liquidator, realise assets and settle debts, convene a final meeting, and file Form 345 with BRELA for deregistration. The full step-by-step procedure is set out in detail above.
If your company is solvent, you follow the members’ voluntary winding-up route. Directors make a declaration of solvency, members pass a special resolution, a liquidator is appointed to settle affairs, and the company is deregistered with BRELA after the final meeting and filing of returns.
A straightforward members’ voluntary winding up typically takes between three and twelve months. Compulsory winding ups are more complex and can take six to twenty-four months or longer, depending on factors such as contested creditor claims, unresolved tax disputes and asset realisation difficulties.
It is a statutory declaration made by a majority of the directors stating that they have inquired into the company’s affairs and believe it can pay all its debts, with interest, within twelve months from the commencement of winding up. It must be made within thirty days immediately preceding the resolution to wind up and must include a statement of assets and liabilities.
In a members’ voluntary winding up, the liquidator is appointed by the members at a general meeting. In a compulsory winding up, the High Court appoints the liquidator following a winding-up petition. The appointment must be filed with BRELA and published in the Government Gazette.
While not yet a formal statutory precondition in all cases, obtaining a tax clearance certificate from TRA before filing for dissolution is strongly recommended and treated as best practice. The liquidator should file all outstanding returns and settle all assessed taxes before making final distributions or applying for deregistration.
A creditor, the company itself, a contributory or the Registrar petitions the High Court. If the court is satisfied the grounds are established, it makes a winding-up order and appoints an official liquidator. The process is supervised by the court, and the Company Insolvency Rules 2005 govern procedural matters including creditor proofs, meetings and distributions.
Yes. Directors who made a false declaration of solvency without reasonable grounds may face personal liability. Directors may also be liable for wrongful or fraudulent trading if they allowed the company to continue incurring debts when they knew, or ought to have known, that the company could not avoid insolvency.
Gazette notices are submitted to the Government Printer for publication in the Tanzania Government Gazette. Each notice must include the company’s full registered name, registration number, the nature of the event (resolution to wind up, liquidator appointment or final meeting), and the liquidator’s name and contact details. As of 2026, BRELA’s updated forms provide standardised templates that reduce the risk of rejection.
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What Are the Steps for Winding Up a Company in Tanzania (2026)

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