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Winding Up a Company (ATO): Statutory Demands, Director Penalty Notices and How Directors Avoid Liquidation (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

When an ATO statutory demand lands on a company’s registered office, directors have exactly 21 days to respond before the Commissioner can apply to the court for a winding-up order, and the clock starts running immediately. Winding up a company at the ATO’s initiative is now one of the most common creditor-driven insolvency pathways in Australia, with the Commissioner ranking as the single largest petitioning creditor by volume in Federal Court wind-up applications. The reinstatement of the loss carry-back tax offset from 1 July 2026 adds a new dimension to the restructure-versus-liquidation calculus, potentially allowing companies with prior-year profits to recover tax paid and redirect those funds toward settling ATO debts.

This article provides a step-by-step director’s playbook covering statutory demands, Director Penalty Notices (DPNs), the immediate actions required to avoid liquidation, and the restructuring alternatives now available.

How the ATO Can Wind Up a Company

The Australian Taxation Office is a creditor like any other for the purposes of Part 5.4 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). When a company falls behind on PAYG withholding, GST, income tax or superannuation guarantee charge (SGC) obligations, the ATO follows a staged recovery pathway that can ultimately end in court-ordered liquidation. The ATO’s own internal policy, set out in its Receivables Policy (RP0021), confirms that winding up a company is treated as a last-resort collection tool, deployed after negotiation, payment plans and enforcement action have been exhausted or refused.

The standard ATO enforcement sequence proceeds as follows:

  • Stage 1, Demand and negotiation. The ATO issues running balance account statements and formal demands for payment. Directors are invited to propose payment plans or dispute the assessment.
  • Stage 2, Creditor’s statutory demand. If the debt exceeds the statutory minimum and remains unpaid, the ATO serves a creditor’s statutory demand under s 459E of the Corporations Act. The company then has 21 days to pay, secure the debt, or apply to court to set the demand aside.
  • Stage 3, Winding-up application. Where the company fails to comply with the statutory demand within 21 days, a presumption of insolvency arises under s 459C(2)(a). The ATO files an application in the Federal Court (or relevant state Supreme Court) seeking a winding-up order under s 459P.

Key Legal Tests: Sections 459E–G of the Corporations Act

Can the ATO wind up a company? Yes, provided the procedural requirements of Part 5. 4 are satisfied. Section 459E sets out the formal requirements for a valid statutory demand: it must be in the prescribed form, specify the debt (which must be at least the statutory minimum), and be accompanied by an affidavit verifying the debt. If the demand is defective, the company may apply under s 459G to have it set aside, but that application must be filed and served within the same 21-day window.

Once the 21 days expire without compliance or a set-aside application, s 459C(2)(a) creates a rebuttable presumption that the company is insolvent, significantly lowering the evidentiary burden for the ATO when it proceeds to a winding-up hearing.

Statutory Demands: Mechanics, Responses and Timing

A creditor’s statutory demand is the single most important document in the ATO winding-up process. For directors, understanding its mechanics is not optional, it is the difference between retaining control of the company and losing it to a court-appointed liquidator.

The statutory demand must relate to a debt that is due and payable and that is not the subject of a genuine dispute. The Corporations Act sets a statutory minimum threshold for the debt, currently $4,000 under s 459E(2) read with Corporations Regulation 5.4.01. In practice, the ATO rarely issues a statutory demand for debts near this minimum; most ATO demands involve debts of $20,000 or more, reflecting the Commissioner’s internal cost-benefit thresholds documented in RP0021.

Once served, a statutory demand triggers two hard deadlines that run concurrently:

  • 21 days to comply, pay the debt in full, secure it to the creditor’s reasonable satisfaction, or compound for it to the creditor’s reasonable satisfaction (s 459F).
  • 21 days to apply to set aside, file and serve a set-aside application under s 459G. This deadline is absolute; courts have consistently refused extensions.

How to Set Aside a Statutory Demand

A company may apply to set aside a statutory demand on two principal grounds under s 459H and s 459J:

  • Genuine dispute. The company demonstrates there is a genuine dispute about the existence or amount of the debt. The threshold is relatively low, the company need not prove its case, only show a “plausible contention requiring investigation.”
  • Offsetting claim. The company has a counterclaim, set-off or cross-demand that equals or exceeds the demanded amount.
  • Other reason (s 459J). A defect in the demand, or “some other reason” why the demand should be set aside, for instance, a substantial injustice if the demand stands.
Step Deadline Director Action
Statutory demand served Day 0 Record date of service; obtain legal and insolvency advice immediately
Assess grounds for set-aside Days 1–7 Gather evidence of genuine dispute, offsetting claims or demand defects
File and serve set-aside application (s 459G) By Day 21 (absolute) Lodge application in court and serve on ATO, no extensions permitted
Pay, secure or compound the debt By Day 21 Arrange full payment, negotiate security, or agree composition with ATO
If no action taken by Day 21 Day 22+ Presumption of insolvency arises; ATO can file winding-up application

Industry observers expect that the volume of ATO statutory demands will remain elevated through the second half of 2026, given the Commissioner’s public commitment to reducing the tax debt book and the end of pandemic-era forbearance measures.

Director Penalty Notices (DPNs): Types, When They Bite and Defences

While a statutory demand targets the company, a Director Penalty Notice targets the director personally. Under Division 269 of Schedule 1 to the Taxation Administration Act 1953, the ATO can issue a DPN to make directors personally liable for their company’s unpaid PAYG withholding and superannuation guarantee charge obligations. Understanding the director penalty notice ATO regime is critical, because personal liability can survive the company’s liquidation.

There are two categories of DPN, and the distinction is pivotal:

DPN Type Trigger Director’s Remedial Options (within 21 days)
Non-lockdown DPN PAYG withholding or SGC reported on time but unpaid Pay the liability in full; place the company into voluntary administration; appoint a small business restructuring practitioner; or begin winding up the company
Lockdown DPN PAYG withholding or SGC not reported within three months of the due date Pay the liability in full, this is the only option; administration or liquidation will not release the director from personal liability

The distinction is harsh but clear: if the company’s BAS or SGC statements were lodged on time (even though the amounts were not paid), a non-lockdown DPN is issued and the director retains multiple remedial options. If, however, the company failed to lodge within three months after the due date, the ATO issues a lockdown DPN. In that scenario, the only way to avoid personal assessment is to pay the full amount. Placing the company into administration or liquidation after receiving a lockdown DPN will not relieve the director.

Director Liability and Personal Exposure

Are directors liable for ATO debts? Under the DPN regime, yes, but only for unpaid PAYG withholding and SGC obligations, and only where a valid DPN has been issued. The notice gives directors 21 days from the date of the DPN to take one of the permitted remedial steps. If 21 days pass without action, the Commissioner may make a personal assessment against the director for the full penalty amount, plus general interest charge (GIC).

Directors should gather the following documents within 48 hours of receiving a DPN:

  • All BAS and SGC lodgements for the relevant periods, confirm lodgement dates
  • ATO running balance account statements for the company
  • Board minutes and cashflow records showing the company’s financial position at the time the liabilities fell due
  • Any prior correspondence with the ATO (payment plans, objections, disputes)
  • Evidence of any voluntary administration or restructuring steps already taken

Immediate Director Checklist to Avoid Liquidation

Whether a director has received a statutory demand, a DPN, or both, the first 48–72 hours are decisive. The following seven-step checklist should be actioned immediately:

  1. Record and verify the notice. Confirm the date of service, the amount claimed, and whether the demand or DPN is validly issued.
  2. Freeze non-essential payments and distributions. Do not make preferential payments to other creditors or pay dividends, this can worsen insolvent trading exposure under s 588G of the Corporations Act.
  3. Instruct an insolvency adviser. Engage a registered liquidator or insolvency practitioner to assess solvency and advise on options.
  4. Engage the ATO early. Contact the ATO’s debt recovery team to signal willingness to negotiate. A suggested email subject line: “[Company name], [ABN], Response to statutory demand / DPN dated [date], request for discussion.”
  5. Conduct a payroll and superannuation audit. Verify all PAYG withholding and SGC obligations are reported and quantify any shortfall.
  6. Prepare a 13-week cashflow forecast. This is the standard document insolvency practitioners and the ATO will require to assess viability.
  7. Evaluate restructuring options. Consider whether voluntary administration, a Deed of Company Arrangement (DOCA), a small business restructuring plan, or an informal workout is viable, and whether the loss carry-back offset (from 1 July 2026) could generate a tax refund to fund the arrangement.

The decision framework reduces to three pathways: pay (settle the debt in full), negotiate (propose a payment plan or composition), or administrate (appoint an administrator or restructuring practitioner). Each has different implications for director liability and company control.

Restructuring Alternatives vs Liquidation

Directors considering how to liquidate a company in Australia should first exhaust every restructuring alternative. The Corporations Act provides several formal pathways, each with distinct characteristics and control implications. The right choice depends on the company’s cashflow, the nature and quantum of its debts, whether it has recoverable tax attributes, and the attitude of the ATO as principal creditor.

Option Who Controls the Outcome Key Timelines and Effect
Voluntary administration → DOCA Administrator initially; creditors vote on DOCA proposal Administrator appointed immediately; creditors meet within 20–25 business days; DOCA terms set by negotiation, can preserve the company as a going concern
Small business restructuring (SBR) Director retains control; restructuring practitioner oversees plan Available to companies with liabilities under $1 million; plan proposed within 20 business days; creditors vote
Creditors’ voluntary liquidation (CVL) Directors resolve to wind up; liquidator appointed by creditors Directors convene meeting; liquidator takes control; assets realised and distributed per statutory priority
Voluntary deregistration (ASIC) Directors apply to ASIC Only available if company has ceased trading, has no outstanding liabilities, and is not party to legal proceedings, winding up a company through ASIC is simpler but only viable for solvent, dormant entities
Court-ordered winding up Court and liquidator Triggered by creditor (including ATO) application; directors lose all management powers upon appointment of liquidator

How Loss Carry-Back Reinstatement Affects the Choice

The reintroduction of the loss carry-back tax offset from 1 July 2026 materially changes the restructuring calculus for companies with prior-year profits. Early indications suggest this measure will be particularly valuable for companies that were profitable in FY2024 or FY2025 but are now facing insolvency due to accumulated ATO liabilities.

Consider a simplified example: a company earned taxable income of $500,000 in FY2025 (tax paid: $125,000 at the 25% base rate) but incurred a tax loss in FY2026. Under the loss carry-back rules, the company could claim a refundable tax offset of up to $125,000 in its FY2026 return. If the company’s total ATO debt is $150,000, a successful loss carry-back claim could fund the overwhelming majority of a DOCA proposal, preserving the business, protecting director positions, and avoiding the reputational and operational consequences of liquidation.

The likely practical effect will be that more directors explore restructuring before consenting to winding up, particularly where the company has taxable profits in recent prior years that can be carried back. This makes early engagement with both a tax adviser and an insolvency practitioner essential.

Tax Consequences of Winding Up a Company

What happens when a company goes into liquidation in Australia extends well beyond the cessation of trading. The ATO requires a series of final lodgements and tax events to be completed, and failure to do so can generate additional penalties.

The key tax consequences of winding up a company include:

  • Deemed dividends. Under s 47 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936, distributions to shareholders during winding up may be treated as deemed dividends to the extent they represent the company’s retained profits, potentially triggering dividend withholding tax obligations for non-resident shareholders.
  • CGT events. The disposal or distribution of company assets during liquidation triggers CGT events (typically CGT event A1 on disposal, or CGT event G1 on distributions to shareholders). The liquidator must calculate and report capital gains or losses in the company’s final return.
  • Final BAS and PAYG obligations. The liquidator must lodge a final Business Activity Statement covering the period up to the date of liquidation, remitting any outstanding GST, PAYG withholding and PAYG instalments.
  • Single Touch Payroll (STP) finalisation. All employee payment summaries must be finalised through STP before cancellation of the company’s ABN and PAYG registrations.
  • Record retention. Company records must be retained for a minimum of five years after the completion of the winding up, as required by both the ATO and ASIC. The liquidator typically assumes custody of records, but directors should ensure copies of key documents are preserved.

The ATO’s guidance on trust tax changes in Australia provides additional context on how trust distributions interact with winding-up tax events where corporate trustees are involved.

What Happens to Directors and Personal Liability After Liquidation

Once a liquidator is appointed, whether by court order or by resolution of creditors, directors cease to exercise management powers over the company. However, remaining in office during liquidation does not insulate directors from personal liability. Several exposure points survive the appointment of the liquidator:

  • Insolvent trading. The liquidator will investigate whether directors allowed the company to incur debts at a time when there were reasonable grounds to suspect insolvency (s 588G, Corporations Act). If established, directors face personal liability for the debts incurred during the period of insolvent trading, plus potential civil penalties.
  • DPN assessments. A lockdown DPN assessment made before or after liquidation remains enforceable against the director personally. Liquidation does not extinguish a lockdown DPN liability.
  • Liquidator recovery actions. The liquidator may pursue directors for unfair preferences, uncommercial transactions, or unreasonable director-related transactions under Part 5.7B of the Corporations Act.
  • ATO enforcement. The ATO retains the right to pursue directors for assessed DPN penalties through garnishee notices, statutory charges over the director’s personal assets, or legal proceedings, even after the company has been deregistered.

ASIC’s guidance for directors emphasises that understanding these ongoing obligations is critical before consenting to a winding-up resolution. Directors who are uncertain about their exposure should obtain independent legal advice, not from the company’s solicitor, but from a practitioner advising them in their personal capacity. Further information on pursuing or defending claims involving government entities in Australia may also be relevant where directors seek to challenge ATO assessments.

How to Engage and Negotiate with the ATO

The ATO is generally willing to negotiate where directors engage early, transparently and with supporting documentation. Practical negotiation paths include:

  • Payment plan. The ATO can agree to instalment arrangements, typically requiring a deposit and regular payments over 12–24 months. Interest (GIC) continues to accrue on the outstanding balance.
  • Remission of penalties and interest. Directors can apply for remission of GIC and administrative penalties where they can demonstrate reasonable cause for non-compliance (e.g., natural disaster, sudden loss of major customer).
  • Formal dispute. If the underlying assessment is contested, directors should lodge an objection under Part IVC of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 and request that recovery action be deferred pending the outcome.

When contacting the ATO, directors should prepare the following documentation:

  • A 13-week cashflow forecast showing projected income and expenditure
  • A written proposal setting out the amount offered, payment schedule and source of funds
  • An independent accountant’s report on the company’s financial position
  • Evidence of any steps already taken to reduce the debt (partial payments, asset sales)

The ATO’s enforcement division prioritises cases where directors have been unresponsive or have failed to lodge returns. Early, documented engagement is the single most effective way to delay or prevent a winding-up application.

Taking Action Before the ATO Does

Winding up a company at the ATO’s initiative is avoidable in the majority of cases, but only if directors act within the statutory deadlines and with professional guidance. The 21-day windows for responding to statutory demands and DPNs are absolute, and missing them transforms a manageable compliance issue into a personal liability crisis. Directors facing ATO enforcement action should instruct an insolvency specialist, engage the ATO’s debt recovery team, and evaluate whether restructuring, potentially enhanced by the loss carry-back offset available from 1 July 2026, can preserve the business and limit personal exposure. Prompt, documented action is not just good practice; it is the legal standard against which director conduct will be judged.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Australian Taxation Office, Winding up a company
  2. ATO, Chapter 21 Liquidation Action (RMP RP0021)
  3. ASIC, Insolvency for directors
  4. Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)
  5. Pearce & Heers, ATO Statutory Demands and Winding Up Applications
  6. SV Partners, Director Penalty Notice Guide
  7. HALO Advisory, Insolvency ATO guide
  8. IRT Advisory, ATO debt & liquidation
  9. Endurego, Tax consequences of winding up a company

FAQs

Can the ATO wind up a company?
Yes. After issuing a creditor’s statutory demand under s 459E of the Corporations Act 2001 and where the company fails to comply within 21 days, the ATO can apply to the Federal Court or a state Supreme Court for a winding-up order.
Timelines vary significantly. The statutory demand period is 21 days. Court proceedings for a winding-up order typically take several weeks to months. The liquidation process itself, realising assets, investigating director conduct and distributing funds, often extends over six to 18 months depending on the company’s complexity.
A DPN is a formal ATO notice that makes unpaid PAYG withholding and superannuation guarantee charge liabilities personally recoverable from directors, unless the director takes specified remedial steps within 21 days of receiving the notice.
Preserve all financial documents, cease non-essential payments and distributions, instruct an insolvency adviser, assess grounds to set aside the demand (genuine dispute, offsetting claim or defect), and engage the ATO immediately. Do not ignore the demand.
No. Liquidation does not automatically extinguish ATO claims against directors for assessed DPN liabilities or insolvent trading. Lockdown DPN assessments, in particular, survive liquidation and remain enforceable against the director personally.
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Winding Up a Company (ATO): Statutory Demands, Director Penalty Notices and How Directors Avoid Liquidation (2026)

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