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winding up procedure in Cyprus

Step-by-step Guide to Filing a Winding‑up (creditors' Liquidation) Petition in Cyprus (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

The winding up procedure in Cyprus is the principal mechanism through which a creditor can compel the court‑supervised dissolution and asset realisation of an insolvent company. Governed by Part V of the Companies Law, Cap. 113, the procedure applies to any company registered in Cyprus, or, in defined circumstances, to an unregistered company carrying on business within the jurisdiction. This guide sets out the eligibility criteria, required documents, step‑by‑step filing sequence, indicative costs and key deadlines that creditors, insolvency practitioners and company directors need to navigate in 2026, including the practical consequences of Cyprus’s specialist Commercial Court routes now available for high‑value insolvency petitions.

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

A compulsory winding‑up, also referred to as a creditors’ liquidation, is a court‑ordered process that terminates a company’s operations, realises its assets and distributes the proceeds to creditors according to statutory priority. It stands in contrast to a voluntary liquidation, which is initiated by the company’s members (or creditors where the company is insolvent) without a court order, and to a strike‑off, which is an administrative removal from the Register of Companies for dormant entities. Understanding how to wind up a company in Cyprus begins with identifying which route is appropriate: compulsory liquidation is typically pursued when a debtor company refuses to pay a liquidated debt, when voluntary resolution has failed, or when the company’s conduct warrants judicial supervision.

The statutory foundation is Part V of Cap. 113, which empowers the court to make a winding‑up order on the grounds set out in Section 211. The most frequently invoked ground is the company’s inability to pay its debts, as defined under Section 212, including failure to satisfy a statutory demand within 21 days. Other available grounds include a special resolution of the company, the court concluding that winding up is just and equitable, or the expiry of the company’s fixed duration.

In 2026, petitioners must also consider the forum in which they file: the introduction of specialist Commercial Court tracks has created an alternative to the traditional District Court pathway, with material implications for hearing speed and provisional relief, explored in detail below.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for a Winding‑Up Petition in Cyprus

Who can present the petition

Under Section 210 of Cap. 113, a winding‑up petition may be presented by:

  • A creditor. This is the most common petitioner category. The creditor must hold a liquidated debt that is due and payable. There is no statutory minimum monetary threshold, but courts will scrutinise whether the debt is genuinely disputed, a bona fide dispute on substantial grounds is a well‑established defence.
  • The company itself. A company may petition for its own winding up, typically following a board or shareholder resolution where voluntary liquidation is not feasible.
  • A contributory (member/shareholder). A contributory may petition, although standing is subject to conditions, notably, the contributory’s shares must have been held for at least six of the preceding eighteen months, or devolved by operation of law.
  • The Official Receiver or the Registrar of Companies. In limited circumstances, for instance, where the public interest demands it.

Foreign creditors may present a winding‑up petition on the same basis as domestic creditors, provided the target company is registered in Cyprus or qualifies as an unregistered company carrying on business in the jurisdiction. Cross‑border creditors should, however, give early attention to proof‑of‑debt formalities and any requirement for service abroad under the Hague Service Convention or applicable EU regulations.

Grounds required under Section 211

The petition must demonstrate at least one statutory ground. In practice, the overwhelming majority of creditors’ petitions rely on Section 211(e), that the company is unable to pay its debts. Inability to pay is established in one of two ways under Section 212: (a) the company fails to comply with a statutory demand for a sum exceeding the prescribed threshold, served at its registered office, within 21 days; or (b) a judgment or order of the court remains unsatisfied in whole or in part. Commercial insolvency, where liabilities exceed assets, can also be invoked, but this typically requires expert evidence and is less straightforward to prove at the petition stage.

Pre‑filing steps creditors should take

Before lodging a petition, a creditor should:

  • Issue a formal demand letter to the company at its registered office, clearly stating the debt, the sum outstanding, and a deadline for payment.
  • Serve a statutory demand under Section 212 where no judgment exists, this creates a deemed inability to pay after 21 days of non‑compliance.
  • Conduct a company registry search to confirm the target’s registered office, current directors, secretary and share capital, and to verify that the company has not already entered voluntary liquidation or been struck off.
  • Assemble the evidence bundle: contracts, invoices, correspondence, any judgment or arbitral award, and proof of service of the demand.

Step‑by‑Step Winding‑Up Procedure: Filing a Petition in Cyprus

The following numbered steps set out the core sequence for a creditors’ winding‑up petition under Cap. 113. Each step identifies who acts, what is filed, and the indicative timeframe. The timeline table below consolidates the full process at a glance.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Pre‑filing evidence gathering and statutory demand Creditor + counsel 1–3 weeks
2. Draft and lodge petition at the competent court Creditor (through counsel) 1 day to lodge; court listing in 2–6 weeks
3. Service of petition on the company and advertisement Petitioner / process server; Official Gazette 7–21 days for service; Gazette ad as directed by court
4. Application for provisional liquidator (if urgent) Creditor (with court hearing) Interim hearing within days to 2–3 weeks
5. Return hearing, petition contested or uncontested Parties (company may oppose) 4–12 weeks (complexity / expedited track dependent)
6. Winding‑up order and appointment of liquidator Court Immediate upon order
7. Post‑order administration, asset realisation and distribution Liquidator (Official Receiver or private insolvency practitioner) 3 months to 2+ years (case dependent)

Step 1, Pre‑filing evidence gathering and statutory demand

The creditor instructs counsel and assembles the evidence bundle. The critical documentary requirement at this stage is proof that a liquidated debt is due and payable. Where a court judgment or arbitral award exists, this is straightforward. Where it does not, the creditor should serve a statutory demand under Section 212(a) of Cap. 113 at the company’s registered office, demanding payment within 21 days. Non‑compliance with the statutory demand creates a statutory presumption that the company is unable to pay its debts.

At the same time, counsel will run a Companies Register search to confirm the company’s current status, registered office address and directors. This search also reveals whether prior insolvency proceedings, charges or resolutions are already on record.

Step 2, Draft and lodge the petition at the competent court

Counsel prepares the winding‑up petition, supported by a sworn affidavit verifying the facts relied upon, typically the debt, the demand, and the company’s failure to pay. The petition identifies the statutory ground invoked (most commonly Section 211(e)), the amount owed, and the relief sought.

The petition is then filed at the competent court. Historically, all winding‑up petitions were filed at the District Court with jurisdiction over the company’s registered office. Since 2025, however, the introduction of the specialist Commercial Court has created an alternative forum for cases meeting its jurisdictional criteria, including high‑value insolvency matters. Forum selection is a tactical decision: industry observers expect the Commercial Court track to yield faster listing and hearing dates, particularly for contested petitions involving complex financial evidence. The court filing fee is payable upon lodging.

Step 3, Service of the petition and advertisement

Once filed and assigned a return date, the petition must be served on the company. Service is ordinarily effected at the company’s registered office and must comply with the timelines directed by the court, typically allowing the company a minimum of 7 days’ notice before the hearing date, though courts routinely allow 14–21 days. Where the company has directors or a registered office abroad, service may need to follow the Hague Service Convention or applicable bilateral arrangements, which can significantly extend the timeline.

The court will also typically direct that the petition be advertised in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Cyprus and, in some cases, in a local newspaper. The advertisement serves to notify other creditors and interested parties, who may then appear at the hearing to support or oppose the petition. The petitioner is responsible for arranging and paying for the advertisement.

Step 4, Application for a provisional liquidator (if urgent)

Where there is a credible risk that the company’s assets are being dissipated, concealed or transferred, the creditor may apply ex parte or inter partes for the appointment of a provisional liquidator. The appointment is made under Section 218 of Cap. 113. A provisional liquidator takes immediate custody and control of the company’s property and affairs, effectively freezing the status quo until the petition is heard.

The court may list an urgency hearing for a provisional liquidator application within days of the petition being filed. In practice, this step is discretionary, it is not required in every case, but it is essential where asset preservation is at risk. The applicant must demonstrate a prima facie case for winding up and adduce evidence of the urgency. The court may also require the petitioner to provide a deposit or guarantee as a condition of the appointment.

Step 5, Return hearing, petition contested or uncontested

At the return date, the court hears the petition. If the company does not appear or does not contest, the court may make a winding‑up order on an uncontested basis. If the company opposes the petition, a contested hearing follows. Common defences include:

  • Bona fide dispute on substantial grounds: the company asserts that the debt is genuinely disputed, the court will typically dismiss or stay the petition if satisfied that a real dispute exists.
  • Cross‑claim exceeding the petition debt: the company claims an offsetting liability owed by the petitioner.
  • Payment or settlement: the company has paid the debt before the hearing date.
  • Abuse of process: the petition is being used as a debt‑collection weapon rather than a genuine insolvency remedy.

Contested hearings may be resolved in a single session or adjourned for further evidence, with the process typically taking 4–12 weeks from first listing to final determination. The expedited track available through the Commercial Court may compress this timeline for qualifying cases.

Step 6, Winding‑up order and appointment of liquidator

If the court is satisfied that a ground for winding up is established and no valid defence is made out, it will issue a winding‑up order. The order is effective from the date of filing of the petition (not the date of the order), with retroactive effect on dispositions of the company’s property under Section 227 of Cap. 113. Upon the making of the order, the Official Receiver automatically becomes the provisional liquidator, unless the court appoints a private insolvency practitioner. A liquidation committee may subsequently be established by creditors.

The liquidator assumes custody of the company’s assets, investigates its affairs, adjudicates claims, realises property and distributes proceeds according to the statutory order of priority. The winding up procedure in Cyprus effectively strips the directors of their powers from this point forward, all management vests in the liquidator.

Documents Needed for a Winding‑Up Petition in Cyprus

A winding‑up petition must be supported by a comprehensive evidence package. Deficiencies in documentation are among the most common causes of delay or dismissal. The following table sets out the documents typically required, together with formatting and certification notes.

Document Notes
Winding‑up petition Drafted by petitioner’s counsel; signed and sworn before a certifying officer; filed at the competent court (District Court or Commercial Court)
Verifying affidavit / affidavit of debt Sworn statement by the creditor (or authorised officer) exhibiting invoices, contracts, account statements or judgments that prove the debt; certified copies required
Proof of demand or statutory demand Copy of the demand letter and/or statutory demand served under Section 212, together with proof of service (e.g. signed acknowledgement, process server affidavit)
Company registry extract Current extract from the Cyprus Department of Registrar of Companies confirming the company’s registered office, directors, secretary, share capital and status
Contract, invoice or judgment The underlying instrument giving rise to the debt; certified copies; where the document is in a language other than Greek or English, an official translation is required
Statement of affairs (if available) Where the company is cooperating or where a provisional liquidator has been appointed, a statement of affairs listing assets and liabilities may be required
Service address verification Verified registered office and, where applicable, directors’ residential addresses for personal service; foreign service addresses if directors are abroad
AML/KYC documentation (for corporate petitioner or funder) Identity documents, beneficial ownership declarations and shareholder registers for the petitioning entity, as required under Cyprus AML/CFT regulations
Court fee receipt and deposit evidence Proof of payment of the court filing fee; receipt for any deposit required for the Official Receiver or provisional liquidator
Translations and notarisation Official translations of all non‑Greek/English documents; notarisation or apostille where required for foreign‑sourced documents

Practitioners should treat this table as a minimum checklist. Additional documents may be required depending on case specifics, for example, expert valuation reports where commercial insolvency (balance‑sheet test) is relied upon, or evidence of asset dissipation where a provisional liquidator is sought. All documents filed with the court should be in duplicate, with copies retained by the petitioner’s counsel.

Winding‑Up Timeline in Cyprus: Key Deadlines at a Glance

The total duration of a creditors’ liquidation in Cyprus varies significantly depending on whether the petition is contested, the complexity of the company’s affairs, and whether the expedited Commercial Court track is used. The following table summarises key procedural deadlines that petitioners and respondents must observe.

Action Typical deadline or statutory timing
Compliance with statutory demand (Section 212) 21 days from date of service
Service of petition on the company 7–21 days after filing (as directed by the court)
Advertisement in the Official Gazette As directed by the court, typically published before the return hearing date
Urgency hearing for provisional liquidator Court may list within days of application (case‑by‑case)
Return hearing (uncontested) 2–6 weeks from filing (District Court); potentially faster on Commercial Court track
Return hearing (contested, final determination) 4–12 weeks from first listing (may extend if adjourned for evidence)
Application to set aside winding‑up order Must be made promptly, typically within a short period after the order is drawn (court rules and practice directions apply)
Completion of liquidation (asset realisation and distributions) 3 months to 2+ years depending on asset complexity, litigation and creditor claims

Early engagement with counsel is critical. Missed service or advertisement deadlines can result in adjournments, increased costs or, in a worst‑case scenario, dismissal of the petition. Respondent companies that are served with a petition should seek legal advice immediately: the window for filing opposition or raising a bona fide dispute defence narrows rapidly once the return date is set.

Winding‑Up Costs in Cyprus: Fees, Deposits and Professional Charges

Costs are a material consideration for any creditor weighing the decision to petition. The table below sets out the main cost categories. Exact amounts for certain official fees are subject to periodic revision and should be confirmed with the court registry and the Department of Insolvency before filing.

Item Indicative range Notes
Court filing fee (petition) €100–€500 Varies by court; confirm current schedule with the District Court or Commercial Court registry
Official Receiver / provisional liquidator deposit €2,000–€6,000 The court may require a deposit or guarantee to cover the Official Receiver’s initial costs; amount varies by case
Process server and proof of service €100–€400 Higher end applies to foreign service or urgent same‑day service
Official Gazette advertisement €60–€300 Depends on advertisement length and publication schedule
Liquidator professional fees Typically several thousand €; case dependent Based on estate size, complexity of asset realisation and duration of liquidation; may be fixed, hourly or a percentage of realisations
Legal fees (petitioner’s counsel) Varies: fixed fee for uncontested; hourly for contested hearings Request a detailed costs estimate from counsel at the outset; contested petitions involve significantly higher fees
VAT on professional services 19% (standard Cyprus VAT rate) Applicable to legal fees, liquidator fees and advertisement costs; creditors recovering debts may have different tax treatment, confirm with tax counsel

A creditor should budget for the aggregate of court fees, advertisement costs, process service and legal fees as a minimum outlay before the petition is heard. Where a provisional liquidator is sought, the deposit requirement adds materially to upfront costs. Liquidator fees are typically paid from the estate and do not fall directly on the petitioner, unless the estate is insufficient, in which case the petitioner may be required to fund the liquidation. Industry observers expect the costs of the winding up procedure in Cyprus to remain broadly stable in 2026, though Commercial Court filings may carry adjusted fee schedules as the new forum matures.

What Changes in 2026: Specialist Commercial Court Routes and Procedural Reforms

The most significant procedural development affecting the winding‑up procedure in Cyprus in 2025–2026 is the establishment and operationalisation of the specialist Commercial Court. This court, created as part of broader judicial reforms aimed at improving the efficiency and predictability of commercial dispute resolution, has jurisdiction over high‑value commercial and corporate matters, including insolvency petitions that meet its case‑value thresholds.

The practical consequences for petitioners are material:

  • Forum selection. Petitioners whose claims meet the Commercial Court’s jurisdictional criteria now have the option of filing directly at the Commercial Court rather than the District Court. Early indications suggest that the Commercial Court offers shorter listing intervals and more structured case‑management timetables.
  • Expedited provisional relief. The Commercial Court’s procedural framework includes expedited hearing tracks for urgent applications, including applications for provisional liquidators. The likely practical effect will be a compressed timeline from petition filing to interim relief in qualifying cases.
  • Procedural consistency. The Commercial Court applies enhanced case‑management practices, including strict compliance timetables for service, advertisement and filing of evidence. Petitioners and respondents should expect tighter procedural discipline than has traditionally been the case in some District Courts.
  • Document‑filing format. The Commercial Court may require electronic filing and compliance with specific formatting and bundling rules that differ from legacy District Court practice. Counsel should confirm current practice directions before filing.

These reforms do not alter the substantive law, the statutory grounds for winding up, the rights of parties and the role of the Official Receiver remain governed by Part V of Cap. 113. However, they do change the tactical landscape. A creditor pursuing a high‑value or contested winding‑up petition in 2026 should evaluate the Commercial Court route at the outset of the engagement, weighing the advantages of speed and structured case management against any additional procedural requirements.

Common Pitfalls in the Winding‑Up Procedure and How to Avoid Them

  • Insufficient evidence of debt. Filing a petition on the basis of a genuinely disputed debt is the single most common reason for dismissal. The court will not make a winding‑up order where the company raises a bona fide dispute on substantial grounds. Do this instead: obtain judgment or an uncontested statutory demand before petitioning; ensure documentary evidence is watertight.
  • Defective service or advertisement. Failure to serve the petition on the company in compliance with court directions, or failure to advertise in the Official Gazette, will delay or invalidate the proceedings. Do this instead: instruct a process server immediately upon receiving the return date; arrange Gazette advertisement as soon as the court directs.
  • Wrong court or forum. Filing at the wrong District Court (e.g. one without jurisdiction over the company’s registered office) or failing to consider the Commercial Court option wastes time and costs. Do this instead: verify the registered office from the Companies Register; assess Commercial Court eligibility before filing.
  • AML/KYC omissions. Corporate petitioners or funded creditors who fail to provide AML/KYC documentation may face delays, particularly where the court or the Official Receiver requires verification of the petitioner’s identity and source of funds. Do this instead: prepare AML documentation in parallel with the petition evidence bundle.
  • Underestimating opposition. Opposing a winding‑up petition on grounds of bona fide dispute, cross‑claim or abuse of process is a legitimate and frequently successful defence. Petitioners who fail to anticipate opposition may be caught unprepared at the return hearing. Do this instead: assess the strength of potential defences before filing; prepare witness evidence and rebuttals in advance.
  • Failing to apply for provisional relief. Where the company is actively dissipating assets, delay in applying for a provisional liquidator can render the eventual winding‑up order ineffective. Do this instead: where dissipation is suspected, apply for a provisional liquidator at the earliest opportunity, supported by concrete evidence.

Conclusion

Filing a creditors’ winding‑up petition in Cyprus is a structured, court‑supervised process with clear statutory requirements and well‑defined procedural steps. For creditors, it remains one of the most powerful enforcement tools available when a company fails to pay a liquidated debt. For company directors, early awareness of the procedure, and the defences available, is critical to protecting legitimate interests. The winding up procedure in Cyprus in 2026 is shaped not only by the longstanding provisions of Companies Law, Cap. 113, but also by the practical opportunities and procedural discipline introduced by the specialist Commercial Court.

Whether you are contemplating filing a petition or responding to one, engaging experienced insolvency counsel at the earliest stage is the single most important step you can take.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Christos Ioannides at LLPO Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Department of Insolvency (Cyprus), Official Guidance on Winding‑Up
  2. Companies Registration Office (Cyprus), Voluntary Liquidation Guidance
  3. Loizides & Associates, General Principles of a Winding‑Up Petition by Court in Cyprus
  4. Economou & Co, Guide to Liquidations and Insolvency in Cyprus
  5. Lexology, How to Dissolve a Cyprus Company
  6. ATCA, Liquidation in Cyprus

FAQs

How do I start a winding‑up petition against a Cyprus company?
You begin by establishing that a liquidated debt is due and unpaid, typically by serving a statutory demand under Section 212 of Cap. 113 and waiting 21 days. If the company fails to pay, your counsel drafts and files a winding‑up petition at the competent court (District Court or Commercial Court), supported by a verifying affidavit and documentary evidence of the debt.
Under Section 210 of Cap. 113, a petition may be presented by a creditor, the company itself, a contributory (subject to shareholding‑period conditions), the Official Receiver or the Registrar of Companies. In practice, the vast majority of compulsory winding‑up petitions are brought by creditors holding liquidated debts that have not been paid despite formal demand.
At a minimum, the petitioner must file the winding‑up petition itself, a sworn verifying affidavit, copies of the underlying contract or judgment, proof of the demand or statutory demand served on the company, a current Companies Register extract, and proof of payment of the court filing fee. Additional documents, such as AML/KYC materials, translations and expert reports, may be required depending on the case.
An uncontested petition can progress from filing to winding‑up order within 4–8 weeks. Contested petitions typically take 8–16 weeks to reach a final determination, potentially longer if the matter is adjourned. Post‑order liquidation, the process of realising assets and distributing proceeds, ranges from a few months for simple estates to two or more years for complex or litigated matters.
Yes. A foreign creditor has the same right to petition as a domestic creditor, provided the target company is registered in Cyprus or is an unregistered company carrying on business in the jurisdiction. Foreign creditors should ensure that their evidence of debt complies with local documentary standards, including certified translations and, where applicable, apostille or notarisation of foreign‑sourced documents. Service abroad on directors may require compliance with the Hague Service Convention.
Failure to serve the petition or to publish the required Gazette advertisement within the court‑directed timeframe will typically result in an adjournment and may, in serious cases, lead to dismissal of the petition. If a deadline is at risk, counsel should apply to the court for an extension or revised directions before the deadline expires. Where a winding‑up order has already been made, an affected party may apply to set aside the order, but this must be done promptly and requires demonstrable grounds.
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Step-by-step Guide to Filing a Winding‑up (creditors' Liquidation) Petition in Cyprus (2026)

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