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Last reviewed: 14 June 2026
If you are asking how do I close a company in Ghana, the answer depends on a single threshold question: can the company pay all of its debts in full within twelve months? A solvent company follows the private (members’) liquidation route under the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992), beginning with a directors’ affidavit of solvency and a special resolution. An insolvent company, or one facing financial distress, must instead pursue official liquidation (creditors’ voluntary or court-ordered compulsory winding up) or consider the business-rescue mechanisms introduced by the Corporate Insolvency and Restructuring Act, 2020 (CIRA, Act 1015) and now operationalised through the Corporate Insolvency & Restructuring Regulations, 2025 (L. I. 2502).
This guide sets out each route step by step, covers the required filings with the Office of the Registrar of Companies (ORC), and includes practical templates, cost ranges and a decision-tree checklist so directors and advisors can move with confidence.
Choosing the right winding up process in Ghana begins with an honest solvency assessment. Answer the three questions below to identify the correct path:
Act 992 and CIRA recognise two limbs of insolvency. The cashflow test asks whether the company can pay its debts as they fall due. The balance-sheet test compares total assets against total liabilities, including contingent and prospective obligations. A company that fails either test is insolvent and cannot lawfully pursue private liquidation in Ghana. Directors who make a false affidavit of solvency risk personal liability for the company’s debts and potential criminal prosecution.
CIRA (Act 1015) introduced a formal business-rescue regime that allows an administrator to be appointed to restructure a financially distressed company. Industry observers expect this route to become increasingly common as L.I. 2502 embeds the procedural framework. Business rescue is appropriate where the company’s underlying business remains viable, its creditors are likely to receive a better return than in liquidation, and the directors or a creditor can demonstrate a reasonable prospect of rescuing the company. Where no rescue prospect exists, liquidation, whether voluntary or compulsory, remains the correct course.
Private liquidation in Ghana is the standard route for a solvent company that the members have decided to close. It is quicker, less expensive and less adversarial than official liquidation. The key steps are set out below.
The board of directors should first pass a resolution recognising that the company should be wound up and authorising the preparation of an affidavit of solvency. This resolution forms the starting point of the formal process and should be recorded in the minute book.
The affidavit of solvency is the legal cornerstone of private liquidation in Ghana. Under Act 992, a majority of the directors (or, where the company has only two directors, both of them) must swear a statutory declaration stating that they 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 within twelve months of the commencement of the winding up.
The affidavit must attach:
Timing is critical. The affidavit of solvency in Ghana must be sworn not more than five weeks before the date of the special resolution to wind up, and ideally as close to the meeting date as possible so that the financial position it describes remains current. The special resolution must then be passed within five days of the affidavit being sworn for the process to remain valid. Failing to observe this window is one of the most common procedural errors and can invalidate the entire private liquidation.
The members must pass a special resolution for liquidation at a general meeting (or by written resolution if the company’s constitution permits). A special resolution requires at least 75 per cent of the votes cast. The resolution should state clearly that the company be wound up voluntarily and that a named person be appointed as liquidator. Once passed, notice of the special resolution must be filed with the ORC within the statutory filing window, and a copy published in the Gazette.
The liquidator appointment in Ghana for a private winding up is made by the members in the same special resolution (or a separate ordinary resolution at the same meeting). The appointed liquidator must be a person qualified to act, typically a chartered accountant or legal practitioner with insolvency experience. Upon appointment the liquidator must:
The following documents must be filed with the ORC Insolvency Directorate to formalise a private liquidation:
| Document | Who Signs | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Affidavit of solvency (with asset-and-liability statement) | Majority of directors | Proves the company is solvent and can pay debts within 12 months |
| Certified copy of the special resolution | Company secretary / chair of meeting | Evidences the members’ decision to wind up voluntarily |
| Notice of liquidator appointment | Liquidator | Notifies ORC of the identity and contact details of the liquidator |
| ORC prescribed forms (as per L.I. 2502) | Liquidator / directors as applicable | Standard regulatory filing to update the company register |
| Gazette publication receipt | N/A | Confirms public notice of the winding-up resolution |
The ORC reviews the filings, enters the company’s status as “in liquidation” on the register and assigns the matter to its Insolvency Services directorate for monitoring.
Official liquidation in Ghana applies when a company is insolvent or when creditors require the protection of a supervised winding up. There are two principal routes.
Where the directors cannot truthfully swear an affidavit of solvency, the company may still initiate a voluntary winding up, but it proceeds as a creditors’ voluntary liquidation rather than a members’ voluntary. The company must convene a meeting of creditors within twenty-one days of the members’ resolution. Notice of the creditors’ meeting must be sent to every known creditor and published in the Gazette. At the creditors’ meeting, creditors may appoint a liquidator of their choosing (who may differ from any person nominated by the members). The creditors’ nominee prevails if there is a dispute.
A creditor, the company itself, a contributory, or the Registrar of Companies may petition the High Court for a compulsory winding-up order under Act 992 and CIRA. The most common ground is that the company is unable to pay its debts. Under CIRA (Act 1015), a company is deemed unable to pay its debts if a creditor who is owed more than a prescribed threshold has served a statutory demand and the company has failed to pay, compound or secure the debt within twenty-one days.
The petition process typically involves:
The timeline from petition to winding-up order varies but industry observers indicate that a straightforward, unopposed petition can be heard within two to four months.
The ORC’s Insolvency Services directorate oversees all liquidation proceedings in Ghana, both private and official. It maintains the register of liquidators, receives periodic reports from appointed liquidators, and can intervene where a liquidation is not being conducted properly. Under L.I. 2502, the directorate’s supervisory role has been strengthened with additional reporting requirements and prescribed forms.
| Feature | CVL (Creditors’ Voluntary) | Compulsory (Court-Ordered) |
|---|---|---|
| Trigger | Company insolvent; directors cannot swear affidavit of solvency | Creditor petition; statutory demand unpaid for 21 days |
| Initiator | Directors / members (with creditors’ meeting) | Creditor, company, contributory, or Registrar |
| Who appoints liquidator? | Creditors at creditors’ meeting | The High Court |
| Court involvement | Minimal (unless dispute) | Full, petition, hearing, winding-up order |
| Typical timeline | 3–6 months | 4–12 months (longer if contested) |
Whether appointed privately by the members, by the creditors, or by the High Court, the liquidator becomes the central figure in closing a company in Ghana. Under Act 992 and CIRA (Act 1015), the liquidator has broad statutory powers to realise assets, settle claims, disclaim onerous contracts, bring or defend legal proceedings in the company’s name, and distribute surplus funds.
A private liquidator is typically a chartered accountant or legal practitioner nominated by the members. An official liquidator in a compulsory winding up may be the Official Liquidator (a public officer) or a private insolvency practitioner appointed by the court. Under L.I. 2502, all liquidators must now hold or be eligible for registration with the ORC Insolvency Services directorate.
Ghana’s insolvency legislation establishes a strict priority waterfall for the distribution of a company’s assets in liquidation:
| Priority | Category |
|---|---|
| 1 | Costs and expenses of the liquidation (including liquidator’s remuneration) |
| 2 | Preferential debts, employee wages, salaries and accrued leave (up to prescribed limits) |
| 3 | Secured creditors (to the extent of their security) |
| 4 | Unsecured creditors (pari passu, pro rata) |
| 5 | Deferred debts (e.g., loans from members / connected persons) |
| 6 | Return of surplus (if any) to members according to their rights |
The liquidator must file periodic reports with the ORC detailing the progress of the winding up, realisations made, claims admitted and dividends paid or proposed. Under L.I. 2502, these reports must be filed at prescribed intervals and the ORC may require the liquidator to attend and answer questions. A final account must be prepared and filed before the company can be formally dissolved. Failure to file reports on time can result in the ORC taking enforcement action or applying to the court to remove the liquidator.
Beyond the legal formalities, directors and liquidators must manage the operational shutdown. The following checklist covers the most commonly overlooked steps when closing a company in Ghana:
The company must file all outstanding corporate income tax returns, VAT returns and withholding tax returns up to the date of cessation of business. A tax clearance certificate from the GRA is typically required before the ORC will process the final dissolution. Any unpaid taxes become a claim in the liquidation and must be addressed before distributions to unsecured creditors. Early engagement with the GRA significantly reduces delays in the winding up process in Ghana.
All employees must be given proper notice (or payment in lieu) in accordance with their contracts and the Labour Act, 2003 (Act 651). Redundancy payments, accrued leave and end-of-service benefits must be calculated and settled. Employee claims rank as preferential debts in the priority waterfall, meaning they are paid before unsecured trade creditors.
The cost of closing a company in Ghana varies substantially depending on the route chosen, the complexity of the company’s affairs and the volume of creditor claims.
| Method | Typical Cost Range | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Administrative strike-off (dormant company, no debts) | Low, ORC filing fees only | 3–6 months |
| Private (members’) voluntary liquidation | Moderate, liquidator fees + ORC fees + professional costs | 4–9 months |
| Creditors’ voluntary liquidation (CVL) | Moderate to high, liquidator fees + creditor meeting costs | 6–12 months |
| Compulsory (court-ordered) liquidation | High, court fees + legal costs + official liquidator fees | 8–18 months (or longer) |
For a truly dormant company with no liabilities and no assets, an administrative strike-off (where the Registrar removes the company from the register for failure to file annual returns) may be the cheapest option, though this route is initiated by the ORC rather than the company and carries certain risks, including potential restoration. A private (members’) voluntary liquidation remains the cheapest controlled closure for a solvent, operating company. Fees are subject to change, always confirm current ORC fee schedules and obtain a liquidator’s quote before committing.
Practitioners regularly encounter the same mistakes when directors attempt to close a company in Ghana. Avoiding these pitfalls can save significant time and cost:
The following micro-templates are provided as starting points. They must be reviewed and adapted by a qualified legal or insolvency practitioner to reflect the specific circumstances of the company.
1. Affidavit of Solvency, Checklist
2. Special Resolution Wording (Members’ Voluntary Liquidation)
“RESOLVED as a Special Resolution that the Company be wound up voluntarily pursuant to the Companies Act, 2019 (Act 992) and that [Full Name of Liquidator], of [Address], a [qualified insolvency practitioner / chartered accountant], be and is hereby appointed Liquidator of the Company for the purposes of such winding up.”
3. Notice to Creditors
“NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that by Special Resolution dated [Date], [Company Name] resolved to be wound up voluntarily. Creditors are required to submit proof of their claims to the Liquidator, [Full Name], at [Address / Email], on or before [Deadline Date].”
4. Letter Appointing Liquidator
A formal letter from the company (signed by the chair of the meeting) confirming the appointment, enclosing a certified copy of the special resolution and requesting the liquidator’s written acceptance.
Once the liquidator has realised all assets, settled all admitted claims and distributed any surplus, a final account and return must be prepared and filed with the ORC. The ORC then formally dissolves the company and removes it from the register. From the date of dissolution, the company ceases to exist as a legal entity.
Company records, including accounting records, minutes and the liquidator’s files, must be retained for the period prescribed by law. Directors and former officers should be aware that personal liabilities for wrongful trading, fraudulent trading or breach of duty can survive dissolution. The court retains jurisdiction to declare void any transaction that constituted a preference or an undervalue transaction in the period leading up to the liquidation.
Not every company closure requires a lawyer, but several situations demand professional insolvency advice:
In any of these situations, engaging a qualified insolvency practitioner and legal counsel early can protect directors from personal exposure and ensure the winding up process in Ghana proceeds lawfully. Find an insolvency lawyer in Ghana through the Global Law Experts directory.
| Feature | Private (Members’) Liquidation | Official (CVL / Compulsory) |
|---|---|---|
| Solvency requirement | Company must be solvent (affidavit of solvency required) | Company is insolvent or unable to pay debts |
| Who initiates? | Directors and members | CVL: directors/members + creditors; Compulsory: creditor/Registrar/court |
| Court involvement | None (unless challenged) | CVL: minimal; Compulsory: full court process |
| Liquidator chosen by | Members (special resolution) | CVL: creditors; Compulsory: the court |
| Typical cost | Lower | Higher (court fees, extended timelines) |
| Typical timeline | 4–9 months | 6–18 months |
| Primary legislation | Companies Act 2019 (Act 992) | Act 992 + CIRA (Act 1015) + L.I. 2502 |
Understanding how to close a company in Ghana requires careful navigation of Act 992, CIRA (Act 1015) and the procedural requirements now embedded in L.I. 2502. The decision between private liquidation and official liquidation turns on a single, critical question, solvency, and getting that assessment wrong carries serious consequences for directors. Whether the company is solvent and heading for an orderly members’ voluntary winding up, or insolvent and facing creditor pressure, following the correct statutory process protects all stakeholders. For complex situations, engaging qualified insolvency counsel early is not optional, it is essential. Search the Global Law Experts directory to connect with an experienced insolvency practitioner in Ghana.
This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult a qualified legal or insolvency practitioner before taking any action based on this content.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Audrey Naa Dei Kotey at Audrey Grey, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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