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If you are asking how do I close a company in Indonesia, you are facing a multi-stage legal process that demands precision at every turn, from the initial shareholders’ resolution through to final deregistration with the Ministry of Law and Human Rights (MOLHR). Company dissolution in Indonesia is governed primarily by Law No. 40 of 2007 on Limited Liability Companies (Undang-Undang Nomor 40 Tahun 2007 tentang Perseroan Terbatas), which prescribes mandatory steps including liquidator appointment, public creditor notices in the State Gazette and a national newspaper, a defined creditor claims period, tax and audit clearance, and ultimately the removal of the entity from the legal entity administration system (AHU).
This guide sets out each of those steps in the order they must be completed, identifies the documents and filings required, explains typical timelines and costs, and highlights the risks that catch directors and shareholders off-guard when they attempt to wind up a PT, PT PMA or representative office (KPPA).
Before examining each stage in detail, the following snapshot checklist summarises the end-to-end process for how to liquidate a company in Indonesia. Use it as a reference throughout the liquidation journey.
The primary statute governing company liquidation in Indonesia is Law No. 40 of 2007 (UU PT). Part IV of the law, specifically Articles 142 through 152, sets out the grounds for dissolution, the procedural requirements for liquidation, and the legal consequences of deregistration. Article 142 enumerates the permissible grounds for dissolution, which include a resolution of the GMS, the expiry of the company’s duration as stated in its articles of association, a court order, and revocation of the company’s business licence rendering continued operations impossible. Article 143 mandates that the liquidator notify MOLHR and announce the dissolution in the State Gazette and a newspaper. Articles 147 through 149 address the creditor claims process, asset distribution and the liquidator’s accountability obligations.
All changes to a company’s legal status, including dissolution, must be recorded through the AHU online system operated by MOLHR. The liquidator is responsible for submitting the dissolution notification to MOLHR so that the company’s status is updated in the register. Separately, the dissolution must be published in the State Gazette of the Republic of Indonesia (BNRI) to provide constructive notice to the public. These two processes, the ministry of law and human rights submission and the BNRI publication, run in parallel and both must be completed before the company can be fully deregistered.
A critical distinction applies throughout this process. Where a company is solvent and shareholders simply wish to cease operations, a voluntary liquidation is initiated by GMS resolution. The shareholders control the process and appoint the liquidator. Where a company is insolvent or unable to pay its debts as they fall due, creditors or the company itself may apply to the Commercial Court for a bankruptcy declaration under Law No. 37 of 2004 on Bankruptcy and Suspension of Debt Payment Obligations. In that scenario, the court appoints a receiver (kurator), and the process follows a different procedural track with court supervision. This guide focuses primarily on the voluntary solvent liquidation process, but flags insolvency considerations at each relevant stage.
The dissolution of a limited liability company (PT) in Indonesia begins with a formal decision of the shareholders. Under Article 142(1)(a) of Law No. 40 of 2007, a company may be dissolved based on a resolution of the GMS. This is the standard voluntary dissolution pathway and is used by the vast majority of companies, both domestic PTs and foreign-invested PT PMAs, that choose to wind up operations.
The GMS must be convened in accordance with the procedures set out in the company’s articles of association and Articles 86 through 91 of Law No. 40 of 2007. A written invitation must be sent to all shareholders at least 14 days before the meeting date. The dissolution resolution is a “special resolution” requiring an enhanced quorum and voting majority. Under Article 89, for matters including dissolution, a GMS quorum is met when shareholders representing at least three-quarters (75%) of the total issued shares with valid voting rights are present. The resolution must be approved by at least three-quarters (75%) of the votes cast at the meeting.
If the initial quorum is not met, a second meeting may be convened with a lower quorum requirement (at least two-thirds of shares represented), and the resolution must still be approved by at least three-quarters of votes cast. If the second meeting also fails to achieve quorum, the company may petition the district court to set the quorum for a third meeting.
Before the GMS, the board of directors should prepare the following supporting documentation:
The resolution must be notarised by an Indonesian notary. The notarial deed of the GMS minutes (Akta Berita Acara Rapat) constitutes the formal legal record of the dissolution decision and is a required attachment for subsequent MOLHR filings.
Under Article 142(3) of Law No. 40 of 2007, the GMS that resolves to dissolve the company must also appoint a liquidator. If no liquidator is appointed, the board of directors acts as liquidator by operation of law. The appointment of a liquidator in Indonesia is therefore embedded in the dissolution resolution itself.
There is no statutory requirement that the liquidator be an independent third party. The law permits any of the following to serve:
Where the company is a PT PMA or has multiple foreign shareholders with divergent interests, industry observers recommend appointing an independent liquidator to ensure transparency and reduce the risk of subsequent challenges by minority shareholders or creditors.
The liquidator’s statutory duties include collecting and safeguarding company assets, settling debts to creditors, distributing remaining assets to shareholders, and publishing the required dissolution notices. The GMS resolution should expressly authorise the liquidator to open and close bank accounts, sell or transfer assets, execute deeds, appear before government authorities and file all necessary documents with MOLHR and the tax office.
Practical considerations include the liquidator’s fee (which varies based on company size and complexity), any requirement for a surety bond or professional indemnity insurance, and clear engagement terms specifying the scope, duration and reporting obligations. For solvent voluntary liquidations, professional liquidator fees typically range from USD 3,000 to USD 15,000 depending on company complexity, asset base and the number of creditors, though fees for large multinational PT PMAs may be significantly higher.
Once the dissolution resolution is passed and the liquidator is appointed, the next mandatory step is public announcement. Article 147(1) of Law No. 40 of 2007 requires the liquidator to publish the dissolution in the State Gazette (Berita Negara Republik Indonesia, BNRI) and in at least one daily newspaper. The liquidator must also notify MOLHR of the dissolution.
The announcement and public notification in Indonesia must be made within 30 days of the GMS dissolution resolution. The notice must contain, at minimum:
A sample notice typically reads: “Notice is hereby given that PT [Company Name], domiciled in [City], has been dissolved pursuant to the resolution of the General Meeting of Shareholders dated [Date], as recorded in Notarial Deed No. [X] of Notary [Name]. [Liquidator Name] has been appointed as liquidator. All creditors are invited to submit their claims in writing, supported by relevant evidence, to [Address] within 30 days of this announcement.”
Concurrently, the liquidator must notify MOLHR through the AHU online system that the company is in dissolution status. This notification updates the company’s record in the national legal entity database and triggers the “in liquidation” status flag. The submission requires upload of the notarised GMS minutes, proof of newspaper publication and details of the appointed liquidator. Processing typically takes 7 to 14 working days from the date of a complete submission.
The creditor claims period in Indonesia is a critical phase of the liquidation. Following publication of the dissolution notice, creditors have a statutory window to submit their claims to the liquidator. Under Article 147(2) of Law No. 40 of 2007, the creditor claims period runs for 30 days from the date of announcement in the newspaper or State Gazette, whichever is later.
The liquidator must maintain a register of all claims received, recording the creditor’s identity, the amount claimed, the basis of the claim and the supporting evidence provided. Creditors should submit written claims accompanied by copies of contracts, invoices, delivery receipts or court judgments. The liquidator then verifies each claim, accepts or rejects it in whole or in part, and communicates the decision to the creditor in writing.
Accepted claims are settled from company assets in accordance with the priority established by Indonesian law:
If, during the claims verification process, the liquidator determines that the company’s assets are insufficient to satisfy all claims, the company may need to be placed into formal bankruptcy proceedings under Law No. 37 of 2004. In such cases, the liquidator must apply to the Commercial Court for a bankruptcy declaration, at which point a court-appointed receiver (kurator) takes over the process. This is a fundamentally different regime with distinct procedural rules, court oversight and creditor committee structures. Companies anticipating insolvency should seek specialist legal advice before commencing voluntary liquidation, as beginning a voluntary process that later converts to formal bankruptcy adds cost and complexity.
| Stage | Action | Deadline / Timing | Evidence Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Publication of notice | Newspaper + BNRI announcement | Within 30 days of GMS resolution | Proof of publication (tear sheet / digital confirmation) |
| Creditor claims window | Creditors file written claims with liquidator | 30 days from date of last publication | Contracts, invoices, court orders |
| Claim adjudication | Liquidator verifies and accepts/rejects claims | Ongoing during and after claims window | Liquidator’s written decision per claim |
| Debt settlement | Payment to accepted creditors in priority order | After adjudication is complete | Payment receipts, release letters from creditors |
No company can complete its dissolution without obtaining clearance from the Indonesian tax authorities. This step frequently causes the most delay and is a common bottleneck for companies asking how do I close a company in Indonesia efficiently.
The liquidator must file the company’s final corporate income tax return (SPT Tahunan PPh Badan) with the Directorate General of Taxes (DGT) covering the period from the start of the financial year up to the date of dissolution. All outstanding monthly and annual tax obligations, including VAT returns, withholding tax returns (PPh 21, PPh 23, PPh 26) and any other periodic filings, must be brought current. The company must also settle any outstanding tax assessments, penalties or interest.
Once all returns are filed and liabilities settled, the liquidator applies to the relevant Tax Service Office (Kantor Pelayanan Pajak / KPP) for a tax clearance letter confirming that the company has no outstanding tax obligations. Processing times vary, but typically range from one to three months depending on the complexity of the company’s tax history and whether the DGT initiates a final tax audit.
Indonesian tax law requires companies to retain financial records, tax returns and supporting documents for a minimum of 10 years after the end of the relevant tax year. The liquidator or a designated custodian should arrange secure document storage and ensure that records remain accessible in the event of a post-dissolution tax audit or legal claim.
After all creditor claims have been settled, tax clearance obtained and permit cancellations completed, the liquidator convenes a final shareholders’ meeting (final GMS). At this meeting, the liquidator presents a comprehensive accountability report detailing all actions taken during the liquidation, the disposition of company assets, the settlement of all debts, and any remaining surplus available for distribution.
If shareholders approve the accountability report, any surplus assets are distributed to shareholders in proportion to their respective shareholdings. The minutes of this final GMS must also be notarised, as they form part of the dissolution package submitted to MOLHR. If a shareholder disputes the accountability report, the matter may be referred to the district court for resolution, a scenario that can add months to the overall timeline.
The concluding step in the company dissolution process is the submission of the final dissolution package to MOLHR through the AHU online portal. This is the ministry of law and human rights submission that formally removes the company from the Indonesian legal entity register.
The submission package typically includes:
The AHU system validates the submission and, if all documents are in order, updates the company’s status to “dissolved” and issues a confirmation of deregistration. Processing typically takes 14 to 30 working days. Common reasons for rejection include incomplete documentation, mismatched company data between the notarial deed and the AHU register, and failure to attach proof of publication. A rejected submission must be corrected and resubmitted, which can delay the process by several weeks.
Closing a company in Indonesia carries risks that extend beyond the administrative process. Directors and shareholders should be aware of the following exposures:
The precise obligations and typical timelines for closing a company in Indonesia depend on the entity type. The following comparison table summarises the key differences between a domestic PT, a PT PMA (foreign-invested limited liability company) and a KPPA (representative office).
| Entity Type | Key Closure Obligations | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| PT (domestic) | Shareholders’ resolution; liquidator appointment; newspaper & State Gazette notices; MOLHR (AHU) filings; tax & audit clearance | 4–9 months (solvent); longer if creditor disputes arise |
| PT PMA (foreign investor) | All PT obligations + BKPM / Ministry of Investment notification; OSS deregistration; foreign capital repatriation steps | 5–12 months (varies with BKPM processing & capital repatriation) |
| KPPA (representative office) | BKPM / Ministry of Investment application for closure; cancel local permits & employee visas; BPJS deregistration | 2–6 months (usually faster due to limited creditor exposure) |
For companies that are unsure whether liquidation or restructuring is the right path, a preliminary assessment of the company’s financial position and strategic options is strongly recommended before committing to dissolution. Companies holding specialised licences, such as a payment licence in Indonesia, should also factor in the regulatory implications of licence surrender. Understanding what corporate services offer can help businesses navigate the administrative complexity of a cross-border wind-up.
Closing a company in Indonesia is a structured, multi-step legal process that demands meticulous compliance with Law No. 40 of 2007, MOLHR filing requirements, State Gazette publication rules and DGT tax clearance procedures. From the initial shareholders’ resolution through creditor settlement to final AHU deregistration, each phase has defined deadlines, documentation requirements and legal consequences for non-compliance. Whether winding up a domestic PT, a foreign-invested PT PMA or a representative office, the key to an efficient dissolution is early planning, thorough documentation and, where complexity warrants, the engagement of qualified Indonesian corporate counsel who can navigate MOLHR, BKPM and tax authority procedures on your behalf.
For companies evaluating how do I close a company in Indonesia, obtaining professional legal guidance at the outset of the process is the single most effective step to avoid costly delays and personal liability exposures.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Bagus Nur Buwono at Bagus Enrico & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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