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Company voluntary arrangement meaning

/ˈkʌmp(ə)ni/ /ˈvɒlənt(ə)ri/ /əˈreɪn(d)ʒm(ə)nt/
What does Company voluntary arrangement mean?
A company voluntary arrangement (CVA) is a statutory restructuring that lets a company keep trading while compromising unsecured debts under a binding plan supervised by a licensed insolvency practitioner. It is used to avoid creditors’ voluntary liquidation, compulsory winding up or to exit administration, often to compromise landlord and trade liabilities. The regime is in Part I of the Insolvency Act 1986 and the Insolvency Rules 2016 (with parallels in the Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 1989), and operates similarly in England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Directors, or an administrator/liquidator, propose the CVA through a nominee (who becomes supervisor if approved). Approval requires at least 75% in value of creditors voting, including a majority by value of unconnected creditors. An approved CVA binds unsecured creditors who had notice; secured and preferential creditors are unaffected without consent. Creditors may challenge within 28 days for unfair prejudice or material irregularity. A statutory moratorium under Part A1 of the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 can support the proposal. Ireland has no CVA. Comparable debtor rescue tools include examinership, schemes of arrangement under the Companies Act 2014 and the Small Company Administrative Rescue Process (SCARP).
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View the related Checklists about Company voluntary arrangement

CHECKLISTS
FCA FG22/4: Assessment Criteria for UK Compromises of Regulated Firms (Schemes, Restructuring Plans, CVAs, IVAs) and Likely Grounds for FCA Objection

Where a scheme of arrangement, restructuring plan, company voluntary arrangement or individual arrangement is put forward in respect of a regulated firm (defined below), the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) should be engaged at the earliest possible stage. The FCA serves as the conduct regulator for both financial services firms and for the financial markets across the United Kingdom. Under section 1B of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (FSMA 2000), it is tasked with pursuing specified objectives, including one centred on consumer protection in practice. The FCA states its statutory aims as securing an appropriate level of protection for consumers and safeguarding and strengthening the overall integrity of UK financial markets, with the intention of limiting the volume of proposed compromises it deems unsuitable (see FG22/4 para 1.2). On 5 July 2022, the FCA issued guidance on compromises by regulated firms (FCA Guidance FG22/4 July 2022, updated January 2024), prompted by serious concerns that these mechanisms were being advanced and deployed by firms to sidestep redress due to customers...

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CHECKLISTS
CVA Proposals Involving the Pension Protection Fund: Legal Checklist Covering PPF Voting Criteria, Scheme Rescue vs PPF Entry, Anti-Embarrassment Equity, Creditor Treatment, DRCs, PPF Drift and Levy Protections

This Checklist This Checklist provides points to weigh up when preparing and seeking sign-off for a company voluntary arrangement (CVA) involving the Pension Protection Fund (PPF). It draws on PPF Guidance Note 5 issued in 2018 (see PPF Guidance Note 5: CVAs). When an employing company (or all participating employers in a last man standing scheme) files a CVA proposal with the court, a PPF assessment period begins. Under section 137 of the Pensions Act 2004, the PPF assumes the pension trustees’ voting entitlement (see Practice Note: The Pension Protection Fund—eligibility and entry). In practice, the PPF will typically cast a vote for or against the proposal rather than refrain. The PPF is consistently focused on avoiding any precedent that might allow pension schemes to be diluted where potential PPF entry could arise in the near future (the PPF observes that this has occurred in numerous prior CVAs). The PPF also anticipates that pension trustees will appoint their financial advisers to produce a report addressing the areas of concern...

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CHECKLISTS
Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) Proposal and Procedure: Indicative Timetable (see Checklist)

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NEWS
Purkiss v Kennedy: Court of Appeal (England and Wales) holds IA 1986 s423 does not catch EBT tax mitigation; no ‘prohibited purpose’; liquidator’s clawback claim over disguised remuneration fails

Christopher Purkiss (as liquidator of Ethos Solutions Limited) v Tim Kennedy and others [2025] EWCA Civ 268 Ethos Solutions Limited (the Company) ran a disguised remuneration arrangement under which sums were channelled to an employee benefit trust (EBT) without withholding income tax or NICs. The EBT’s trustee allocated funds into sub-trusts for the respondents and, when asked, advanced the amounts to them as discretionary loans. On 4 December 2012, HMRC issued determinations, holding the Company liable for income tax and NICs of c.£2m arising from payments made to the EBT in the 2008‑09 and 2009‑10 tax years. On 18 December 2012, the Company entered creditors’ voluntary liquidation, making no remittances to HMRC and taking no steps to appeal. On 9 January 2013, HMRC lodged a proof of debt totalling c.£2m with respect to those same EBT payments, as claimed therein...

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NEWS
UK tax weekly: beneficial loan interest rise, NICs re-rating, HMRC digital and agent services, self-assessment threshold plan, VAT FTT rulings, SDLT refund update, Welsh Budget—13 March 2025

In this issue: Employment taxes Individuals National Insurance contributions (NICs) Stamp duty land tax (SDLT) Tax compliance Value added tax (VAT) Wales Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Dates for your diary Trackers Useful information Employment taxes Parliament makes Regulations to increase the official rate of interest on beneficial loans On 5 March 2025, Parliament approved the Taxes (Interest Rate) (Amendment) Regulations 2025 (SI 2025/270). The Regulations raise the 'official rate of interest' on beneficial loans (see ITEPA 2003, Pt 7, Ch 3) from 2.25% to 3.75% a year with effect from 6 April 2025. For tax purposes, the cash equivalent of the advantage from such loans—calculated as the gap between interest at the official rate and the amount actually paid—is generally treated as earnings. These changes follow the government's Autumn Budget 2024 announcement that HMRC's late payment interest on unpaid tax liabilities would rise by 1.5 percentage...

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NEWS
Successful CVA challenge: supervisors not liable for costs absent serious personal misconduct—Burke v Peabody (High Court, England and Wales)

Burke and others v Peabody Construction Ltd [2024] EWHC 392 (Ch) What are the practical implications of this case? The judgment confirmed and reinforced the principle that, in almost all cases, a nominee will only be held responsible for the costs of a voluntary arrangement that is later set aside for unfair prejudice or material irregularity where there is a discernible element of serious personal misconduct by the nominee. What was the background? Two creditors of a company that was in a CVA (‘the Company’) commenced proceedings against the Company to contest the CVA, alleging unfair prejudice and material irregularities in respect of the CVA...

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View the related Practice Notes about Company voluntary arrangement

PRACTICE NOTES
CVAs and commercial leases: landlord impacts on rent, moratoria, termination options, forfeiture, surrender, guarantees, rent reviews and LTA 1954 issues (England and Wales)

What is a CVA? A company voluntary arrangement (CVA) is a form of insolvency that permits a company to enter a binding agreement with its creditors to compromise unsecured debts or otherwise agree how its affairs are handled. The directors continue to run the business, under the oversight of an insolvency practitioner. Retailers, particularly those with extensive property portfolios, frequently adopt so‑called ‘landlord CVAs’ to reset rental commitments and shut loss‑making stores. This note outlines how property law and landlord and tenant considerations may emerge under such a CVA. It highlights provisions commonly included in CVAs and explains how they tend to work in practice. Nevertheless, each CVA will vary according to the precise terms proposed. It is therefore vital to examine the CVA proposal carefully to assess its effect on creditors. This note does not provide detailed guidance on the mechanics of approving and implementing a CVA. For Practice Notes addressing the CVA procedure, see: Company voluntary arrangements—an introductory guide The CVA proposal and...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Practical guide to combining informal restructurings with UK schemes, Part 26A plans, pre-pack administrations, CVAs, and US Chapter 11

Formulating an informal restructuring plan An informal restructuring may blend out-of-court measures with formal mechanisms to bind objecting parties, such as: schemes of arrangement Part 26A restructuring plan (see Practice Note: Part 26A restructuring plans: history, rationale and scope) pre-pack administrations company voluntary arrangements (CVAs) US Chapter 11 proceedings Informal restructuring rationale Once a valuation of the company or group has been secured that identifies where the value breaks (see Practice Note: Where the value breaks and negotiating strength), it becomes apparent who genuinely has a seat at the negotiating table, and dissenters typically surface, often challenging the valuation itself. Where those dissenters sit near the value break, and the creditors who are in the money refuse to offer a small equity stake in the restructured entity or another incentive to win consent to an informal approach, parties often turn to one of the more formal routes...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Waterfall of payments: comparative priorities in liquidation, administration, administrative receivership, CVAs, Part 26A restructuring plans and bankruptcy, including moratorium and priority pre-moratorium debts

Liquidation Following enforcement of security by fixed charge creditors for their own benefit, the order of distributions in a winding up is: if liquidation commences within 12 weeks of a moratorium, any unpaid moratorium debts and ‘priority pre‑moratorium debts’ to which no payment holiday applied during the moratorium expenses properly incurred in the winding up (including the liquidator’s remuneration) ordinary preferential debts secondary preferential debts the prescribed part for unsecured creditors (where not disapplied) debts secured by floating charges unsecured debts statutory interest postponed debts (i.e. non‑provable liabilities) return of any surplus to members (subject to adjustment between members) For further details, see Practice Note: Waterfall of payments in liquidation...

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View the related Precedents about Company voluntary arrangement

PRECEDENTS
Chair’s Report Template: Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) Meeting and Decision Procedure (England and Wales) under Insolvency Act 1986 and Insolvency Rules 2016 – Resolutions, Voting, Modifications and Supervisors

Number of matter CVA [ insert matter number ] of 20 [ insert year ] Report of the consideration of the proposal Pursuant to sections 4(6) and 4(6A) of the Insolvency Act 1986 and rule 2.38 of the Insolvency Rules 2016, I certify that the company meeting in the above matter, properly convened for [ insert time and date ] at [ insert place of meeting ], was duly held. Creditors were duly invited to consider the proposal by way of a decision procedure, and I therefore report as follows: The directors of [ insert company name ] Limited put forward a Voluntary Arrangement under Part I of the Insolvency Act 1986 dated [ insert date ]. This was [ approved OR rejected ] by the company and [ approved OR rejected ] by the creditors, with the modifications annexed as Appendix 6. [ IF THE PROPOSAL WAS APPROVED THEN ADD THE RELEVANT PARTS OF (2) ] The following resolution was taken at the...

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PRECEDENTS
Umbrella Long-Term Incentive Plan Rules: Share Awards, Options, Co-Investment (Deferred Bonus) and Cash Awards (England and Wales)

PART ONE—GENERAL PROVISIONS 1 Definitions and interpretations This Rule sets out the glossary for the Plan and how those terms should be read. Defined expressions cover, among others: Awards and outcomes: Contingent Awards, Restricted Awards, Matched Awards, Options and Cash Awards, together with Date of Grant, Option Price, Exercise Price, Market Value, Dividend Equivalent and the concept of Vesting; People and entities: the Company (acting through the Board or a duly authorised committee, which may include the Remuneration Committee), Eligible Employees, Participants (and their personal representatives), the Group and its Subsidiaries, Associated Companies, the Grantor, the Nominee, the Trustee and Trust, and HMRC; Timeframes and dealing: Financial Year, Dealing Day, Closed Period, Grant Period, Holding Period, Relevant Period and the Plan Period; Shares and schemes: Shares, Employees’ Share Scheme and Company Share Scheme, Invested Shares and Invested Share Amount, and Matched Awards linked to such co‑investment; Legal and tax concepts: Control (as in ITA 2007, s995), ITEPA, Tax liabilities and any...

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PRECEDENTS
Directors’ Company Voluntary Arrangement proposal: drafting template and checklist covering court headings, creditor treatment, assets, distributions and supervisor powers (England and Wales)

Court Reference No: [ INSERT COURT REF. NUMBER ] [ IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS [OF ENGLAND AND WALES] [IN [ INSERT LOCATION ]] [INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)] OR [IN THE COUNTY COURT AT [ INSERT LOCATION ] ] [BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS LIST] OR [IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE [CHANCERY DIVISION ] ] IN THE MATTER OF [ INSERT COMPANY NAME ]IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986 Proposal for a Company Voluntary Arrangement This document, advanced by the Company’s directors, is drawn up pursuant to [ Part I Insolvency Act 1986 and in accordance with the provisions of Parts 1 and 2 of The Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 ]. To: [ insert addressee eg the Nominees ]Dated [ insert date ] 1 Interpretation 1.1 [ Insert definitions ]. 1.2 Any reference to a paragraph is a reference to a paragraph within this proposal. 1.3 Headings appear solely...

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