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Statement of initial significant control meaning

What does Statement of initial significant control mean?
In practice, this is the PSC information a new UK company must file on incorporation. Under the Companies Act 2006 PSC regime (Part 21A, ss 790A–790ZG), a statement of initial significant control tells Companies House whether, at incorporation, there is any registrable person (individual) or registrable relevant legal entity with significant control, and provides the required particulars of each, together with any other matters that would need to be entered in the company’s PSC register on incorporation (see ss 790C, 790K and 790M). Where an election has been made to keep the PSC register at Companies House (s 790X), the confirmed information is filed there. Since 26 June 2017, companies must update their own PSC register within 14 days of any change and file the change at Companies House within a further 14 days. PSC details must also be confirmed at least every 12 months via the confirmation statement (CS01). The term is a statutory concept used consistently across England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. It does not apply in Ireland, where companies maintain a beneficial ownership register and file details with the Central Register of Beneficial Ownership under Irish regulations; there is no “statement of initial significant control” at incorporation.
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View the related Practice Notes about Statement of initial significant control

PRACTICE NOTES
UK LLP PSC register: identifying PSCs and RLEs, significant influence, fund structures, investigation duties, and Companies House filings (including ECCTA 2023 reforms)

People with significant control (PSC) regime The architecture of the people with significant control (PSC) regime, which first commenced on 6 April 2016, is contained in Part 21A of the Companies Act 2006 (CA 2006). Its purpose is to tackle worries about the lack of transparency in corporate ownership, where historically the register captured only the legal holder of shares, not always the beneficial owner. By requiring a PSC register, more precise and up‑to‑date details are available about who ultimately owns and directs companies and other bodies, and this information is made public via the central register at Companies House and remains accessible to the public. It assists prospective investors in their decision‑making. It likewise aids law enforcement bodies with money laundering enquiries. LLPs formed under the Limited Liability Partnerships Act 2000 must keep a record of persons with significant control over the LLP under the Limited Liability Partnerships (Register of People with Significant Control) Regulations 2016, SI 2016/340 (the LLP Regulations), as amended by the Information about People...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK Company Incorporation under the Companies Act 2006: formation, naming, PSCs, officers, articles, share capital, filings, public/guarantee requirements and initial post-incorporation steps

This Practice Note looks at the principal considerations and steps when establishing a company limited by shares or by guarantee. What is a company? A company is a business vehicle that exists as a separate legal entity, distinct from its members. It is owned by its members and run by its directors. It is governed by the Companies Act 2006 (CA 2006). Companies are widely used; more than 5 million are on the UK public register maintained by Companies House. Under the CA 2006, the following company types are available: Public or private companies limited by shares — see Practice Notes: Private companies limited by shares and Public companies limited by shares Private companies limited by guarantee (primarily used by charities and other not-for-profit organisations — see Practice Note: Companies limited by guarantee) Unlimited companies (comparatively uncommon — see Practice Note: Unlimited companies) For details on other business vehicles, see Practice Note: Forms of business vehicle — fundamentals....

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PRACTICE NOTES
Procedures under CA 2006 and ECCTA 2023 for buying and tailoring UK shelf companies: transfers, appointments, filings, articles, share issues, trading certificate, accounting reference date, PSC and trading disclosures

A person wishing to set up a new company has the following options: Incorporate a new company in line with the Companies Act 2006 (CA 2006), configuring it on incorporation to satisfy its particular requirements (a tailor-made company); or Acquire a ready-made, ‘off-the-shelf’ company (ie a company already incorporated that has never traded, a ‘shelf company’) from a company formation agent and then adapt it to meet those requirements. The actions involved in buying and customising a shelf company are set out below. For information on forming a tailor-made company, refer to Practice Note: Incorporating a company...

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