Winding Up of a Company in India – Strike-Off under Section 248, Voluntary Liquidation under IBC, NCLT Compulsory Winding Up, Form STK-2 / 3 Filing & Post-Closure Tax Compliance Advisory

Winding up of a company in India is the formal legal process by which a company's life as a corporate entity is brought to an end — its assets are liquidated, creditors paid, surplus distributed to members, and the company finally struck off the Register of Companies maintained by the Registrar of Companies (ROC). The Indian framework offers three distinct routes depending on the company's status and intent: (a) Strike-Off under Section 248 of the Companies Act 2013 read with the Companies (Removal of Names of Companies from the Register of Companies) Rules 2016 — for inactive / dormant companies with no assets / liabilities; (b) Voluntary Liquidation under Section 59 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (IBC) read with the IBBI Voluntary Liquidation Regulations 2017 — for solvent companies wishing to exit cleanly with surplus distribution; and (c) Compulsory Winding Up under Section 271 of the Companies Act before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) — typically on grounds such as inability to pay debts, fraud, or just-and-equitable considerations.

Choosing the right route matters enormously — strike-off is fast and inexpensive but only works for clean, liability-free companies; IBC voluntary liquidation provides a court-supervised, creditor-protective closure for active solvent companies with surplus; NCLT winding up is reserved for contested or insolvent matters. Mistakes — such as filing strike-off where IBC is the right route, ignoring pending litigations, missing tax dues, or incomplete EPF / ESI / GST closure — lead to STK-7 rejection, restoration applications under Section 252, director DIN deactivation, and even disqualification under Section 164(2). Our Winding Up consultancy services deliver end-to-end company closure across all three routes — diagnostic, strategy memo, ROC and NCLT filings, IBBI-registered Insolvency Professional liaison, statutory clearances (GST, IT, EPF, ESI, ESIC, professional tax, customs), bank-account closure, and post-closure director defence.

Sec 248
Strike-Off Route
Sec 59 IBC
Voluntary Liquidation
Sec 271
NCLT Compulsory Winding Up
Form STK-2
Strike-Off Application
Frameworks & Provisions We Work Under
Companies Act 2013
Sec 248 – Strike-Off
Sec 250 – Effects
Sec 252 – Restoration
Sec 271 – Winding Up
Sec 304 – Voluntary
IBC 2016 – Sec 59
IBBI Voluntary Reg 2017
Form STK-2 / 3 / 5 / 7
CAA / IBC Rules
Sec 164(2) – Disqualification
Sec 167 – Vacation
PMLA / FEMA Closure
GST / IT / EPF / ESI Clearance

Winding Up Use Cases We Handle

Sec 248 Strike-Off

Strike-Off (Inactive Company)

Inactive / dormant company with no assets, no liabilities, no operations for 2+ years — Form STK-2 application to the ROC, public notice in STK-5/STK-6, and removal from register.

  • Form STK-2 application
  • STK-3 affidavit by directors
  • STK-4 indemnity bond
  • STK-8 statement of accounts
  • Public notice / objection
  • STK-7 closure
IBC Sec 59

Voluntary Liquidation (Solvent)

Solvent company wishing clean exit with surplus distribution — Sec 59 IBC voluntary liquidation, IBBI-registered Insolvency Professional, and NCLT order for dissolution.

  • Sec 59 IBC route
  • Solvency declaration
  • IP appointment
  • Public announcement
  • Asset realisation & distribution
  • NCLT dissolution order
NCLT Sec 271

Compulsory Winding Up

Companies wound up by NCLT on petition by company / creditors / contributories / Registrar / Central Government — grounds include just-and-equitable, fraud, default in filings.

  • Sec 271 grounds analysis
  • Petition before NCLT
  • Provisional liquidator
  • Official Liquidator role
  • Asset realisation
  • Final dissolution
LLP Closure

LLP Strike-Off & Winding Up

Limited Liability Partnerships — Form 24 strike-off for inactive LLPs, voluntary winding up under LLP Act, and NCLT-supervised winding up where applicable.

  • LLP Form 24 strike-off
  • 2-year inactivity test
  • Partner consents
  • Closure of GST / TDS
  • NCLT winding up
  • Final dissolution
Restoration

Restoration under Sec 252

Restoration of struck-off / wound-up company — Sec 252(1) appeal by aggrieved person and Sec 252(3) NCLT application by company / creditor / member within prescribed timelines.

  • Sec 252(1) appeal
  • Sec 252(3) NCLT application
  • 3-year window (Sec 252(3))
  • Compounding of defaults
  • ROC re-activation
  • DIN restoration
Sec 8 Closure

Section 8 Company / Foundation

Closure of Section 8 charitable companies — surrender of Sec 8 licence, Charity Commissioner / state PT Act compliance, FCRA closure, and Sec 12AB / 80G surrender.

  • Sec 8 licence surrender
  • Charity Commissioner NOC
  • FCRA closure
  • Sec 12AB / 80G surrender
  • Asset transfer to similar Sec 8
  • ROC strike-off

Key Winding Up Concepts You Must Know

Sec 248(1)

ROC Suo-Motu Strike-Off

Registrar can strike off a company suo motu where it has not commenced business within 1 year of incorporation, or has not been carrying on business for 2 immediately preceding FYs and has not applied for dormant status under Sec 455.

Suo Motu Inactive 2 Yrs
Sec 248(2)

Voluntary Strike-Off

Company can apply to ROC for strike-off under Sec 248(2) by way of Form STK-2 — after extinguishing all liabilities, passing a special resolution, and submitting required affidavits and indemnity bonds.

Form STK-2 Special Resolution
Sec 250

Effects of Strike-Off

Once struck off, the company ceases to operate, but the liability of every director / officer / member continues — creditor claims can still be pursued through the restoration route.

Cease Operating Liability Survives
Sec 59 IBC

Voluntary Liquidation Triggers

Available only to a solvent corporate person — requires majority of directors / partners to declare that the company is solvent and there is no intention to defraud creditors.

Solvency No Fraud
IBBI Reg 2017

Insolvency Professional Role

An IBBI-registered Insolvency Professional (IP) takes over as Liquidator — public announcement, claim verification, asset realisation, distribution, and final report to NCLT.

IBBI-Registered Liquidator
Sec 271

NCLT Winding Up Grounds

Grounds: company resolves to wind up by special resolution, acted against state / public interest, conducted affairs fraudulently, defaulted in filing financials / ARs for 5 years, or just-and-equitable.

Just & Equitable Default 5 Yrs
Sec 252

Restoration Routes

Sec 252(1) — appeal by aggrieved person within 3 years of ROC strike-off order. Sec 252(3) — application by company / creditor / member within 20 years where strike-off was incorrect.

3-Yr Appeal 20-Yr Window
Sec 164(2)

Director Disqualification Risk

Directors of companies that fail to file financials or ARs for 3 consecutive years face disqualification under Sec 164(2) — DIN deactivation across all companies and 5-year bar on new directorships.

3-Year Default 5-Year Bar

Our Winding Up & Closure Services

01

Closure Diagnostic & Route Selection

Diagnostic of company status, assets, liabilities, litigations, and tax dues — recommendation between Sec 248 strike-off, IBC Sec 59 voluntary liquidation, or NCLT Sec 271 winding up.

02

Form STK-2 Strike-Off Filing

End-to-end Form STK-2 filing — special resolution, STK-3 affidavits, STK-4 indemnity bond, STK-8 statement of accounts (≤30 days old), board resolution, and ROC follow-up.

03

IBC Voluntary Liquidation

Sec 59 IBC voluntary liquidation — solvency declaration, IBBI-registered IP appointment, public announcement, claim handling, surplus distribution, and NCLT dissolution order.

04

NCLT Sec 271 Winding Up

Petition before NCLT under Sec 271 — drafting, hearings, provisional liquidator coordination, asset realisation, creditor distribution, and final dissolution order.

05

Statutory Clearances Pack

Pre-closure clearances — GST cancellation, IT no-dues / scrutiny clearance, EPF / ESI closure, professional tax, FEMA / FCRA wind-up, customs / IEC, RBI compliances.

06

Asset Realisation & Distribution

Asset valuation, sale / transfer / surrender, creditor settlement, surplus distribution to members in cash / kind, and tax-efficient structuring of liquidation proceeds.

07

Bank Account & Director Exit

Bank account closure, surplus repatriation, director / KMP resignation (DIR-12), DIN deactivation handling, and final indemnities.

08

LLP Strike-Off & Winding Up

LLP Form 24 strike-off, partner consents, asset settlement, statutory clearances, and where applicable, NCLT-supervised winding up under the LLP Act 2008.

09

Restoration under Sec 252

Restoration of struck-off companies — Sec 252(1) appeal or Sec 252(3) NCLT application, compounding of default filings, and ROC re-activation.

10

Sec 8 / Trust / Society Closure

Closure of Section 8 companies, trusts, and societies — Sec 8 licence surrender, Charity Commissioner NOC, FCRA closure, Sec 12AB / 80G surrender, and asset transfer.

11

Director Sec 164(2) Defence

Director disqualification defence under Sec 164(2) — compounding strategy, DIN restoration, removal of disqualification, and CODS-style schemes where re-introduced.

12

Post-Closure Tax & Compliance

Final ITR filing, GST final return, EPF / ESI closure return, capital-gains computation on liquidation, dividend tax on liquidation distribution, and 10-year record retention.

When You Need Winding Up Support

Inactive Shell / Dormant Company

Company with no business / operations for 2+ years, no assets / liabilities — Sec 248(2) Form STK-2 strike-off is the fastest, cheapest route.

Solvent Exit with Surplus

Solvent company with assets / surplus to distribute — Sec 59 IBC voluntary liquidation provides court-supervised, creditor-protective closure with member distribution.

Group Restructuring / Subsidiary Cleanup

Group consolidation / IPO preparation — strike-off / liquidation of multiple subsidiary / dormant entities for clean cap-table and reduced compliance burden.

Founder Exit / Business Stoppage

Startup / family business decision to stop operations — clean closure preferred over leaving company dormant; protects directors from Sec 164(2) and ROC penalties.

ROC Suo-Motu Strike-Off Threat

ROC notice under Sec 248(1) for suo-motu strike-off due to non-filing — strategic response, voluntary closure pivot, or restoration application planning.

Director Disqualification Risk

Directors facing Sec 164(2) disqualification due to 3-year default — strategic closure of defaulting companies, compounding, and DIN protection.

Restoration Needed

Struck-off / wound-up company with surviving assets, contracts, or claims — Sec 252 restoration to revive the entity within statutory window.

Sec 8 / NGO Closure

Section 8 company / charitable trust deciding to close — Sec 8 licence surrender, Charity Commissioner / FCRA / Sec 12AB / 80G coordinated closure.

Documents Needed for Winding Up

Corporate & Governance

  • MOA & AOA
  • Certificate of Incorporation
  • Board / shareholder resolutions
  • Director / KMP KYC & DIN
  • Director DIR-2 / DIR-12
  • Special resolution (strike-off)
  • Solvency declaration (IBC)

Financial & Statutory

  • Audited financials (3 yrs)
  • Statement of accounts (≤30 days)
  • ITR / Form 26AS
  • GST / TDS returns & clearance
  • EPF / ESI / PT clearance
  • Bank statements & balances
  • List of assets / liabilities

Affidavits & Indemnities

  • STK-3 director affidavits
  • STK-4 indemnity bond
  • Solvency affidavit (IBC)
  • No-litigation affidavit
  • No-pending-creditor affidavit
  • NOC from regulators
  • Identity proofs

Our Winding Up Engagement Process

1

Diagnostic & Strategy

Company status review, asset / liability analysis, litigation check, route recommendation between Sec 248, IBC Sec 59, and NCLT Sec 271.

2

Pre-Closure Cleanup

Statutory clearances (GST, IT, EPF, ESI, FEMA, FCRA), creditor settlement, asset realisation, bank-account preparation, and document pack assembly.

3

Resolution & Filing

Special resolution / solvency declaration, Form STK-2 / IBC public announcement / NCLT petition, IBBI-IP appointment where applicable, and document upload.

4

Authority Follow-Up

ROC / NCLT objections handling, public-notice response, claim verification, hearing representation, and follow-through till strike-off / dissolution order.

5

Post-Closure Compliance

Final ITR / GST returns, asset transfer / surplus distribution, bank closure, director resignation, record retention, and post-closure dispute support.

Why Choose Us for Winding Up Advisory

All 3 closure routes
IBBI-IP network for Sec 59
Strike-off specialists
Sec 252 restoration expertise
Statutory clearances pack
Sec 164(2) defence
Sec 8 / Trust / Society closure
Group / IPO cleanup

FAQs on Winding Up of a Company

What are the routes available to wind up / close a company in India?
Three principal routes: (a) Strike-Off under Section 248 of the Companies Act 2013 — fast, ROC-driven removal from the register for inactive companies (Form STK-2 application); (b) Voluntary Liquidation under Section 59 of the IBC 2016 — a court-supervised closure for solvent companies via an IBBI-registered Insolvency Professional, ending in an NCLT dissolution order; and (c) Compulsory Winding Up under Section 271 of the Companies Act before NCLT — typically used in contested / insolvent matters or where there is fraud, default, or just-and-equitable grounds. The right route depends on solvency, presence of assets / liabilities, litigation, and timeline.
Who can apply for strike-off under Section 248?
Strike-off can happen in two ways: (i) Suo-Motu by ROC under Sec 248(1) — where the company has not commenced business within 1 year of incorporation, or has not been carrying on business for the 2 immediately preceding FYs and has not applied for dormant status under Sec 455; (ii) Voluntary by company under Sec 248(2) — through Form STK-2, after passing a special resolution, extinguishing all liabilities, and submitting the prescribed affidavits (Form STK-3) and indemnity bond (Form STK-4). The voluntary route is the most common — it gives the company control over the timing, documentation, and treatment of remaining assets and liabilities.
What is voluntary liquidation under the IBC?
Section 59 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016, read with the IBBI (Voluntary Liquidation Process) Regulations 2017, allows a solvent corporate person (company / LLP) to voluntarily liquidate. The process requires: (a) a solvency declaration by majority of directors / partners that the company can pay all its debts and is not being liquidated to defraud anyone; (b) special resolution by members; (c) appointment of an IBBI-registered Insolvency Professional as the Liquidator; (d) public announcement, claim verification, asset realisation, and creditor / member distribution; (e) submission of final report and NCLT order of dissolution. Time-bound (target 270 days as per regulations) and creditor-protective.
When is NCLT compulsory winding up under Section 271 used?
Section 271 of the Companies Act 2013 lists grounds on which a company can be wound up by NCLT: (a) a special resolution by the company itself for winding up by NCLT; (b) where the company has acted against the sovereignty / integrity of India / state security / public order; (c) on application by ROC or others on grounds of fraud, misconduct, or unlawful affairs; (d) default in filing financial statements / annual returns for the immediately preceding 5 consecutive financial years; (e) where the Tribunal is of the opinion that it is just and equitable to wind up. Typical use cases include shareholder deadlocks, oppression / mismanagement (parallel to Sec 241–242), fraud / siphoning, and government / regulator-driven action.
How long does company strike-off take?
Indicative timelines: Sec 248(2) voluntary strike-off via Form STK-2 — typically 4 to 9 months from filing to publication of STK-7 final order, subject to ROC bandwidth, public-notice period, and absence of objections. IBC voluntary liquidation under Sec 59 — regulations target 270 days (around 9 months), but can extend depending on asset realisation and claim handling. NCLT compulsory winding up under Sec 271 — multi-year process given hearings, asset realisation, and creditor litigation, often 2–4 years or longer. Pre-closure clearances (GST, IT, EPF, ESI, FEMA) typically add 1–3 months upfront across routes.
Can a struck-off company be restored?
Yes — under Section 252 of the Companies Act 2013. Sec 252(1) permits any aggrieved person to file an appeal before NCLT against the ROC strike-off order within 3 years from the date of the order. Sec 252(3) additionally allows the company itself, its members, creditors, or workmen to apply for restoration to NCLT within 20 years from the date of strike-off, where it is shown that the strike-off was wrongful (e.g., the company was actually doing business or had ongoing assets / liabilities). NCLT, on being satisfied, orders restoration; the company has to file all pending returns, pay penalties, and resume regular compliance.
Do directors face liability after the company is wound up?
Yes — director / officer / member liability is not extinguished by strike-off or winding up. Under Section 250 of the Companies Act, the liability of every director / officer / member continues even after strike-off, and creditors retain remedies through the restoration route. Additional risks include: (a) Sec 164(2) disqualification for directors of non-filing companies, with 5-year DIN deactivation across all companies; (b) personal liability for tax dues, GST dues, EPF / ESI dues, and statutory penalties; (c) liability under specific laws (PMLA, FEMA, customs) for acts done while in office. A clean, properly-documented closure is critical to defend such residual liability.

Clean Closure. Liabilities Settled. Director Risk Defended.

Partner with our winding-up specialists for end-to-end company closure — Sec 248 strike-off, IBC Sec 59 voluntary liquidation, NCLT Sec 271 winding up, statutory clearances, Sec 252 restoration, and director Sec 164(2) defence for FY 2026–27.

Talk to a Winding Up Expert