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Liquidation in Malaysia – The Complete 2025 Guide for Company Owners & Directors

1. What Is Liquidation (Winding-Up)?

Liquidation is the statutory process of collecting and realising a company’s assets, paying creditors, and dissolving the entity under the Companies Act 2016. Once liquidation is complete, the company ceases to exist and its name is removed from SSM’s register.

When should you liquidate (rather than strike-off)?

  • The company still has assets, liabilities, or pending disputes.
  • You need a court-supervised or creditor-driven procedure for transparency.
  • Group restructuring—return surplus capital to shareholders tax-efficiently.


2. Types of Liquidation in Malaysia

TypeSolvency testWho starts it?Key reference
Members’ Voluntary Liquidation (MVL)Solvent – directors swear the company can pay debts within 12 monthsMembers (shareholders)s. 439–455 CA 2016
Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation (CVL)Insolvent or no solvency declarationDirectors & creditors vote on liquidators. 456–460 CA 2016
Compulsory (Court) Winding-UpUsually insolvent, or other statutory groundsCreditor, contributory or Registrar files petitions. 465–469 CA 2016

MVL converts to CVL if the liquidator later finds the company cannot pay debts in full.


3. Members’ Voluntary Liquidation – Step-by-Step

  1. Board meeting & Declaration of Solvency
    Majority directors declare the company will pay all debts within 12 months (Form Section 443) and lodge it with SSM within 5 weeks before the members’ meeting.
  2. Members’ Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM)
    Pass a special resolution to wind up and appoint a licensed liquidator (must be held within those 5 weeks). Lodge the resolution with SSM within 7 days.
  3. Notice & Gazette
    Publish notice of winding-up in the Gazette and one newspapers within 14 days.
  4. Liquidator takes control
    Realises assets, settles creditors, files six-monthly progress reports with SSM (s. 456).
  5. Final Meeting & Dissolution
    When affairs are fully wound up, the liquidator calls a final meeting, lodges Form Section 459 (Return); the company is dissolved 3 months after the return is filed.

Typical timeline: 6–12 months for small, simple companies.


4. Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation – Step-by-Step

StageWhat happensKey timing
Directors’ Resolution – acknowledge insolvency, call creditors’ meeting
Creditors’ Meeting – directors table Statement of Affairs; creditors vote on liquidation & liquidatorNotice 7 days before meeting
Committee of Inspection (optional) elected to supervise liquidatorSame day
Liquidator’s Realisation & DistributionContinuous
Final Creditors’ Meeting & filing of liquidator’s account (s. 461)End of process

Timeline: 12–24 months depending on asset realisation and disputes.


5. Compulsory (Court) Winding-Up

  1. Statutory Demand (s. 466) – creditor serves 21-day demand > RM50,000; failure to pay presumes inability to pay debts.
  2. Winding-Up Petition – filed in High Court on one of 12 grounds (most common: insolvency) (s. 465).
  3. Court Hearing & Order – if granted, Official Receiver or a private liquidator is appointed.
  4. Liquidator realises assets; claims proved in court; distributions made.

Timeline: often 18-30 months (longer if litigation arises).


6. Key Documents & Costs Snapshot

DocumentWho signs / issuesMVLCVLCourt
Declaration of Solvency (s. 443)≥ 2 directors
Special Resolution to Wind-UpMembers
Statement of AffairsDirectors✔ (on petition)
Gazette / Newspaper NoticesLiquidator
Court Petition & Affidavits
Cost ElementMVL (RM)CVL (RM)Court (RM)
SSM filing fees≈ 500≈ 500N/A
Gazette & ads300–600400–800600–1,200
Liquidator’s feeFrom 8,000 (simple)% of assetsCourt-approved scale
Court deposit & legal fees15,000 +

(Figures are 2025 market averages; actual fees vary with case complexity.)


7. Powers & Duties of the Liquidator

The liquidator collects assets, pays debts, adjudicates claims, and distributes any surplus. They can compromise debts, carry on limited business, or litigate with court/committee approval (s. 236 CA 1965 & Part X CA 2016).

Failure to cooperate with the liquidator—e.g., not delivering books—may attract fines or imprisonment.


8. After Dissolution: Liability & Restoration

  • Officers remain liable for fraud or improper conduct discovered later.
  • A dissolved company can be restored within 7 years by court order if assets or claims surface (s. 555).


9. Liquidation vs Strike-Off at a Glance

Strike-OffLiquidation
Debts allowed?NoYes (CVL / Court)
Assets to distribute?NoYes
Regulator scrutinyLowHigh
CostLow (≈ RM100 + fee)Higher
Timeline6–9 months6–30 months


10. How Our Firm Can Help

As licensed company secretaries and approved liquidators, we provide:

  • Free solvency assessment and advice on MVL vs CVL vs Court route
  • End-to-end liquidation – board papers, statutory ads, filings, creditor liaison
  • Asset realisation & tax clearance
  • Transparent fee quotes, progress dashboards, and dedicated support.

Thinking of winding up? Book a confidential consultation and let our experts close the chapter smoothly.


Last Updated: 28-Apr-2025

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Malaysian Business Reporting System 2.0 ( MBRS 2.0 ) – 2025 Compliance Guide