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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Bankruptcy Alternatives for Businesses: A Guide

TS行政書士
Supervisionado por Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Consultor Administrativo Licenciado, JapãoTodo o conteúdo da MmowW é supervisionado por um especialista em conformidade regulatória licenciado nacionalmente.
Explore bankruptcy alternatives for struggling businesses across 7 countries. MmowW Scrib🐮 supports your documentation through every option. When a business is in financial difficulty, many owners assume formal bankruptcy or liquidation is inevitable. In reality, there are numerous alternatives that may preserve the business, protect jobs, and result in better outcomes for all stakeholders — including creditors.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Formal bankruptcy or insolvency is often a last resort. There are several alternatives — from debt negotiation to formal restructuring processes — that can save a business and protect creditors better than outright failure.

What You Need to Know

When a business is in financial difficulty, many owners assume formal bankruptcy or liquidation is inevitable. In reality, there are numerous alternatives that may preserve the business, protect jobs, and result in better outcomes for all stakeholders — including creditors.

The key is to act early. The more financial runway a business has when it begins exploring alternatives, the more options are available. A business that engages professional advisors at the first signs of stress has far more choices than one that waits until it has exhausted cash and can no longer pay suppliers.

This guide outlines the main alternatives to formal bankruptcy across seven countries, with an emphasis on the practical steps businesses can take.

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

Informal Debt Negotiation (Workout)

The simplest alternative to formal proceedings is a direct negotiation with creditors — often called a "workout" or "standstill agreement." This involves:

The advantage of an informal workout is speed and cost — no court involvement, no formal proceedings, and no public disclosure. The disadvantage is that all creditors must agree voluntarily. A single creditor who refuses can derail the process and potentially force formal proceedings.

Refinancing and New Capital

In some cases, financial distress can be resolved by bringing in new money:

Formal Restructuring Processes (Pre-Insolvency)

Several countries have developed formal but non-bankruptcy processes designed to give businesses breathing space while they restructure:

UK — Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA): A binding agreement between the company and its unsecured creditors, approved by 75% (by value) of voting creditors. Once approved, all unsecured creditors are bound, even those who voted against. Allows the business to continue trading while paying a proportion of its debts over time.

UK — Restructuring Plan (Companies Act 2006, Part 26A): A newer mechanism (introduced 2020) that allows cross-class cramdown — binding dissenting creditor classes as long as the plan is fair. Used for larger, more complex restructurings.

France — Procédure de Sauvegarde: A pre-insolvency protection available to companies that can demonstrate they face imminent difficulties but are not yet unable to pay debts. Provides court protection and a structured period to prepare a restructuring plan.

Australia — Safe Harbour: Protects directors from personal liability for insolvent trading while they pursue a course of action reasonably likely to produce a better outcome. Not a formal process, but a legal protection that enables directors to take legitimate restructuring steps.

USA — Chapter 11 (Bankruptcy Code): While technically a bankruptcy process, Chapter 11 is primarily a reorganisation tool rather than a liquidation. The company continues to operate as a "debtor in possession" while reorganising under court supervision.

Assignment for Benefit of Creditors (USA)

An alternative to Chapter 7 liquidation used in some US states. The business transfers its assets to an assignee who liquidates them and distributes proceeds to creditors according to a priority schedule. It is generally faster and cheaper than court-supervised bankruptcy, though creditors have fewer protections.

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Key Pre-Insolvency Tool Key Restructuring Tool Authority
🇬🇧 UK CVA / Restructuring Plan Administration Insolvency Service
🇫🇷 France Sauvegarde / Conciliation Redressement judiciaire Tribunal de Commerce
🇸🇪 Sweden Rekonstruktion (Lag 2022:964) Ackord District Courts
🇦🇺 Australia Safe Harbour / VA DOCA (Deed of Company Arrangement) ASIC / ARITA
🇳🇿 New Zealand Voluntary Administration Creditor Compromise Companies Act 1993
🇨🇦 Canada Notice of Intention (BIA) / CCAA Proposal OSB / Courts
🇺🇸 USA Out-of-court workout / ABC Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Courts

Key government resources:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Waiting until cash has run out. Every alternative to bankruptcy requires some runway — time, money, or both. Businesses that engage advisors early have the most options. A director who waits until the company cannot pay this month's wages has already lost most alternatives.
  2. Not treating all creditors consistently. Paying some creditors preferentially in the period before formal proceedings can be unwound by a liquidator. In informal workouts, proposing different terms to different creditors of the same class can undermine credibility.
  3. Underestimating the time required for formal processes. CVAs, Chapter 11 cases, and similar processes take months to complete. Cash flow must be managed carefully throughout.
  4. Not getting professional advice before entering a formal process. Formal restructuring processes have specific eligibility requirements, procedural rules, and director conduct obligations. Entering them without professional guidance increases the risk of failure or personal liability.
  5. Confusing personal bankruptcy with company insolvency. If you have personally guaranteed company debts, the company's financial failure may trigger your personal liability. These are separate legal situations requiring separate advice. Consult a qualified attorney about both.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

MmowW Scrib🐮 can help prepare the corporate documentation required during restructuring — updated financial records, director statements, and formal creditor communication templates.

Helpful tools:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. Financial distress situations are time-sensitive and complex — seek advice from a qualified attorney or licensed insolvency practitioner immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is a CVA the same as bankruptcy?

A: No. A CVA (Company Voluntary Arrangement) is an alternative to formal insolvency proceedings. The company continues to trade, directors remain in control, and the company pays a proportion of its unsecured debts over an agreed period. Bankruptcy (in the UK context) refers specifically to personal insolvency of individuals, not companies. However, the CVA does appear on public records and can affect the company's credit rating.

Q: How long does a CVA last?

A: Most CVAs in the UK run for 3–5 years, during which the company makes regular contributions to the CVA supervisor who distributes funds to creditors. If the company meets its CVA obligations, remaining debts are written off at the end.

Q: What happens to employees if a company enters administration?

A: When a company enters administration, the administrator assesses whether the business can be rescued or if liquidation is the best outcome. Employees' claims for unpaid wages, notice pay, and redundancy receive preferential treatment in the distribution of assets. In many countries, government schemes (such as the UK's Redundancy Payments Service) pay employees' statutory entitlements if the company cannot.

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