TL;DR: Late filing penalties escalate the longer you leave them. In the UK, late accounts cost up to £7,500. In Australia, you can face ASIC fines and strike-off. The Filing Deadlines tool tracks every deadline before penalties kick in.
Every founder intends to file on time. But compliance filing deadlines are numerous, complex, and easy to lose track of — especially in a growing company where the founder's attention is on the business rather than the administrative calendar. The result is late filings, which trigger penalties that compound the longer the filing remains outstanding.
Late filing penalties fall into several categories. The most immediate are automatic financial penalties — fixed or escalating fines that apply from the day after the deadline. These are calculated differently in each jurisdiction: some are fixed amounts, some escalate on a sliding scale based on how late the filing is, and some are calculated as a percentage of the company's tax liability.
Beyond financial penalties, persistent late filing can trigger regulatory action: removal of the company from good standing, restrictions on banking, inability to file further transactions, and ultimately strike-off from the register. A company struck off for non-compliance ceases to be a legal entity — with serious consequences for any ongoing business operations, outstanding contracts, and banking relationships.
The particularly frustrating aspect of late filing penalties is that they often arrive well after the founder has lost track of the deadline. A penalty notice for a confirmation statement that was due three months ago is not a useful warning — it's a consequence. The only useful warning is one that comes before the deadline, not after.
The MmowW Scrib🐮 Filing Deadlines tool is designed to surface filing deadlines before they become overdue — giving you the advance notice you need to prepare and file on time.
How the penalty prevention system works:
Priority-ranked calendar:
The tool ranks your upcoming filings by urgency and consequence — filings with severe penalty structures or imminent deadlines appear at the top of your compliance calendar, ensuring you address the highest-risk items first.
Use our free tool: Filing Deadlines
Try it free →A UK Ltd company's annual accounts were due on 31 December (9 months after its 31 March year end). The company filed them on 30 April the following year — 4 months late.
The penalty: UK annual accounts have a sliding scale penalty. Up to 1 month late: £150. 1-3 months late: £375. 3-6 months late: £750. More than 6 months: £1,500. This company's 4-month late filing triggers a £750 penalty.
If the company had been late before, the penalty doubles: £1,500 for 3-6 months late on a repeat offence. The Filing Deadlines tool, had it been in use, would have flagged the deadline in September — 3 months before the due date — giving ample time to prepare and file.
An Australian Pty Ltd receives its ASIC annual review notice and forgets to pay the AUD $310 fee within the 28-day payment window. ASIC charges a late fee of AUD $87 for up to 1 month late, then AUD $363 for more than 1 month late — making the total $310 + $363 = $673 for a filing that was £310 just a month ago.
If payment is still not received, ASIC initiates deregistration proceedings. The Filing Deadlines tool flags the 28-day payment window from the annual review date, with an action reminder 14 days before payment is due.
A Canadian federal corporation misses its annual return due date. Corporations Canada charges a penalty for late annual returns and can, for persistent non-filers, begin administrative dissolution proceedings — the Canadian equivalent of being struck off.
Administrative dissolution is particularly disruptive for an active business: the company's name may become available for registration by a third party, its bank accounts may be affected, and contracts may be called into question. The cost of restoring a dissolved corporation is significantly higher than the cost of filing on time.
| Country | Filing Type | On Time | Up to 1 Month Late | 1-6 Months Late | 6+ Months Late | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK (accounts) | Annual Accounts | No penalty | £150 | £375-750 | £1,500-7,500 | gov.uk/annual-accounts-penalty |
| UK (confirmation) | Confirmation Statement | £34 | Prosecution risk | Prosecution + strike-off | Strike-off | companies.gov.uk |
| Australia | ASIC Annual Review | AUD $310 | AUD $87 late fee | AUD $363 late fee | Deregistration | asic.gov.au/penalties |
| New Zealand | Annual Return | NZD $45 | Late fees apply | Company warnings | Removal from register | companies.govt.nz |
| Canada | Annual Return | CAD $60 | Late fees apply | Administrative dissolution | Administrative dissolution | canada.ca |
| France | Annual Accounts | Varies | Court-imposed penalties | Increasing penalties | Potential liquidation | inpi.fr |
| USA | Annual Report | Varies by state | Loss of good standing | Dissolution risk | Dissolution | State SOS |
Filing Deadlines is completely free — no signup required. Track all your compliance deadlines before penalties become relevant.
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MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney or accountant for advice specific to your situation.
Q: Can I appeal a late filing penalty?
A: In most jurisdictions, you can appeal a penalty if there are exceptional circumstances — for example, if the late filing resulted from a natural disaster, sudden serious illness of the company's sole director, or other circumstances genuinely outside your control. Routine administrative errors ("I forgot" or "I was busy") are not generally accepted as grounds for appeal. The appeals process and criteria vary by country — if you believe you have grounds for appeal, consult a qualified attorney or contact the relevant agency promptly. Appeals are typically time-limited.
Q: Can a director be personally fined for late company filings?
A: Yes, in some jurisdictions. In the UK, company directors can be prosecuted personally for failure to file accounts and confirmation statements — the offence is committed by the company and by its officers (directors). In Australia, ASIC can take action against directors of companies that fail to meet their filing obligations. This is one reason why compliance filing is a director responsibility, not just an administrative task.
Q: If my company has been struck off, can I restore it?
A: In most jurisdictions, yes — but restoration is more complex and expensive than timely compliance would have been. In the UK, restoration can be through administrative restoration (if struck off within the last 6 years and the company was in good standing when struck off) or through court order. Restoration fees apply, outstanding filings must be brought up to date, and penalties for the missed filings may still apply. Prevention through timely filing is always the better option.
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