Court liquidation is a formal process that begins when a creditor applies to the court to wind up a company due to unpaid debts. If the court determines that the company is insolvent, it will appoint a registered liquidator to take control of the business, realise assets and distribute proceeds to creditors.
At Equinox Restructuring & Insolvency, we act as independent court appointed liquidators to manage the process with professionalism, integrity and full legal compliance.
Court liquidation occurs when a creditor – like the ATO or a supplier – files a winding up application and obtains a court order to liquidate the company. It is usually preceded by a statutory demand that remains unpaid for 21 days.
The court will appoint a liquidator (such as Equinox Restructuring & Insolvency) to:
Take control of the company
Investigate its financial affairs
Recover and sell assets
Distribute funds to creditors
Report on any misconduct or breaches of duty
Statutory Demand: A creditor serves a statutory demand on the company
Application: If unpaid, the creditor files a winding up application with the court
Hearing: The court hears the matter and determines insolvency
Appointment: An official liquidator is appointed to manage the company’s affairs
Liquidation: The liquidator undertakes investigations, realisation and reporting
Once appointed, the liquidator has full control of the company and the directors’ powers are suspended.
Court liquidation is generally triggered by:
An unpaid statutory demand
A judgment debt
Failure to comply with ATO obligations
A creditor’s belief that the company is insolvent
Even if the process has already commenced, directors should still engage proactively to ensure compliance and reduce risk.

As the court appointed liquidator, Equinox Restructuring & Insolvency will:
We act independently and in accordance with the Corporations Act and court directions.

Directors and creditors will be impacted by court liquidation in different ways:

If your company is subject to a court liquidation:
Getting legal and insolvency advice early (even before the court hearing, if possible) can protect your position and reputation.


If your company is facing a statutory demand, winding up application or liquidation hearing, contact our team as early as possible.
We’ll help you:
Understand the process and your legal obligations
Respond to creditor action
Minimise risk of personal liability
Engage constructively with the liquidator
Yes, it can. Directors can propose a repayment plan or restructure before officially being in liquidation. If you hope to take this avenue, seek advice immediately.
If the company has assets, they will be realised and distributed based on priority rules once the business is in liquidation.
Generally yes, unless the company being in liquidation has seen them disqualified by ASIC. NOTE: restrictions apply around phoenix activity.
CVL is director initiated whereas court liquidation is creditor initiated and enforced through court order.