Company directors and secretaries are responsible for delivering information to the Registrar. There are over 200 forms that companies could file. The following information deals only with the most common forms and documents that companies will use.
All limited companies, whether trading or not, must keep accounting records and file accounts for each accounting period with the Registrar.
Unless a company is claiming exemption as a medium-sized, small, audit-exempt or dormant company, the accounts will include:
The booklet, Accounts and Accounting Reference Dates, provides more information on preparing and filing accounts and about exemptions from filing.
Accounts must be produced to a standard that we can scan to reproduce electronically - see Quality of documents.
Directors are personally responsible for ensuring that accounts are prepared and delivered to Companies House. Failure to do so may result in a criminal conviction and record for the director(s) and will result in financial penalties for the company.
An annual return is a snapshot of general information about a company giving details of its directors and secretary, registered office address, shareholders and share capital.
Companies House will send a pre-printed 'shuttle' annual return form to the company's registered office each year. It details the information already held on our database.
The details should be:
If you file the annual return late or not at all, the company and its director(s) and secretary can be prosecuted.
Please note that annual returns are quite separate from annual accounts. For more information about how to complete an annual return, refer to Companies House' Annual Return booklet.
Every company has an accounting reference date, which is the date to which the company's accounts are prepared each year. This date can be changed using Form 225. For more information, see our Accounts and Accounting Reference Dates booklet.
It is vital that you keep us informed of the location of your registered office. All formal communications are sent there.
Every company must have a registered office: it is the 'home' of the company to which all official documents, notices and court papers have to be sent by law. The address must be a physical location, not just a post office box. This is because people have the right to visit your office to inspect certain registers and documents, and to deliver documents by hand.
You can change your registered office address by sending a completed Form 287 to the Registrar. The change becomes legally effective only when we have registered the form.
There are three types of Form 288.
All changes to directors' and secretary's details must be sent to the Registrar within 14 days of the change.
This form should be sent to Companies House within one month of the shares being allotted.
The booklet, Share Capital and Prospectuses gives more information about this.
Copies of any special or extraordinary resolutions and certain types of ordinary resolutions, need to be sent to Companies House within 15 days of them being passed by the company - the booklet, Resolutions, gives more information about this.
There is no special form to complete but the document must be produced to a standard that we can scan and reproduce electronically - see Quality of Documents.
Details of any mortgage or charge created by the company must be sent to Companies House within 21 days. See the booklets, Company Charges and Mortgages or Company Charges (Scotland).
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