Article summary

For a standard solvent BVI company with no assets and no liabilities, the essential documents are the company’s constitutional and core corporate records, together with identification and address evidence for client-verification procedures.

Key points

  • Provide the certificate of incorporation, memorandum and articles, and current registers.
  • Supply identification and address evidence for relevant owners and controllers.
  • Confirm that no assets, liabilities or unresolved obligations remain.

This checklist is deliberately focused on a straightforward no-asset, no-liability voluntary liquidation. It is intended to help directors and shareholders prepare the initial information needed to obtain a quote and begin onboarding.

If the company has an asset, liability, bank balance, unresolved contract, tax exposure or other outstanding matter, please tell us at the outset because additional information may be required.

Essential documents for a straightforward BVI voluntary liquidation

1. Constitutional and core company documents

  • Certificate of incorporation.
  • Any certificates recording a change of company name.
  • Current memorandum and articles of association.
  • Current register of directors.
  • Current register of members.
  • A recent certificate of incumbency or company search, if readily available.

The registered agent will often hold these records. If a document is missing, let us know rather than delaying the initial enquiry.

2. Identification for client-verification procedures

We will confirm the precise requirements during onboarding. They will generally include:

  • A valid passport or other acceptable photographic identification.
  • Recent evidence of residential address.
  • Identification and address evidence for the individuals who ultimately own or control the company and the person instructing us.
  • Where a shareholder is a company, trust or other entity, documents showing its ownership and control structure.

We will also confirm whether copies must be certified and which certifiers are acceptable before you arrange certification.

3. Confirmation that the company has no assets or liabilities

For the standard fixed-fee case, we will ask the directors to confirm that the company is solvent and has no remaining assets or liabilities. This includes no residual bank balance, receivables, investments, property, loans, creditors, guarantees, employees, ongoing contracts or unresolved tax obligations.

This confirmation helps establish whether the company fits the straightforward no-asset, no-liability process. Formal liquidation documents and resolutions are prepared separately as part of the engagement.

What is not normally needed at the initial stage?

For the standard case described above, you do not normally need to assemble extensive accounting files, asset schedules, valuations, creditor schedules or historic bank statements before making an enquiry. We will request additional material only if the company’s circumstances make it relevant.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need audited financial statements?

Not normally for the initial review of a straightforward company with no assets or liabilities. We may ask for limited financial information or confirmation if something requires clarification.

Do identification documents need to be certified?

That depends on the document and the verification route available. We will provide the current certification requirements before you arrange copies.

What if the registered agent holds the company documents?

That is common. Tell us which documents you have, and we can identify what should be requested from the registered agent.

What if the company has a small bank balance or shareholder loan?

Tell us before proceeding. Even a small balance, receivable or shareholder loan means the company is not yet a pure no-asset, no-liability case and its treatment should be agreed.

Next step: request a fixed-fee quotation and provide the documents you already have. We will confirm any remaining onboarding requirements.

This article provides general information and is not legal or tax advice.

Get a quick quote.

We process all personal information collected in accordance with our Privacy Policy.