Voluntary
administration
explained
When a company cannot meet its debts, voluntary administration offers a structured path forward.
When voluntary
administration fits
Not every business needs this path, but some do.
Situation
Your business cannot meet its obligations
When debts exceed assets and the company cannot pay creditors, voluntary administration provides a formal mechanism to assess options. A registered insolvency practitioner takes control to determine if the business can be saved or if an orderly exit is the better course.
Process
The four stages unfold
Voluntary administration moves through clear, defined phases.
Stage
An administrator is appointed
A registered insolvency practitioner takes control immediately.
Stage
Investigation and proposal are prepared
The administrator examines the business and develops options.
Stage
Creditors meet to decide the path
A formal meeting determines whether restructuring or liquidation proceeds.
Stage
The outcome is implemented
A deed of company arrangement, liquidation, or return occurs.
Support
How Varden Pierce prepares
you
We assess whether voluntary administration is right for your situation. Then we prepare everything needed so you enter the process with clarity and control.
Real stories
What business owners say
“Varden Pierce helped us understand our options without pressure. We felt heard, not judged.”
Michael Torres
Director, manufacturing
“They prepared everything we needed. When we met with the insolvency practitioner, we were ready.”
Sarah Chen
Owner, retail business
“The clarity we got made all the difference. We moved forward with confidence instead of fear.”
James Whitmore
Director, construction