Company Dormancy Letter (UK)
HMRC Corporation Tax Dormancy Notification
[Director Name]
[Director Address]
Email: [Director Email]
Tel: [Director Phone]
Date: [Letter Date]
[HMRC Office]
NOTIFICATION OF COMPANY DORMANCY — CORPORATION TAX
Company Name: [Company Name]
Companies House Number: [Company Number]
Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR): [Company UTR]
Registered Office: [Registered Address]
Dear Sir or Madam,
I am writing on behalf of [Company Name] (Companies House number [Company Number], UTR [Company UTR]) to notify HMRC that the company has become dormant for Corporation Tax purposes.
DORMANCY DETAILS
Date of Last Trading Activity: [Last Trading Date]
Date Company Became Dormant: [Dormancy Start Date]
Reason for Dormancy: [Dormancy Reason]
End of Current Accounting Period: [Accounting Period End]
With effect from [Dormancy Start Date], the company has had no significant accounting transactions and has been dormant within the meaning of section 1169 of the Companies Act 2006 and section 12 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010.
CORPORATION TAX POSITION
Last Corporation Tax Return Filed: [Previous Return Filed]
Tax Liability Confirmation: [No Tax Liability]
As the company is dormant and has had no chargeable income or gains during the dormant period, I confirm that the company has no Corporation Tax liability for the accounting period ending [Accounting Period End]. I therefore request that HMRC records the company as dormant and confirms that no Corporation Tax return (CT600) is required for this and future accounting periods until further notice.
COMPANIES HOUSE OBLIGATIONS
Please note that the company will continue to fulfil its obligations to Companies House, including filing its annual confirmation statement and dormant company accounts, as required by the Companies Act 2006. This notification relates to Corporation Tax only.
Please confirm receipt of this notification and that the company's Corporation Tax record has been updated accordingly. If you require any further information, please do not hesitate to contact me at the address above.
Yours faithfully,
_________________________
[Director Name]
Director, [Company Name]
Date: [Letter Date]
Director
________________
Signature
What Is a Company Dormancy Letter (UK)?
A Company Dormancy Letter in the United Kingdom makes a statutory filing or company-administration record and sets out the particulars the registrar or revenue authority requires, with its requirements set by the Corporation Tax Act 2010.
For Corporation Tax purposes, HMRC defines a dormant company as one that has had no 'significant accounting transactions' during its accounting period. A significant accounting transaction is any transaction that must be entered in the company's accounting records, such as receipt of income, payment of invoices, purchase of assets, or payment of dividends. Under Corporation Tax Act 2010, section 12, a company that has had no Corporation Tax liability for an accounting period may be excused from filing a Corporation Tax return (CT600) for that period if HMRC accepts its dormancy notification. Three types of transactions are permitted during a dormant period without affecting dormant status: payment of Companies House filing fees, payment of penalties to Companies House, and allotment of subscriber shares at incorporation.
For Companies House purposes, the definition of dormancy under section 1169 of the Companies Act 2006 is broadly similar but separately applied. A company can be dormant for Companies House purposes while still having some activity for HMRC purposes, or vice versa. Companies House requires dormant companies to continue filing their annual confirmation statement (under section 853 of the Companies Act 2006) and dormant company accounts, even though those accounts may consist only of a simplified balance sheet.
The Company Dormancy Letter is distinct from a company dissolution or strike-off application. A dissolution application (made on Form DS01 under section 1003 of the Companies Act 2006) permanently removes the company from the Companies House register and cannot be reversed except by a court order for restoration under section 1029 of the Companies Act 2006. Dormancy preserves the company as a live legal entity — protecting the company name, any intellectual property or contracts held by the company, and the option to resume trading in the future — while eliminating the Corporation Tax compliance burden during the inactive period.
Directors of a UK limited company have a continuing obligation under the Companies Act 2006 and the Corporation Tax Act 2010 to file accounts and to notify HMRC of changes in the company's tax position. Failing to notify HMRC of dormancy when a company ceases to trade, and failing to file Corporation Tax returns, can result in automatic filing penalties and interest charges under Schedule 55 of the Finance Act 2009.
When Do You Need a Company Dormancy Letter (UK)?
A UK Company Dormancy Letter is needed whenever the directors of a limited company decide that the company will temporarily cease trading and want to confirm HMRC does not require Corporation Tax returns to be filed during the inactive period.
When a sole director company owner suspends trading to take extended leave, pursue other projects, or manage personal circumstances — without wishing to dissolve the company permanently — a dormancy notification to HMRC prevents Corporation Tax returns from being demanded for the dormant periods. HMRC's Corporation Tax office will confirm that no CT600 return is required for the period of dormancy once the notification is received and accepted.
When a holding company within a corporate group has no trading activity of its own — its sole function being to hold shares in subsidiary companies — the holding company is likely to be dormant for Corporation Tax purposes in any accounting period in which it receives no dividends, charges no management fees, and makes no disposals of assets. A dormancy letter to HMRC at the start of each accounting period in which no activity is expected is a straightforward compliance step that avoids unnecessary CT600 filing obligations.
When a company name is registered to protect a brand, product name, or intellectual property asset, with no current intention to trade under that name, the registered company will typically be dormant from the date of incorporation until commercial activity begins. A Company Dormancy Letter sent to HMRC shortly after incorporation notifies HMRC that the company is dormant and has no Corporation Tax liability, and requests that HMRC record the company accordingly on its CT register.
When a company's trading activities are temporarily suspended due to a regulatory review, a licensing dispute, or a pending business acquisition — but dissolution is not appropriate because the company's contracts, licences, or assets need to be preserved — a dormancy letter to HMRC manages the tax compliance position during the suspension period.
When a company has completed the wind-down of its trading activities in preparation for a members' voluntary liquidation but has not yet appointed a liquidator, the directors should notify HMRC of dormancy for the period between the cessation of trading and the commencement of the formal winding-up process under the Insolvency Act 1986.
What to Include in Your Company Dormancy Letter (UK)
A UK Company Dormancy Letter must include the following elements to be effective as a notification to HMRC that the company has ceased trading and has no Corporation Tax liability for the relevant period.
The company identification block must state the company's full registered name exactly as it appears on the Companies House register, the Companies House registration number, the company's Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR) as assigned by HMRC, and the company's registered office address. The UTR is the primary identifier HMRC uses to locate the company's Corporation Tax record and is essential for the letter to be routed correctly within HMRC's Corporation Tax processing teams.
The dormancy start date must state the precise date from which the company became dormant — that is, the date on which the last significant accounting transaction occurred and from which the company has had no further trading activity. This date determines the start of the accounting period for which no Corporation Tax return will be required, and it should be consistent with the company's accounting records and the date from which no further transactions appear in the company's books.
The accounting period reference should state the accounting period or periods for which the company will be dormant. If the dormancy straddles the end of a Companies House accounting reference date — for example, the company became dormant on 15 August 2025 and the accounting reference date is 31 December 2025 — the letter should address the treatment of the period from the dormancy start date to the accounting reference date.
The no-Corporation-Tax-liability statement must confirm that the company has no Corporation Tax liability for the accounting period in which it became dormant and for any subsequent dormant accounting periods. This confirmation triggers HMRC's process for suspending the CT600 filing requirement. Without this statement, HMRC may continue to issue CT600 notices for filing and may impose automatic penalties under Schedule 55 of the Finance Act 2009 for non-filing.
The request to update HMRC records should expressly ask HMRC to record the company as dormant on its Corporation Tax register, to confirm that no CT600 return is required for the dormant period, and to advise the company when — or under what circumstances — Corporation Tax filing obligations will resume. HMRC will typically respond with a written confirmation, which the company should retain in its statutory books.
The director's signature and date block identifies the person authorising the notification. For a single-director company, the sole director signs. For multi-director companies, any director can notify HMRC of the company's dormancy. The letter should be dated on or before the date it is sent, and a copy should be retained in the company's registered office files or company secretarial records. The forms-legal.com Company Dormancy Letter (UK) template covers the mandatory elements under Companies Act 2006.
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author = {{Forms Legal}},
title = {Company Dormancy Letter (UK) (United Kingdom)},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/uk/business/letters/company-dormancy-letter-uk}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Companies Act 2006}
}Frequently Asked Questions
For HMRC purposes, a company is dormant if it has had no 'significant accounting transactions' during its accounting period. A significant accounting transaction is one that must be entered in the company's accounting records — such as receipt of income, payment of expenses, or purchase of assets. A few types of transaction are permitted even in a dormant period without losing dormant status, including payment of fees to Companies House, payment of penalties to Companies House, and allotment of shares by subscribers on incorporation. Companies House has a slightly different definition of dormant — a company is dormant for Companies House purposes if it has had no significant accounting transactions in the period. A company can be dormant for Corporation Tax purposes but still be required to file accounts with Companies House.
You should notify HMRC in writing (by letter or through the HMRC online Corporation Tax service) as soon as your company becomes dormant. HMRC's Corporation Tax office will be identified from your company's previous correspondence or CT online registration. Your notification should include: the company's name and registration number; the company's UTR (Unique Taxpayer Reference); the date from which the company became dormant; a statement that the company has no Corporation Tax liability for the period; and a request that HMRC record the company as dormant and confirm that no Corporation Tax return is required. Once notified, HMRC will normally confirm that no Corporation Tax return needs to be filed for periods of dormancy. You should keep a copy of the dormancy letter on file. Under United Kingdom law, Companies Act 2006, parties should seek independent legal advice from a qualified lawyer to confirm compliance with all applicable requirements. Under the Companies Act 2006, Companies House maintains the register of UK companies. Section 386 of the Companies Act 2006 sets accounting record obligations. Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for United Kingdom-compliant documentation.
Yes. A dormant company in the UK must still file its annual confirmation statement (previously called the annual return) and annual accounts with Companies House, even if it has had no trading activity. Dormant companies can file simplified accounts — called 'dormant company accounts' — which consist only of a simplified balance sheet and notes. A dormant company that qualifies as a small company can take advantage of the dormant company accounts filing exemption and does not need an audit. However, if the company has never traded, different rules apply — a company that has never traded and has no assets or liabilities can file 'dormant and never traded' accounts. Failure to file accounts on time incurs automatic penalties from Companies House. Under United Kingdom law, Companies Act 2006, parties should seek independent legal advice from a qualified lawyer to confirm compliance with all applicable requirements. Under the Companies Act 2006, Companies House maintains the register of UK companies. Section 386 of the Companies Act 2006 sets accounting record obligations. Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for United Kingdom-compliant documentation.
Yes. There is no time limit on how long a company can remain dormant in the UK. Many directors keep companies dormant to preserve the company name, maintain a registered legal entity for future use, or protect goodwill and intellectual property. As long as the company continues to file its annual confirmation statement and accounts with Companies House, and pays the relevant fees, it can remain registered indefinitely. You should also confirm that the registered office address remains current and that any changes to directors or shareholders are notified to Companies House using the relevant forms (CH01, AP01, TM01, SH01 etc.). Companies House does have the power to strike off companies that fail to file their documents. Under United Kingdom law, Companies Act 2006, parties should seek independent legal advice from a qualified lawyer to confirm compliance with all applicable requirements. Under the Companies Act 2006, Companies House maintains the register of UK companies. Section 386 of the Companies Act 2006 sets accounting record obligations. Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for United Kingdom-compliant documentation.
A dormant company remains registered at Companies House and on the HMRC register, continues to file its confirmation statement and accounts, and retains all its legal rights (including its company name and any intellectual property owned by it). Striking off (or dissolution) is a permanent process that removes the company from the Companies House register entirely. A voluntary strike-off can be applied for using form DS01 if the company has not traded within three months of the application and has no outstanding liabilities. Once struck off, the company ceases to exist and its assets (if any) pass to the Crown as bona vacantia. Striking off cannot be reversed except by an application to the court for restoration. Dormancy is appropriate where the company may be revived in future; striking off is appropriate where it will not.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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