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Companies are automatically fined if accounts are not submitted on time. Accounts should be normally be filed for a private company ten months after the company's accounting reference date (reduced to nine months for accounting periods starting on or after 6 April 2008). Public companies should file their accounts within seven months of the company's accounting reference date (reduced to six months for accounting periods starting on or after 6 April 2008).
The period of filing first accounts for a private company is 22 months after the date of incorporation (21 months for accounts starting on or after 6 April 2008) and for a public company 19 months after the date of incorporation (18 months after 6 April 2008).
With effect from 1 February 2009 penalties for late filing of accounts are to increase. These penalties represent an increase of 50 percent and are intended to take account of inflation from 1992 to 2007.
The current filing penalties are as follows:
| Length of delay, based on the filing date | Private company | Public company |
| Three months or less | £100 | £500 |
| More than three months up to six months | £250 | £1,000 |
| More than six months to 12 months | £500 | £2,000 |
| More than 12 months | £1,000 | £5,000 |
From 1 February 2009 the penalties are as follows
| Length of delay, based on the filing date | Private company | Public company |
| Not more than one month | £150 | £750 |
| More than one month but not more than three months | £375 | £1,500 |
| More than three months but not more than six months | £750 | £3,000 |
| More than six months | £1,500 | £7,500 |
These rates double for any company which files late having also filed late in the previous year. In this circumstance that results in a maximum fine of £15,000 for a PLC filing more than six months after the filing deadline.
The Registrar of Companies automatically issues invoices where accounts are filed late - these are sent to the registered office.
Can a filing penalty be appealed against?
You may appeal against a penalty but it will only be successful if you can show that the circumstances are exceptional. The Registrar has limited discretion not to collect a penalty. It may be applied when an unforeseen catastrophe strikes a company at a critical time; for instance, a personal tragedy affecting a sole director immediately before a filing deadline or a fire destroying records a few days before time runs out.
The Registrar lists the following reasons that are not considered exceptional:
In order to ensure your accounts are completed and ready for filing it is important you provide your accounting records when we request them and any additional information we require in order to complete the accounts and, where appropriate, the audit.
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