Insolvency Practitioners · 14 min read

Anatomy of UK Insolvency Practitioner Misconduct: 220+ sanctions analysed (2022–2026)

An analysis of 227 publicly available disciplinary records covering UK Insolvency Practitioners: the recurring patterns, the regulatory backdrop, what consumers should watch for, and where to complain.

When the person meant to help is the problem

An Insolvency Practitioner (IP) is one of the most powerful figures most consumers will never have heard of — until they need one, or until one is appointed over a business they own, owe money to, or work for. An IP can liquidate a company, sell a bankrupt's home, vote claims up or down, settle directors' conduct reports, and decide which creditors get paid and in what order. They handle other people's money in conditions of stress, opacity, and time pressure. The price of getting it wrong is paid in pounds — sometimes by debtors trying to dig out of a hole, sometimes by small-trade creditors owed money they will never see again, sometimes by employees waiting for redundancy payments.

The UK regulatory system for IPs is robust on paper. It rests on statutory licensing, professional codes of ethics, a detailed body of Statements of Insolvency Practice (SIPs), the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016, the Insolvency Act 1986, the Money Laundering Regulations 2017 (MLR 2017), and the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (POCA). Yet a steady stream of disciplinary orders shows the same failures recurring case after case — and many of them are the kind of failures consumers can spot, push back on, and report.

This article analyses 227 publicly available disciplinary records covering UK Insolvency Practitioners between roughly 2022 and early 2026, drawn from the Insolvency Service's sanction notices, the Insolvency Practitioners Association (IPA), and the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW). The aim is not to single out individuals — names are deliberately disregarded — but to describe the pattern of misconduct: what goes wrong, what regulators do about it, and what an ordinary consumer should watch for.

The regulatory backdrop: who licenses an IP and how complaints flow

To act as an Insolvency Practitioner in the UK, an individual must be authorised under Part XIII of the Insolvency Act 1986. Authorisation does not come direct from the government; it comes through a Recognised Professional Body (RPB). The Insolvency Service, an executive agency of the Department for Business and Trade, oversees the RPBs as a meta-regulator and runs the Complaints Gateway through which most consumer complaints are filtered.

There are four RPBs operating across the UK:

(ACCA previously licensed IPs but withdrew from that function; its historical decisions still appear in the corpus.)

Each RPB has its own committee structure — typically a Regulation and Conduct Committee or Insolvency Licensing Committee dealing with conduct, plus appeal and review committees. The IPA, for example, uses Common Sanctions Guidance ("CSG") to set starting points for fines and reprimands; ICAEW operates Investigation and Disciplinary Regulations and a Conduct Committee. Both publish anonymised or named outcomes on gov.uk and on their own websites.

The complaints route for the public is deliberately simple in principle. A debtor, creditor, director, or other affected party submits a complaint to the Insolvency Service Complaints Gateway, which triages and forwards it to the relevant RPB. The RPB investigates. If misconduct is established, sanctions follow. If the complainant is dissatisfied with how the RPB has handled the complaint (as opposed to the underlying conduct), they can escalate to the Insolvency Service Adjudicator, which scrutinises the process rather than re-running the case.

This three-tier system — Gateway, RPB, Adjudicator — is the framework the rest of this article assumes.

Categories of misconduct: what actually goes wrong

The 227 records cluster into a relatively small number of recurring failure modes. They are listed below roughly in descending order of frequency.

1. Anti-money-laundering (AML) failures

By far the most common single category of recent disciplinary findings concerns the Money Laundering Regulations 2017. Practitioners are repeatedly sanctioned for:

Closely linked are failures under POCA — specifically section 330 (failure to report suspicions of money laundering to the firm's nominated officer or Money Laundering Reporting Officer, MLRO) and section 331 (failure by the nominated officer to make the required disclosure to the National Crime Agency). Several practitioners were sanctioned for not filing Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) when, on the face of the case, the warning signs were obvious — including misapplied Covid Bounce Back Loan funds and suspected director misconduct. In a few cases the practitioner was themselves the firm's MLRO, which regulators treated as a clear aggravating factor.

The IPA's Money Laundering Sanctions Guidance typically starts at a severe reprimand and a fine of £8,000–£10,000 for serious breaches of regulations 27, 28 or 30, with higher starting points where the practitioner held an MLRO role. In one case a starting point of a temporary licence restriction or suspension was contemplated for a serious failure to report.

2. SIP breaches — investigations and reporting

Statements of Insolvency Practice, particularly SIP 1 (an overview of an officeholder's duties), SIP 2 (investigations by office-holders), SIP 3.1 (Individual Voluntary Arrangements), SIP 3.2 (Company Voluntary Arrangements), SIP 3.3 (Protected Trust Deeds — Scotland), SIP 7 (financial presentation), SIP 11 (handling of funds), and SIP 16 (pre-pack administration sales), generate a large share of the caseload.

The most common SIP 2 failures involve liquidators not conducting proportionate investigations into the affairs of the company or its directors, not enquiring into potentially voidable prior transactions, and — perhaps most strikingly — not documenting what investigations they did or why they concluded no further action was needed. Paragraph 18 of SIP 2 (documentation of investigations and conclusions) is cited again and again. In several cases the practitioner had also failed to file a director conduct report under section 7A of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 — or had filed one that was materially misleading and failed to update it when fresh evidence emerged.

SIP 3.1 failures cluster around IVAs that should never have been recommended: proposals certified as having "a reasonable prospect of being approved and implemented" when, on the available information, they plainly did not; debtors wrongly told they were ineligible for a Debt Relief Order; vulnerable debtors given misleading or incorrect advice on initial calls; variations to IVAs put to creditors without affordability checks.

SIP 11 cases consistently turn on the same point: estate money was not held in accounts where the funds were "readily identifiable to each separate estate", or estate funds, client funds and firm funds were not adequately differentiated. In one matter, unfettered bank account access had been given to a non-licensed director of the firm. Even where no funds were actually lost, regulators treat the absence of segregation as a serious breach because it is the safeguard, not the loss, that the rules exist to protect.

3. Recordkeeping and statutory filing failures

A surprisingly large proportion of cases involve simply not filing things on time, or at all. Recurring failures include:

The volumes can be eye-watering: one case involved no fewer than 260 progress reports unfiled or filed late; another, 164 voluntary liquidations with around 335 separate filing breaches over a four-year period; another, 82 progress reports late across 39 cases. These are not paperwork lapses in the trivial sense — they are how creditors and members find out what the IP is doing with the estate.

4. Fee and remuneration failures

Several practitioners drew remuneration they were not entitled to. Common patterns include:

In Scotland, there is also a recorded case of making a payment after the commencement of a winding up without valid approval under rule 4.7(5) of the Insolvency (Scotland) (Receivership and Winding up) Rules 2018.

5. Pensions and redundancy filings

A distinct cluster of cases involves Forms RP14, RP14A, RP15 and RP15A submitted to the Redundancy Payments Service. Recurrent failings include including unverified holiday or annual-leave claims for directors or family members of directors, failing to engage with the company's pension administrator, and closing cases without ensuring that outstanding pension contributions had been finalised. Because these failures translate directly into employees being under-paid or over-paid out of public funds, regulators treat them as material even where the practitioner's intent was benign.

6. Ethics breaches — referrals, payments for introductions, advertising

A specific Code-of-Ethics rule has produced its own line of cases: R340.4 of the Insolvency Code of Ethics, which restricts paying for client introductions. Several practitioners — sometimes across different firms — were sanctioned for paying for referrals or operating "refer-a-client" incentive programmes, including for IVA appointments and for introductions to schemes offering business asset disposal relief. Other ethics-based sanctions include continuing to advertise services the practitioner could not lawfully offer, despite repeated reminders from the RPB; engaging the services of an individual to assist with a bankruptcy estate in circumstances where it should have been obvious the individual was unfit to act; and continuing a professional relationship with a colleague known to have falsified a valuation report.

7. Conflict of interest, due diligence on appointment, and acceptance of inappropriate appointments

A smaller but important set of cases concerns failures before the appointment is even taken. These include accepting a liquidation appointment in breach of a licence restriction; failing to identify that a target company was FCA-regulated, requiring a different statutory regime; accepting an administration appointment without taking reasonable steps to evaluate whether a trading strategy was viable; and acting without recognising significant professional relationships that created threats to objectivity.

8. Conduct unrelated to insolvency practice

A handful of records involve conduct outside the IP role that nevertheless engages the licensing body — for example, criminal convictions (including fraud by abuse of position), causing a false declaration in a Bounce Back Loan application as a company director, dishonest expense claims, or filing inaccurate Companies House documents. These tend to engage the "fit and proper person" test rather than the SIP framework directly, and they more often result in licence withdrawal or exclusion from membership.

The sanction ladder: what consequences IPs face

Regulators broadly work along a published ladder of sanctions, with starting points modified by aggravating and mitigating factors.

Reprimand and fine (lower end). For "less serious" breaches of the fundamental principle of Professional Competence and Due Care, the IPA's Common Sanctions Guidance typically starts at a reprimand and a £1,500–£2,000 fine. Examples in the corpus include isolated form-filing errors, single-case delays of moderate length, and one-off failures to respond to a debtor or pension administrator.

Severe reprimand and fine (mid-range). This is the modal outcome. Starting points cluster at £5,000 for a serious breach of the fundamental principle of competence and due care, £3,000 for a serious breach of professional behaviour, and £8,000–£10,000 for serious AML breaches. Many cases settle in the £3,000–£10,000 fine range with a severe reprimand and a costs contribution typically of £3,000–£15,000. ICAEW's settlement orders frequently sit in the same band, sometimes with additional CPD requirements or undertakings to commission cold-file and hot-file reviews.

Higher fines for very serious or repeated misconduct. Where conduct is repeated, where the practitioner was the MLRO, where vulnerable debtors were affected, or where there has been a previous advisory notice or disciplinary finding on the same point, fines escalate. The corpus contains examples of fines at £15,000, £20,000, and — for a firm-level breach — over £1.2 million.

Licence restrictions and conditions. Short of withdrawal, regulators may attach conditions such as a cap on new appointments per month, mandatory joint office-holder appointments, monthly progress reporting to the RPB, expedited Quality Assurance Department (QAD) review visits, or undertakings not to take any new cases. These are typically used where the RPB believes the underlying capability is salvageable but immediate risk needs containing.

Licence withdrawal and exclusion. At the top of the ladder, a practitioner's insolvency licence may be withdrawn under provisions such as rule 35 of the IPA Regulatory Rules 2019 or regulation 5.12(d) of the ICAEW Insolvency Licensing Regulations. Where this happens, the practitioner usually undertakes a block transfer of all open cases to another IP — sometimes via a court application — before the licence falls away. In the most serious cases, the individual is excluded from membership of the RPB altogether, which ends their ability to practise as an IP under that body's authorisation. Recent examples include exclusion following a Crown Court conviction and licence withdrawal following dishonest conduct as a company director.

Suspensions on conditions. A handful of cases show appellate or review committees affirming a sanction but suspending its effect on conditions — for example, that the practitioner takes no new appointments, files monthly progress and closing reports, retains compliant insurance, and uses best endeavours to secure a joint officeholder. This is, in effect, a structured wind-down rather than an outright cliff edge.

Costs awards almost always accompany sanctions and can be substantial — frequently £3,000–£15,000, occasionally much more — reflecting the RPB's investigative costs.

What this means for consumers

A consumer dealing with an IP — whether as a debtor in an IVA, a creditor in a liquidation, a director facing a CVL, or an employee chasing redundancy pay — is not a passive bystander. The pattern of misconduct in these 227 cases gives a clear picture of what good practice looks like, and what to watch for.

Signs that an IP is doing the job properly:

Warning signs:

Where to take a complaint

If you believe an Insolvency Practitioner has acted improperly, there are three correct routes, and they should be used in the right order.

  1. The Insolvency Service Complaints Gateway. This is the front door for almost all consumer complaints against IPs in England, Wales and Scotland. The Gateway is operated by the Insolvency Service and triages complaints before forwarding them to the IP's licensing body. You can find it via gov.uk under "Complain about an insolvency practitioner." You will be asked for the practitioner's name, the case, and a description of what went wrong.

  2. The IP's own licensing body (RPB). If you already know which RPB authorises the practitioner — it must appear on their correspondence and reports — you can complain directly. The four current RPBs are ICAEW, IPA, ICAS and CAI. Each has a complaints page and a published disciplinary process. The RPB will investigate, and if misconduct is established, it will impose a sanction along the lines described above.

  3. The Insolvency Service Adjudicator. If you are dissatisfied with how the RPB has handled your complaint — not with the underlying conduct, but with the process — you can ask the Adjudicator to review. The Adjudicator does not re-investigate the original allegations; it looks at whether the RPB followed its own procedures and reached a reasonable decision.

You may also have civil remedies available — for example, applications to the court under the Insolvency Act 1986 challenging an officeholder's acts — but these are properly the territory of a solicitor, not a regulator.

The picture that emerges from 227 disciplinary outcomes is, in the end, a reassuring one in one specific sense: the system catches a wide range of misconduct, from late filings to AML failures to dishonesty, and it imposes real consequences. It is also a sobering one, because the same failures keep happening — particularly around AML, SIP 2 investigations, segregation of funds, and timely communication with the people whose money is at stake. Consumers who know what good practice looks like, and who know where to take a complaint, are not at the mercy of the system. They are part of how it works.


Sources

This analysis is based on public sanction records published by the Insolvency Service on gov.uk and by the Insolvency Practitioners Association, together with published disciplinary orders and settlement orders of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW). All practitioner names have been disregarded; the article describes aggregate patterns only and does not identify or characterise any individual case.