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Insolvency Practitioners for Technology and IT Businesses

Technology and IT businesses can move from growth into financial difficulty faster than most sectors. The pressure on company finances is continuous as businesses must invest in new technology to keep pace with technological advancements, including the rise of AI-powered services. Our directory includes licensed Insolvency Practitioners with specialist technology and IT experience, ready to provide qualified pre-insolvency advisory and insolvency advice.

What financial challenges do technology and IT businesses face?

Software companies, IT services businesses, digital agencies, SaaS providers, and telecoms operators face a wide range of financial pressures, but what they share is exposure to rapid change. Client contracts can be lost to a competitor, a platform shift, or a procurement decision with very little warning, and the recurring revenue models that many technology businesses rely on can deteriorate quickly when customer turnover rises or a major contract renewal is lost.

Companies that have relied on loans or external investment to fund their growth can find themselves in serious difficulty when their credit application or funding round fails. Our Insolvency Practitioners are finding that established IT services and telecoms businesses are facing margin pressure from increasing competition and the need for continuous investment in skills, infrastructure, and technology to remain relevant to clients.

Over the last five years, the number of AI companies in the UK has come to exceed 5,800 – an 85% increase since 2023, which shows increased competition and higher technological benchmarks. As more businesses integrate AI into operations, technology businesses must be prepared to invest in advanced technology or risk reduced demand. According to Red Flag Alert data for Q1 2026, telecommunications and information technology businesses recorded 40,044 businesses in 'significant' financial distress and 3,426 in 'critical' financial distress.

Warning signs your technology or IT business may need an Insolvency Practitioner

  • Funding runway shortening, funding round stalled, grant application rejected, or investor appetite cooling in the current market
  • A major contract lost, a significant client churned, or a flagship product discontinued, leaving a gap in recurring revenue
  • Payroll commitments, including developer salaries and contractor fees, that the business can no longer sustain at current monthly recurring revenue levels
  • Investor or board pressure to reduce headcount or cut R&D spend without a credible path to profitability
  • Directors personally funding operations, deferring salary, or drawing on personal credit to meet software licensing costs, hosting fees, or payroll obligations

What options are available to technology and IT directors?

Technology businesses often own assets that go beyond balance sheet entries; intellectual property, software licences, customer data, and ongoing SaaS contracts all require careful handling. A licensed Insolvency Practitioner with technology sector expertise will guide you through industry pressures and advise on the routes available.

Pre-insolvency advisory

An early review of your financial position, particularly relevant in view of a funding shortfall or key contract review. A licensed Insolvency Practitioner will assess what options remain open, including how to protect intellectual property, manage software licences, SaaS agreements, and customer contracts.

Administration

Company administration in technology is frequently used to facilitate a pre-pack sale of the business, preserving intellectual property, source code, customer contracts and staff, where those assets hold greater value as a going concern than in liquidation.

Company rescue and turnaround

Practical intervention to stabilise a technology business under creditor pressure, addressing tax arrears, renegotiating terms with key suppliers and hosting providers, and reviewing the cost base, while protecting core products and teams.

Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation (CVL)

Wind up an insolvent technology business in an orderly way. This involves realising the value of assets, including intellectual property, proprietary software, domain names and equipment, while addressing outstanding obligations to creditors, and dealing with prepaid customer contracts and subscriptions.

Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA)

A CVA may suit technology businesses where recurring revenue from contracts or retainer agreements remains in place, providing the predictable income stream creditors require before approving a repayment plan.

Members’ Voluntary Liquidation (MVL)

A tax-efficient closure route for solvent technology businesses, where a founder is stepping back from a profitable company or removing a redundant subsidiary. The company must have no outstanding debts and sufficient assets to pay all creditors in full before an MVL can proceed.

Why use a licensed Insolvency Practitioner with technology and IT expertise?

A licensed Insolvency Practitioner with technology and IT expertise can navigate sector-specific pressures, such as intellectual property valuations, high volumes of consumer creditors, and contracts with insolvency clauses. An Insolvency Practitioner with knowledge of your sector can comprehensively assess the position of your company and advise on the best options to preserve value.

Find an Insolvency Practitioner for your technology or IT business

Whether you require pre-insolvency advisory services or immediate insolvency advice, we can connect you with a licensed Insolvency Practitioner who understands the technology sector. Get in touch today for a free, confidential consultation.

We work with all types of technology and IT businesses, including software companies where intellectual property valuations add complexity to any formal procedure, SaaS providers with prepaid subscriptions, IT services businesses carrying contracts with insolvency termination clauses, digital agencies dependent on key people, and limited company IT contractors with overdrawn director’s loans.

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Insolvency Practitioners is a trading name of BTG Begbies Traynor (Central) LLP a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales No. OC306540. The firm is authorised by the FCA to undertake debt counselling and debt adjusting and its reference number is 660455. Copyright 2026 Insolvency Practitioners, all rights reserved.

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