
Professional services firms are exposed to a multitude of financial pressures, from unpredictable fee income and high talent costs to regulatory obligations. Our licensed Insolvency Practitioners with direct experience in the professional services sector can help navigate the insolvency and restructuring journey, while protecting revenue streams and navigating regulatory requirements. Our professional services insolvency expert, Gary Shankland, shares the common warning signs that should trigger you to seek formal advice from a licensed Insolvency Practitioner.
Accountants, solicitors, consultancies, and recruitment businesses are financially resilient but often exposed to substantial financial uncertainty. Fee income is directly tied to client activity, and a loss of key accounts, a slowdown in client spending, or the departure of a fee-earning partner can have an immediate impact on revenue. In our experience, unlike businesses with physical assets, most professional services firms have limited tangible security, which can make accessing alternative finance difficult when cash flow deteriorates. This trigger is commonly cited by distressed directors when our Insolvency Practitioners are approached for insolvency advice.
Talent is the highest cost in professional services, which creates a particular challenge when revenues fall. As headcount is difficult to reduce without disrupting client relationships and service delivery, cost structures can remain high long after revenue has dropped. Billing cycles in legal, accountancy, and consultancy businesses add further pressure, as work is often completed well before it is paid. Recruitment businesses face an additional layer of complexity as they must fund temporary and contract payroll ahead of client settlement, creating a structural cash flow gap that can widen significantly if a major client is slow to pay or defaults.
According to Red Flag Alert data for Q1 2026, professional services recorded 53,115 businesses in 'significant' financial distress and 4,582 in 'critical' financial distress. These figures place professional services among the four most distressed sectors in the UK by volume, sitting behind only construction, support services, and real estate at Q1 2026.
Professional services businesses must make regulatory considerations that go beyond the financial, from Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) intervention for law firms or Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) involvement for regulated financial businesses, to client account obligations and professional indemnity run-off requirements. A licensed Insolvency Practitioner with professional services experience will guide you through the options and navigate obligations unique to the professional services sector, alongside the financial process. Read our case study below on how we navigated SRA intervention throughout the pre-pack administration of a leading law firm.
An early review of your firm's financial position before you must notify regulators or renew professional indemnity insurance. This includes identifying whether restructuring, creditor negotiation, or a formal procedure is the right response.
A formal procedure providing immediate protection from creditor enforcement, while a licensed Insolvency Practitioner pursues the sale of the practice, client relationships, and work in progress as going concern assets, preserving value.
Practical intervention to stabilise a struggling professional services business, reviewing fee agreements, work in progress, and restructuring overheads to reflect the firm's current fee-earning capacity.
A director-led process to wind up an insolvent professional services business in an orderly way, managing creditor claims and any outstanding client or regulatory obligations.
A formal agreement with creditors to repay debts in instalments. A CVA is considered when the firm retains a viable client base and ongoing fee income, but a short-term cash flow gap must be resolved.
A tax-efficient closure route for solvent professional services firms, provided all client obligations, regulatory requirements, and professional indemnity liabilities have been resolved before the MVL process begins.
Professional services businesses often face insolvency scenarios that involve regulatory complexity alongside the financial, whether that is a solicitor’s practice with client account obligations, a recruitment business with outstanding payroll liabilities, or an accountancy firm with a client book to transfer. A licensed Insolvency Practitioner with experience in the professional services sector will guide you through any formal procedure, informing you of your regulatory obligations and client responsibilities.
Pre-pack administration of a long-established property law firm
Background – A central London law firm with a £12 million turnover and 100 staff experienced serious financial and operational pressure, including:
Outcome – The company entered administration, and we successfully obtained a validation order, which enabled the business to continue trading while securing a buyer.
We achieved a successful sale out of administration to a private equity-backed purchaser, protecting and retaining all jobs, client files, and monies. This route resulted in a greater return to unsecured creditors than a liquidation or SRA intervention would have enabled.
"With SRA intervention imminent and a winding up petition already filed by HMRC, we navigated this pre-pack with utmost care, precision, and speed, working closely with the SRA to avoid any disruption to trade, staff, and clients."
If your professional services firm is under financial pressure or you wish to seek pre-insolvency support, speak to a licensed Insolvency Practitioner for qualified advice. Get in touch today for a free, confidential discussion, and we will match you with a licensed Insolvency Practitioner who understands your sector.
We work with all types of professional services businesses, including accountancy practices where partner departures can rapidly erode the fee base, solicitor firms carrying client money and disbursement obligations that require careful handling, recruitment agencies exposed to payroll funding gaps and slow-paying clients, management consultancies reliant on a small number of retainer relationships, and financial advisers where insolvency triggers FCA notification obligations and places professional indemnity insurance at immediate risk.
Connecting UK businesses and professional advisers with experienced, licensed Insolvency Practitioners across England and Wales.
Insolvency Practitioners is a trading name of BTG Begbies Traynor (Central) LLP Copyright 2026, all rights reserved. Copyright 2026 Insolvency Practitioners, all rights reserved.