383 GROUP LIMITED
Incorporated in London on 24 March 2016, marketing sector firm 383 Group Limited entered a creditors voluntary liquidation on 6 April 2026. This transition followed the appointment of joint liquidators from Moorfields on 30 March 2026. The move to wind up the firm occurred under sections 100 and 109 of the Insolvency Act 1986, with the resolution supported by members and creditors.
What the data was telling us
Readings from The Gazette and Companies House, in the firm's final two years.
Lessons behind the liquidation
The register shows that 3 outstanding charges were registered to Santander UK PLC on 18 May 2016, shortly after incorporation. This demonstrates how early stage financial arrangements can remain as permanent obligations, potentially restricting operational flexibility in the years leading up to the 2026 insolvency.
With 4 director appointments since 2016 and an average tenure of 3.6 years, the company maintained a consistent leadership base, reporting zero resignations in the final 12 months. This board stability highlights that insolvency can arise from broader macroeconomic headwinds rather than internal management churn.
The company remained compliant with its filings, submitting full accounts as recently as 18 June 2025. While up to date records and filed confirmation statements provide transparency, they are lagging indicators that may not reflect rapid changes in trading conditions.
This case resembles a common pattern where long established agencies with stable boardrooms and secure bank facilities face sudden, insurmountable operational disruption that quickly leads to a voluntary winding up.
Every charge, every filing, every appointment, in one dossier.
Director histories across related entities, the full debenture instrument, creditor estimates, and the practitioner's record on comparable cases for 383 GROUP LIMITED.
