TEKO PP LIMITED
Edinburgh-based professional services firm Teko PP entered compulsory liquidation on 7 April 2026 following a court order under section 122 of the Insolvency Act 1986. Incorporated on 24 April 2017, the company transitioned from active trading to wind-up proceedings after a winding-up petition was Gazetted under notice 5103154. The company leaves behind a history of micro-entity filings, with its last accounts submitted on 6 January 2026.
What the data was telling us
Readings from The Gazette and Companies House, in the firm's final two years.
Lessons behind the liquidation
Teko PP filed micro-entity accounts on 6 January 2026, shortly before its compulsory liquidation on 7 April 2026. Such abbreviated filing requirements offer limited visibility into the cash flow and creditor pressures of a professional services business, highlighting the limitations of public register analysis for micro-entities.
With five appointments since 2017 and an average director tenure of 4.3 years, the company experienced one resignation in its final 12 months. This departure, leaving three active directors at the time of winding up, often points to internal misalignment or shifting responsibilities when facing insolvency.
Unlike voluntary processes, the compulsory winding-up order under section 122 of the Insolvency Act 1986, published in Gazette notice 5103154, represents an involuntary termination. It underscores how unresolved creditor action can swiftly overtake a business, bypassing voluntary restructuring routes.
This case fits the classic pattern of a micro-entity professional services firm where basic regulatory filing compliance continues right up to the point of a court-mandated winding-up order.
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 TEKO PP LIMITED.
