๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ

    JURISDICTION FILE

    Debt collection in Australia

    Under Section 459E of the Corporations Act, a Statutory Demand gives the debtor 21 days to pay or face a presumption of insolvency. No court hearing. No judgement required. Just a correctly served demand and a deadline. If the debtor fails to comply, you can petition to wind up the company. In Australia, that threat alone recovers most debts.

    87%
    Collection Rate
    45d
    Avg Days
    Common law
    Legal System
    AUD
    Currency
    English
    Language

    HOW WE COLLECT HERE

    The instrument your debtor receives

    [ CLASSIFIED ]INTERSTATION DOSSIER
    ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ
    DOCUMENT
    Statutory Demand โ€” Corporations Act 2001, Section 459E
    SEAL
    REFERENCEINT-2026-AU
    JURISDICTIONAustralia
    TOโ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆ Pty Ltd
    REOutstanding debt โ€” AUD โ–ˆโ–ˆ,โ–ˆโ–ˆโ–ˆ.โ–ˆโ–ˆ

    "The company is required within 21 days after service of this demand to pay to the creditor the amount of the debt, or to secure or compound for it to the creditor's reasonable satisfaction. Failure to comply will result in presumption of insolvency under section 459C(2)(a)."

    DEADLINE
    21 days
    CONSEQUENCE
    Presumption of insolvency โ†’ winding-up petition โ†’ liquidation
    Filed via: Direct service on registered office (no court required)
    Statutory basis: Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) s.459E, s.459C(2)(a), s.459P
    Legal instrument: Statutory Demand โ€” Corporations Act 2001, Section 459E. Filed via Direct service on registered office (no court required). Statutory basis: Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) s.459E, s.459C(2)(a), s.459P. Deadline: 21 days. Consequence: Presumption of insolvency โ†’ winding-up petition โ†’ liquidation.

    Australia is one of the most creditor-friendly common law jurisdictions in the Asia-Pacific. The legal system is clear, courts are efficient, enforcement mechanisms are powerful, and debtors face serious consequences for non-payment.

    The Statutory Demand: The Nuclear Option

    The Statutory Demand under Section 459E of the Corporations Act 2001 is the most powerful B2B collection instrument in Australian law. Served on a company owing AUD 4,000 or more, it creates a 21-day deadline. Failure to comply creates a statutory presumption of insolvency.

    Corporations Act 2001 s.459E ยท ACL ยท State court rules

    Statutory Demand for debts over AUD 4,000. 21 days to comply or presumption of insolvency. Directors face personal liability under s.588G for insolvent trading.

    Pre-Litigation: The Letter of Demand

    A formal Letter of Demand specifying the amount, basis, and deadline (14-21 days) is standard practice and often a pre-condition for recovering legal costs. A well-drafted letter on Australian legal letterhead resolves a substantial percentage of commercial debts.

    LETTER OF DEMAND

    Pre-litigation notice

    Australian legal letterhead. Specifies claim, interest, next steps. 14-21 day deadline.

    STATUTORY DEMAND

    Form 509H, s.459E

    21 days. No court required. Presumption of insolvency if ignored.

    WINDING-UP

    Company liquidation

    Petition filed in Federal or Supreme Court. Directors face personal liability.

    GARNISHEE ORDER

    Bank attachment

    Court directs bank to pay debtor's funds directly to creditor.

    Court Proceedings by State

    Each state has its own monetary jurisdictions. In NSW: Local Court up to AUD 100,000, District Court up to AUD 750,000, Supreme Court above. Most states offer default judgement if the debtor fails to file a defence within 28 days.

    Enforcement and Cross-Border

    Options include Writ of Execution (asset seizure by sheriff), Garnishee Order (directing banks to pay creditor), Examination Summons (compelling asset disclosure under oath), and Charging Order (securing against real property).

    Directors who allow a company to incur debts while insolvent face personal liability, compensation orders, and potential disqualification under s.588G. This personal exposure means directors take Statutory Demands seriously.

    $

    Garnishee Order

    Bank directed to pay creditor directly from debtor's funds.

    ๐Ÿ 

    Charging Order

    Judgement debt secured against real property.

    ๐Ÿ“‹

    Examination Summons

    Debtor compelled to disclose all assets under oath.

    โšก

    Writ of Execution

    Sheriff authorised to seize and sell debtor's assets.

    โ†’ See also: Debt collection in the United Kingdom

    ENFORCEMENT PROTOCOL

    What happens to your debtor

    DAY 0

    Letter of Demand

    On Australian legal letterhead. Specifying the claim, the statutory interest, and the next step: Statutory Demand or court proceedings.

    DAY 0: Letter of Demand. On Australian legal letterhead. Specifying the claim, the statutory interest, and the next step: Statutory Demand or court proceedings.
    DAY 21

    Statutory Demand served (Form 509H)

    Served on the registered office under s.459E Corporations Act. 21 days. No court involved. Just a demand and a deadline.

    DAY 21: Statutory Demand served (Form 509H). Served on the registered office under s.459E Corporations Act. 21 days. No court involved. Just a demand and a deadline.
    DAY 42

    Presumption of Insolvency

    21 days expired. Under s.459C(2)(a), the company is presumed insolvent. The creditor prepares a winding-up application.

    DAY 42: Presumption of Insolvency. 21 days expired. Under s.459C(2)(a), the company is presumed insolvent. The creditor prepares a winding-up application.
    DAY 50+

    Winding-Up Petition / Enforcement

    A petition to liquidate the company is filed. Directors face personal liability for insolvent trading under s.588G.

    DAY 50+: Winding-Up Petition / Enforcement. A petition to liquidate the company is filed. Directors face personal liability for insolvent trading under s.588G.
    DAY 0

    Letter of Demand

    On Australian legal letterhead. Specifying the claim, the statutory interest, and the next step: Statutory Demand or court proceedings.

    DAY 0: Letter of Demand. On Australian legal letterhead. Specifying the claim, the statutory interest, and the next step: Statutory Demand or court proceedings.
    DAY 21

    Statutory Demand served (Form 509H)

    Served on the registered office under s.459E Corporations Act. 21 days. No court involved. Just a demand and a deadline.

    DAY 21: Statutory Demand served (Form 509H). Served on the registered office under s.459E Corporations Act. 21 days. No court involved. Just a demand and a deadline.
    DAY 42

    Presumption of Insolvency

    21 days expired. Under s.459C(2)(a), the company is presumed insolvent. The creditor prepares a winding-up application.

    DAY 42: Presumption of Insolvency. 21 days expired. Under s.459C(2)(a), the company is presumed insolvent. The creditor prepares a winding-up application.
    DAY 50+

    Winding-Up Petition / Enforcement

    A petition to liquidate the company is filed. Directors face personal liability for insolvent trading under s.588G.

    DAY 50+: Winding-Up Petition / Enforcement. A petition to liquidate the company is filed. Directors face personal liability for insolvent trading under s.588G.

    FREQUENTLY ASKED

    Need to collect a debt in Australia? Contact us with your case details and we will confirm our approach within 24 hours.

    Free Assessment โ†’