Annual Accounts and a Confirmation Statement sound like they’d belong in the same folder. They don’t. One is a financial report. The other checks that your legal record is still correct. Mix the two up and this is usually how remote directors end up with penalties they didn’t see coming, or in worse cases, a company struck off the register while they had no idea anything was wrong.
This page is written for UK company owners running things from Pakistan, and for non-resident Pakistanis who set up a UK entity but don’t live anywhere near it. No UK residency, no reliable access to your registered office mailbox, and often no idea that these two filings run on completely separate clocks.
Here’s the part that matters most: a late Annual Accounts filing can cost somewhere between £150 and £1,500. A late Confirmation Statement can go as high as £5,000, and if it sits unfiled long enough, Companies House can strike your company off the register altogether.
Annual Accounts report how your company performed financially to Companies House and HMRC. The Confirmation Statement does something different – it confirms that your company’s official record, directors, shareholders, registered office, share structure, is still accurate. Both are legally required every year, on separate deadlines, and filing one does not cover you for the other.
| Annual Accounts | Confirmation Statement | |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | reports how your company performed financially over the year | checks that your company’s official record is still current and accurate |
| Governing body | filed with Companies House, and HMRC uses it for tax purposes | goes to Companies House only, to keep the public register straight |
| Filing fee | nothing to pay | £50 online, £110 if filed by post |
| Filing clock | tied to your company’s financial year-end | a rolling 12-month window, usually anchored to your incorporation date or your last statement |
| Filing window | 9 months from the year-end | 14 days after each 12-month review period closes |
| Penalty for late filing | £150 to £1,500, depending on how late and what kind of company you run | exposure up to £5,000, and it can escalate to strike-off ⚠ Higher Risk |
| Required if the company is dormant or hasn’t traded | yes, trading activity doesn’t change this | yes, same rule applies here too |
Purpose
Governing body
Filing fee
Filing clock
Filing window
Penalty for late filing
Required if the company is dormant or hasn’t traded
Financial Identity
Annual Accounts answer one question: how did your company do financially this year. HMRC and Companies House use them to work out your tax position and check your financial health. There’s nothing in there about who owns the company or who sits in the director’s chair.
Legal Identity
The Confirmation Statement asks something different: is your company’s official record still accurate. It doesn’t report a figure of any kind. It confirms, or updates, who your directors are, who holds shares, where your registered office is, and how the company is structured.
This is where most remote owners trip up. Annual Accounts and Confirmation Statements don’t share a deadline, a review period, or even a start date.
due 9 months after your financial year-end. A year-end of 31 March means accounts are due by 31 December.
due within 14 days after each 12-month review period ends. That period usually starts from your incorporation date, or from your last confirmation statement, not your financial year-end, which is where the mix-up usually starts.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Take a director in Karachi who set one calendar reminder for “UK tax season,” timed loosely around the accounts deadline. Accounts get filed, no problem. The reminder stays quiet for another year. Meanwhile the Confirmation Statement’s 12-month window closed weeks earlier, and now it sits unfiled with that 14-day grace period running out in the background. Two separate reminders, tracked separately, would have caught this before it turned into a problem.
One thing that catches people the other way: filing your Confirmation Statement early doesn’t just close out that year, it starts a new 12-month review period right from that filing date. So an early filing can push your future deadlines earlier than expected. Worth doing deliberately, not just because you happened to be logged in that day.
Never miss a filing deadline again. Set up managed compliance tracking, or download the UK Compliance Deadline Calendar built for remote directors.
Late Annual Accounts get you a tiered financial penalty, £150 to £1,500 depending on how late you are and what type of company you run. It’s a fine. Not pleasant, but contained. You pay it and the company carries on.
A late Confirmation Statement works differently. Yes, the penalty exposure runs up to £5,000, but that’s not really the part to worry about. Companies House can start strike-off proceedings against a company that fails to file its Confirmation Statement. Strike-off means the company is administratively dissolved, it stops existing as a legal entity, and whatever assets are left can pass to the Crown as bona vacantia, ownerless property, instead of staying with you.
For someone running things remotely, this isn’t a small print risk. A struck-off company can’t hold a UK bank account, can’t process payments through Stripe or Wise, can’t operate under contracts it already signed. Getting it back requires a formal restoration process, which costs time and money with no guarantee it works. So the filing that looks like a routine box to tick is, in practice, the one standing between your company and it simply ceasing to exist.
Avoid strike-off risk.
This catches more people than anything else on this list. Silence is not confirmation. Companies House doesn’t assume “no news, good news.” If you don’t actively file, your company’s record gets treated as unverified, whether or not anything actually changed, and regardless of how pointless the deadline feels this year.
These are two separate, mandatory filings that don’t touch each other. Completing one tells Companies House nothing about the other.
Dormant companies still file both Annual Accounts (in a simplified dormant format) and a Confirmation Statement. Inactivity describes your trading status, nothing more. It’s never been treated as a shield.
Note for NRPs, worth reading even if you think it doesn’t apply to you
Missing physical mail sent to your UK registered office is not a valid excuse for missing a digital filing deadline. Companies House isn’t waiting for you to open an envelope. Both filings need to be tracked actively by you, not reacted to once a reminder finally lands on your desk. If you’re not already checking for these deadlines, you’re behind.
Let us track this for you, wherever you are.
Keeping track of two filings, on two independent clocks, from a different country and time zone, is exactly the kind of task that quietly slips through the cracks. Not because anyone’s careless, but because the whole system was never really built with remote owners in mind. That’s where a managed compliance service comes in.
Handles your financial year-end reporting to Companies House and HMRC, prepared and filed on schedule, no chasing required on your end.
Explore the Annual Accounts Filing Service →Tracks your rolling 12-month review period and files on time, no matter where you’re based.
Explore the Confirmation Statement Service →Together, they keep your company in Good Standing without you needing to set foot in the UK. Visit the Compliance Hub for the full picture of your ongoing UK filing obligations.
Or go straight to the Annual Accounts Filing Service or Confirmation Statement Service if you already know what you need.
Yes, both. There’s no way around it. Annual Accounts report how you did financially, and the Confirmation Statement checks that your official record is still accurate, so they’re covering different ground.
Annual Accounts cost nothing to file. The Confirmation Statement runs £50 online or £110 if you go by post.
You can, but it’s worth knowing what happens next, it restarts a fresh 12-month review period from whatever date you filed, which can shift your next deadline earlier than expected.
Both filings still apply. Being dormant changes what you’re reporting, not whether you need to report at all.
Somewhere between £150 and £1,500, scaling with how late you are and what type of company you run.
Exposure up to £5,000, but the real issue is what happens if you keep ignoring it, that’s when strike-off comes into play and your company gets removed from the register entirely.
Move quickly. The Confirmation Statement is the riskier of the two because it threatens whether your company legally exists at all, not just your finances. If you’re not confident sorting it out on your own, book a compliance review and let someone who deals with Companies House directly handle it for you.
Two filings, two separate deadlines, and one of them can end your company’s legal existence if left too long. You don’t need to be in the UK to stay ahead of either one.
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