What “strike off” really means (and when to use it)
Striking off is the simplest way to close a UK limited company that you no longer need. You apply to Companies House to remove the company from the register; if no one objects, it’s dissolved and ceases to exist. Think of it as an administrative goodbye rather than a formal liquidation. It’s ideal when the company has stopped trading, has no debts it can’t pay, and has no plans for future activity. If you still have significant assets, complex contracts, staff, or outstanding disputes, strike off may not be the right tool—an insolvency process or a members’ voluntary liquidation (MVL) could be a better fit. Striking off is faster and cheaper than other routes, but it comes with obligations: you must be eligible, notify the right people, settle taxes and creditors, and make sure all assets are dealt with before dissolution. Done properly, it’s a clean, low‑stress wrap‑up. Done poorly, it can prompt objections, delays, or even restoration of the company later, which is hassle you can avoid with a bit of planning.
Step 1: Check you’re eligible
Before you touch the form, make sure you meet the Companies Act criteria. Your company must have stopped trading for at least three months; it must not have changed its name in that time; and it must not be subject to insolvency proceedings or have entered into arrangements with creditors. You also shouldn’t have disposed of property or stock for value during the three-month window (beyond settling normal costs to wind down). If you have outstanding debts that you can’t pay, or if creditors are already circling, strike off isn’t appropriate—look at a creditors’ voluntary liquidation instead. Also check there are no ongoing legal actions and no outstanding charges that would trip an objection. A quick self‑audit helps: are all invoices issued and collected, suppliers paid, payrolls and pensions closed, and taxes up to date? If the answer to any of these is “not yet,” handle those items first. Eligibility isn’t about clever form-filling; it’s about substance.
Shape Rooms, Light, and Flow
Now add scale and behavior. Proportion matters as much as square footage. Long, narrow rooms feel tight; compact, well-proportioned rooms feel calm. Ensure furniture fits with comfortable circulation around it. Place doors so they do not collide with key furniture or each other. Aim for short, generous paths rather than endless hallways. Think about how people move: a kid racing from the backyard to the fridge, a guest finding the bathroom, you carrying laundry or groceries. Design for those arcs, and you’ll reduce friction in daily life.
When Hours Don’t Match Reality: What To Do
Every now and then, you’ll find a location that says “Open 24 hours” online, but the lights are dim or the door is locked. Don’t assume the worst—it could be a short-staffed hour, a fire inspection, or a deep clean. Check for a note on the door with a return time. If you’re still determined, call the number on the listing; a voice on the line can confirm whether they’re reopening soon or if you should head to the next nearest shop.
Craving Hashbrowns? Here’s How To Check Hours Today
When you’re hungry for a buttery waffle and scattered, smothered hashbrowns, the first question is simple: is the Waffle House near me open right now? Many locations are famously 24/7, but not every store runs the exact same schedule every single day. The fastest way to verify waffle house hours today near me is to do a quick map search on your phone. Type the restaurant’s name plus “near me,” then tap the closest pin. Look for “Open now,” “Open 24 hours,” or a closing time under the name. If you see a specific closing time, that store isn’t true 24/7 today.
So What Does A House of Dynamite Poster Cost?
Because the title crosses categories, think in scenarios. If you are looking at a modern open-edition digital print with "House of Dynamite" styling, expect something like 20 to 75 dollars depending on size and paper. A limited screen print (say, 100 to 250 copies) from a known artist that sold out on release might trade in the 150 to 400 dollar range, with variant colorways or artist proofs nudging higher. If the artist is hot and the edition is tiny, secondary-market spikes can hit the mid-hundreds quickly, then cool after a year.