What You Can File Today (And What Still Lives in WebFiling)
Right now, you’ll find many bread‑and‑butter tasks available in the new service: confirmation statements, common changes to officers and company details, and a growing set of maintenance filings. Depending on your company type and circumstances, you may also be able to handle certain closures and updates without leaving the new interface. That said, WebFiling hasn’t vanished. Some forms—especially niche or less frequently used ones—still sit on the old platform for the moment. Accounts are a special case. Companies House is tightening standards and gradually shifting how accounts are filed, with a long‑term aim of better digital tagging and data quality. In practice, that means some accounts routes will change over time, and certain filings may move from the old templates to software or the new service as the roadmap progresses. The simplest approach today is pragmatic: start on the new “file for your company” area and see what’s supported for your specific need. If it isn’t there yet, the service will nudge you toward the right legacy route. You’ll get the job done either way.
Security, Access, and Teamwork
One of the most welcome improvements is how the new service handles people. WebFiling was built for solo operators with an authentication code in their back pocket. The new approach recognises that filing is a team sport: directors, in‑house ops, external accountants, and formation agents all need to collaborate without sharing passwords or passing around sensitive codes. With an account‑based system, you can link your profile to multiple companies and manage who can do what, reducing the old habit of emailing the auth code to half the office. There’s also better traceability. Activity sits in one place, which makes it simpler to see when something was filed and by whom. That transparency becomes much more important as reforms roll in and identity verification tightens. For many businesses, this is the nudge to formalise a simple access policy: who holds the authentication code, who is authorised to file, and how changes are reviewed before submission. The new service supports that kind of governance without making it feel heavy‑handed.
Why A House Closing Costs Calculator Matters In 2026
Closing day is exciting, but the bill that arrives with the keys can surprise even prepared buyers. A house closing costs calculator takes the mystery out of that moment by turning a fuzzy estimate into a grounded, line-by-line preview. In 2026, these tools are more practical than ever, because fees are still complicated: some are lender-controlled, some are third-party, and some are prepaid items that do not feel like fees at all. A clear estimate helps you plan cash on hand, time your move, and avoid last-minute scrambles.
What Closing Costs Include In 2026
Closing costs typically land around a few percent of the purchase price, but the mix matters more than the headline. You will see lender charges (origination, underwriting, discount points if you buy down the rate), third-party services (appraisal, credit report, title search, settlement fee), government and recording charges (transfer taxes, recording fees), and prepaid items (property taxes, homeowners insurance, and the initial escrow deposit). Each line has a purpose, and a good calculator shows which are fixed, which scale with price, and which vary with timing.
Sides, Grits, and Little Upgrades
The sides are sleeper hits. Grits are silky, especially with a pinch of salt and a pat of butter; add cheese if you want more richness. Biscuit and gravy shows up at many locations and is pure comfort—peppery, creamy, and just the right kind of messy. If you like a little kick, a drizzle of hot sauce over your grits or eggs does wonders. Bacon and sausage both do their job well; crispy bacon is easy to score if you ask, and sausage patties are classic diner-style.
Why "House of Dynamite" Feels Exactly Right
As titles go, it’s both playful and precise. A house is containment: walls, rooms, corners where moods change. Dynamite is potential: the promise that what’s inside can rearrange your landscape. Put them together and you get the essential mixtape equation—finite space, infinite feeling. You only have 60 or 90 minutes. You choose carefully, trim mercilessly, then arrange so every doorway the listener walks through hits with intention.