Efficient Repairs & Installation Ltd enters creditors' voluntary liquidation after less than five years

Efficient Repairs & Installation Ltd, a Nelson plumbing and heating contractor incorporated in June 2021, passed a resolution to wind up on 20 May 2026. Full notice and Companies House record.

Information for general guidance, drawn from the public record. Not legal, financial, or insolvency advice. If you are affected by an insolvency, consult a licensed practitioner or qualified solicitor.

Street View image of Suite 11 Bridgewater House, BB9 7TZ, Nelson, the registered office
Street View image of the registered office. © Google.

A Nelson plumbing and heating contractor incorporated in June 2021 has passed a resolution to enter creditors' voluntary liquidation. In a CVL, the insolvent company's members vote to wind it up without a court order, and a licensed insolvency practitioner is appointed to realise assets and distribute proceeds to creditors.

Efficient Repairs & Installation Ltd, registered at Suite 11 Bridgewater House, Surrey Road, Nelson, BB9 7TZ, passed the resolution on 20 May 2026, fewer than five years after it was incorporated on 8 June 2021. The company operated under SIC code 43220, covering plumbing, heat and air-conditioning installation.

The liquidator

Jamie Playford of Leading has been appointed liquidator. Playford holds IP number 9735. His role is to gather and sell the company's assets and distribute whatever is recovered to creditors in the order of priority set out in insolvency law.

The last accounts filed at Companies House were micro-entity accounts made up to 30 June 2024.

The directors

Imran Mohsin Iqbal was appointed director on 8 June 2021, the date of incorporation, and remained in post at the time of the resolution. Khurram Nazir was also appointed on 8 June 2021 but resigned on 10 September 2024, roughly eight months before the winding-up resolution was passed.

No secured charges are registered against Efficient Repairs & Installation Ltd at Companies House, so there are no secured creditors with a prior claim over the company's assets.

Creditors who believe they are owed money by Efficient Repairs & Installation Ltd should submit a proof of debt to the liquidator at Leading. A proof of debt is the formal claim form evidencing the amount owed. The London Gazette notice, published on 22 May 2026, carries the formal record of the resolution.

Common questions

Are you owed money by Efficient Repairs & Installation Limited?

In a creditors' voluntary liquidation you are an unsecured creditor unless you hold a registered charge or retention of title. The liquidators will write to known creditors with a proof-of-debt form. A statement of affairs prepared by the directors and the chair of the creditors' decision procedure should be available on request. Read more about proof of debt and where you sit in the creditor hierarchy.

Did you work at Efficient Repairs & Installation Limited?

In a CVL, employees are typically dismissed at or shortly after the liquidator's appointment. Wages owed up to a statutory cap, holiday pay, notice pay and redundancy may be claimable from the Redundancy Payments Service. The liquidators will normally provide RP1 case-reference numbers to the affected staff. See gov.uk: your rights if your employer is insolvent.

Do you hold a deposit, gift card or undelivered order from Efficient Repairs & Installation Limited?

Customers with paid-but-undelivered orders, gift cards or deposits rank as unsecured creditors in the liquidation. Where you paid by credit card and the amount was over £100, Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 may let you claim from the card issuer for breach of contract or misrepresentation by the supplier; the rules apply per item, not per transaction, and the card must be a regulated credit card. Debit-card payments may be recoverable via chargeback.

Are you a director of a company connected to Efficient Repairs & Installation Limited?

Section 216 of the Insolvency Act 1986 applies the moment the company enters liquidation. If you intend to be involved in another company using the same or a similar name within five years, you must rely on one of the three statutory exceptions and file the relevant notice. Acting in breach is a criminal offence and exposes you to personal liability for the successor's debts.

Sources

Last reviewed by James Waterton on .

AI-drafted (Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6) from The London Gazette and Companies House records, then human-reviewed by James Waterton before publication. See our methodology and editorial standards.

Sourced from official UK records under the Open Government Licence. Information for general guidance, not legal advice.