Personal Insolvency and Bankruptcy Lawyers Brisbane
Specialist dispute lawyers for individuals and creditors. Brisbane-based. Acting nationally.
Personal insolvency is a high-stakes legal process. Whether you have been served with a bankruptcy notice, are facing a creditor’s petition in the Federal Court, or you need to understand your options before financial pressure escalates further, the advice you get now shapes everything that follows.
Boyle Litigation acts for individuals in serious financial difficulty, creditors pursuing enforcement, and insolvency practitioners who require litigation support. Our focus is commercial litigation only. We bring the same strategic clarity to insolvency disputes that we bring to every contested matter we run.
Time is almost always a factor. If you have received formal insolvency documents, do not wait.
When You Should Be Talking to Us
People come to us at different stages of the insolvency process. If any of the following applies, the right move is immediate legal advice.
- You have received a bankruptcy notice
- A trustee in bankruptcy is investigating your affairs
- A creditor has filed or threatened a creditor's petition
- You need to propose a Personal Insolvency Agreement
- You are in default under a judgment debt
- You are a creditor seeking to enforce a debt or judgment
- You are weighing up voluntary bankruptcy
- You are an insolvency practitioner requiring litigation support
- You want to challenge or annul a bankruptcy
- Complex assets, trusts, or cross-border issues are involved
What We Do
Boyle Litigation handles the full range of personal insolvency and bankruptcy matters, acting for debtors, creditors, and insolvency practitioners.
- Acting for Individuals Facing Insolvency
- Advising on all options under the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth), including formal bankruptcy, Personal Insolvency Agreements, and debt agreements
- Responding to and contesting bankruptcy notices and creditor's petitions
- Setting aside or annulling bankruptcy orders
- Negotiating with creditors to avoid formal insolvency proceedings
- Advising on the effect of bankruptcy on assets, income, employment, and directorships
- Acting in examinations and investigations by trustees in bankruptcy
- Advising on asset protection strategies and pre-insolvency planning
Acting for Creditors
- Preparing and serving statutory demands and bankruptcy notices
- Commencing creditor's petitions in the Federal Court
- Enforcing judgments through bankruptcy proceedings
- Advising on proof of debt and creditor rights in administrations
- Acting in contested hearings on creditor's petitions
Acting for Insolvency Practitioners
- Litigation support for trustees in bankruptcy investigating voidable transactions
- Unfair preference and uncommercial transaction claims
- Director duty breaches and insolvent trading disputes
- Asset recovery and enforcement proceedings
- Examinations and coercive process under the Bankruptcy Act
- PPSA and security interest disputes in insolvency contexts
Your Options Under the Bankruptcy Act 1966
Serious misconduct allegations, workplace investigations, and the litigation that follows can expose businesses to significant liability. We advise on the legal dimensions of investigation processes and act in disputes arising from them.
1. Bankruptcy
Voluntary (debtor’s petition) or involuntary (sequestration order on a creditor’s petition). Generally lasts 3 years. Trustee in bankruptcy takes control of divisible assets. Significant consequences for income, employment, travel, and credit. Can be discharged earlier in limited circumstances.
2. Personal Insolvency Agreement (PIA)
A formal arrangement proposed by the debtor to creditors. Can involve asset contributions not otherwise available in bankruptcy. No income or asset thresholds apply. Requires creditor acceptance. More flexible than a debt agreement. Suitable for higher-value or more complex personal insolvency situations.
3. Debt Agreement
A binding arrangement between a debtor and creditors for reduced or deferred repayment. Subject to income, asset, and debt thresholds. Not available to those with prior insolvency administrations in the last 10 years. Less expensive and complex than a PIA, but more limited in application.
Which option is available to you, and which is the right strategic choice, depends on your specific circumstances. We help you understand the full picture before any decision is made.
Critical Timelines You Need to Know
21 Days: The Bankruptcy Notice Deadline
If you receive a bankruptcy notice, you have 21 days to pay the debt, reach a negotiated outcome, or take steps to set aside the notice. Failure to act within 21 days constitutes an act of bankruptcy, which can then be used as the basis for a creditor’s petition. This deadline is strict. Do not wait.
- Other critical timeframes include:
- Creditor's petition: served and then heard in the Federal Court, typically within a short period of filing
- Annulment applications: must be made promptly after a sequestration order is made
- Voidable transaction claims by trustees: subject to statutory limitation periods that vary by claim type
- Setting aside a statutory demand: 21 days from service
Who We Act For
Creditors
Creditors Issuing bankruptcy notices, commencing petitions, conducting contested hearings, enforcing judgments, and advising on recovery prospects before taking formal steps.
Insolvency Practitioners
Litigation support for trustees in bankruptcy pursuing asset recovery, voidable transactions, examinations, and related disputes. Clean reporting. Commercial advice on funding and prospects.
Why Boyle Litigation
We are a specialist commercial litigation firm. Personal insolvency sits squarely within our practice, not as an add-on, but as a core area of dispute work.
- Specialist only. Litigation and disputes is all we do. You get undivided focus and genuine expertise.
- Strategic from day one. We think about the end position before we take the first step. Insolvency proceedings move quickly; the strategy matters from the outset.
- Decisive when urgency requires it. Bankruptcy notices, creditor's petitions, and trustee investigations all move on tight timelines. We do too.
- Discreet by design. Financial difficulty is sensitive. We handle every matter with care, confidentiality, and professionalism.
- National reach from a Brisbane base. We act for clients in Queensland, interstate, and in cross-border insolvency matters.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a bankruptcy notice and what should I do if I receive one?
A bankruptcy notice is a formal document that requires you to pay a judgment debt (currently $10,000 or more) within 21 days. Failure to pay within that period is an act of bankruptcy, which a creditor can then use as the basis for a creditor’s petition in the Federal Court. If you receive a bankruptcy notice, you should obtain legal advice immediately. Options include paying the debt, negotiating with the creditor, applying to the Federal Court to set aside the notice, or considering formal insolvency options. The 21-day deadline is critical.
What is the difference between a Personal Insolvency Agreement and a debt agreement?
Both are formal alternatives to bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth), but they differ in important ways. A Personal Insolvency Agreement (PIA) is available to any insolvent debtor regardless of income, asset, or debt levels. It is more flexible and can involve contributions from third parties not available in bankruptcy. A debt agreement is subject to income, asset, and debt thresholds and is not available if you have had a prior insolvency administration in the last 10 years. The right option depends on your specific financial position and the nature of your debts.
Can I challenge a creditor's petition for bankruptcy?
Yes. A creditor’s petition must comply with strict procedural requirements, and there are a number of grounds on which it can be contested. These include challenging whether the underlying debt is genuinely owed, whether the bankruptcy notice was properly served, whether there is a counter-claim or dispute that reduces or extinguishes the debt, and whether it would be just and equitable for the court to make a sequestration order. Contested petitions are litigated in the Federal Court of Australia. Legal advice should be obtained as soon as you are served.
What assets can a trustee in bankruptcy access?
When a person is made bankrupt, a trustee in bankruptcy takes control of their divisible property. This generally includes most assets owned at the time of bankruptcy or acquired during the bankruptcy period. However, certain assets are protected, including a vehicle up to a threshold value, tools of trade up to a threshold, certain superannuation interests, and essential household items. The trustee also has the power to investigate and recover certain pre-bankruptcy transactions, including unfair preferences and transfers at undervalue. The specific position depends on the individual’s circumstances, and legal advice is important before any steps are taken.
How long does bankruptcy last in Australia?
Bankruptcy generally lasts for 3 years from the date the bankrupt files a Statement of Affairs, provided the trustee does not object to discharge. If the trustee objects (for example, where the bankrupt has not cooperated with the administration), the bankruptcy period can be extended to 5 or 8 years. During the bankruptcy period, the bankrupt is subject to income contribution obligations, travel restrictions, and limits on holding directorships or certain professional licences.
Can a bankruptcy be annulled?
Yes, in certain circumstances. A bankruptcy can be annulled if all debts and costs are paid in full, if a creditors’ resolution accepts a composition or arrangement, or if the court is satisfied that a sequestration order ought not to have been made. Annulment applications are made to the Federal Court. They require careful preparation and are not straightforward. If you believe there are grounds to challenge your bankruptcy, you should seek legal advice promptly.
Do you act nationally, not just in Queensland?
Yes. Boyle Litigation is based in Brisbane and acts for clients across Queensland, interstate, and in matters with national or cross-border dimensions. Personal insolvency proceedings in Australia are governed by federal law and are conducted in the Federal Court of Australia, which sits in all states and territories.
Your dispute. Our battle.
Confidential advice. Decisive action. Direct access from day one.