More than 55,000 UK firms in severe distress, research shows


More than 55,000 UK companies are in serious financial distress and in danger of collapse without improvement over the coming year, according to research.

Experts have warned that the upcoming autumn Budget โ€œmust deliver urgent support to avoid a wave of failuresโ€, particularly among small businesses.

The latest quarterly Red Flag Alert report by Begbies Traynor has revealed a 78% jump in the number of firms in โ€œcriticalโ€ financial distress to 55,530 in the third quarter of 2025, compared with a year earlier.

It said this also represented a 12.6% jump against the quarter to June, showing a sharply worsening situation for more than 6,000 businesses.

Consumer-facing businesses have come under particular threat in recent months, as they face pressure from rising labour costs and an uptick in inflation.

The data showed there was a 96.7% jump in leisure and cultural firms in a โ€œcriticalโ€ situations, with a 92.5% rise in hotels and accommodation, and 85.6% rise for retailers.

Begbies Traynor also found that the number of firms in โ€œsignificantโ€ financial distress increased by 14.8% year-on-year to 726,594 for the latest quarter.

It comes amid fears that the Chancellor Rachel Reeves could turn to tax increases to help address the fiscal black hole in the UKโ€™s state finances.

Julie Palmer, partner at Begbies Traynor, said the woes of many UK businesses โ€œshows the UK economy is in real troubleโ€.

She added: โ€œWith over 55,000 companies now in serious financial distress, the upcoming Budget must deliver urgent support to avoid a wave of failures, especially among SMEs already operating on a knife edge.

โ€œUnfortunately for UK businesses, inflation is going nowhere, putting further pressure on companies at a time when wage, tax, and financing costs are already high.

โ€œMany firms have no room to manoeuvre, and instead of investing for growth, are scaling back just to survive โ€“ the opposite of what the economy needs, if itโ€™s going to recover and grow.โ€

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