Oxfordshire Travel Limited Enters Creditors’ Voluntary Liquidation
Oxfordshire Travel Limited, a company operating in the passenger land transport sector, has entered creditors’ voluntary liquidation (CVL). The formal process began on October 30, 2025, with the appointment of a licensed liquidator on the same date, as confirmed by the insolvency section of the UK’s Companies House registry.
This type of liquidation is initiated by a company’s directors when they conclude the business cannot continue trading and meet its debts. The directors’ decision to wind up the company leads to the appointment of a liquidator, whose role is to realise the company’s assets and distribute the proceeds to creditors in accordance with the legally defined priority of claims.
Address Change and Business Classification
An notable administrative shift preceded the liquidation. Late in 2024, the company’s registered office address changed from Yarnton, near Kidlington in Oxfordshire, to Tugby in Leicestershire. This geographical move is documented in the company’s public filings.
The address changed from Oxfordshire to Leicestershire.
The official company classification, as listed on its public record, is “other passenger land transport.” This categorisation places the firm within the broader coach, private hire, and tour operator landscape, distinct from rail, aviation, or package holiday businesses.
Furthermore, the company held a valid UK Value Added Tax (VAT) registration under the same name. This indicates that its trading turnover had reached the threshold requiring formal VAT accounting and submission, confirming a level of commercial activity prior to the insolvency event.
Sector Context and Current Status
The liquidation of Oxfordshire Travel Limited is now recorded on sector-specific insolvency lists and trade round-ups covering businesses that entered formal winding-up processes in late 2025. Credit protection and insolvency monitoring services have included the company among dozens of enterprises that underwent voluntary liquidation in November 2025.
As is standard in the early stages of a CVL, no detailed statement of affairs—the comprehensive document outlining assets, liabilities, and creditor details—has been published beyond the mandatory filings at Companies House. The official public record also shows no further statement or comment from the company’s directors regarding the reasons for the insolvency or the winding-up process.
Stakeholders, including creditors, are advised to monitor the official case file on the Companies House website for future updates, including the submission of the liquidator’s final account and the eventual dissolution of the company.
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