# Companies House Digital Transformation 2026: What Every Company Secretary Needs to Know Now **Category:** COMPANY-SECRETARIAL **Author:** AI Assistant **Published:** 2026-05-15 **Read Time:** 6 min read ## Summary Companies House is overhauling its digital systems under ECCTA. Identity verification, new filing requirements, and software-only submissions are coming. Here is what your company secretary function needs to prepare. From £49/month. ## Full Content # Companies House Digital Transformation 2026: What Every Company Secretary Needs to Know Now **Companies House is in the middle of the biggest overhaul in its 180-year history. The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act (ECCTA) is not just another regulatory tweak. It fundamentally changes how UK companies file, who verifies identities, and what happens when you get it wrong.** If your company secretary function is still operating on "file the confirmation statement once a year and forget about it," you are about to have a very uncomfortable conversation with your board. Here is what is changing, what has already changed, and what you need to do about it. ## What ECCTA Is Actually Doing to Companies House ECCTA, which received Royal Assent in October 2023, gives Companies House powers it has never had before. This is not gradual. It is transformational. The changes are being rolled out in phases through 2025 and 2026, and the pace is accelerating. ### The Big Changes Already Live **Identity verification for directors and PSCs.** Every new director appointed after the implementation date must verify their identity through Companies House. Existing directors will need to verify within a transition period. This is not optional. Failure to verify will result in offences and potential removal. **New powers to query and reject filings.** Companies House can now reject filings it considers inconsistent, incomplete, or potentially fraudulent. The old model, where Companies House was a passive recipient of whatever you filed, is dead. **Registered email addresses.** Every company must provide a registered email address to Companies House. This becomes the official channel for statutory communications. ### What Is Coming in 2026 **Software-only filing for most document types.** Companies House is moving toward a model where most filings must be submitted through approved software, not paper forms. This mirrors HMRC's Making Tax Digital programme. If your company secretary still prints and posts forms, that option is disappearing. **Enhanced accounts filing.** New requirements for tagging financial data in accounts filed at Companies House. This is designed to make corporate financial data machine-readable and analysable. **Cross-referencing with other registers.** Companies House will cross-reference filed data with HMRC, the Land Registry, and other government databases. Inconsistencies will be flagged automatically. **Shareholder information requirements.** New obligations to disclose shareholder information beyond the current PSC regime. The details are still being finalised, but the direction is clear: more transparency, not less. ## Why This Matters for Your Business (Not Just Your Filing) The temptation is to treat ECCTA as a compliance burden. File the new forms. Verify the identities. Move on. That misses the strategic implications. ### 1. Late or Non-Compliant Filing Now Has Real Consequences Under the old regime, Companies House had limited enforcement power. Late filings attracted modest penalties. Inaccurate filings were rarely challenged. ECCTA changes this. Companies House now has: - Power to impose financial penalties for non-compliance (beyond the existing late filing penalties) - Ability to annotate the register with warnings about companies - Authority to share information with law enforcement - Powers to strike off companies more efficiently For directors, the personal liability exposure has increased. A director who fails to ensure timely and accurate filings is committing an offence. This is not theoretical. Companies House has publicly stated that it intends to use its new powers actively. ### 2. Your Company's Public Record Is Now a Trust Signal Clients, investors, lenders, and partners check Companies House. They always have. But with enhanced data quality, cross-referencing, and machine-readable accounts, the register becomes a more powerful signal of corporate health. A clean, up-to-date Companies House profile says: "This business takes governance seriously." Inconsistencies, late filings, or missing identity verifications say the opposite. In competitive situations, in lending decisions, in M&A due diligence, your Companies House record matters more than it used to. ### 3. The Volume of Filing Obligations Is Increasing ECCTA does not just change how you file. It adds to what you file. Identity verification data. Registered email address updates. Enhanced shareholder information. New confirmation statement content. For a group with multiple subsidiaries, the filing volume is increasing materially. If your company secretary function is already stretched, it is about to be overwhelmed. ## What Your Company Secretary Function Needs to Do Now ### Step 1: Audit Your Current Compliance Posture Start with the basics: - Are all your entities up to date with confirmation statements? - Are all current directors correctly recorded? - Is your PSC register accurate and current? - Have you identified which directors and PSCs need identity verification? - Do you have a registered email address for each company? If any of these answers is "I think so" rather than "definitely yes," you have work to do. ### Step 2: Build an Identity Verification Plan Identity verification is the most operationally complex of the ECCTA changes. Every director and PSC needs to go through the process. For companies with multiple entities and numerous directors, this is a project, not a task. Plan for: - Communicating requirements to all affected individuals - Managing the verification process (including overseas directors who may face different verification routes) - Tracking completion and following up on non-compliance - Handling changes (new appointments, resignations) within the verified framework ### Step 3: Prepare for Digital-Only Filing If your company secretary still uses paper forms or manual processes: - Evaluate software solutions that support Companies House API filing - Ensure your record-keeping systems can produce the data required for electronic submissions - Train relevant staff on new filing workflows - Build quality assurance checks to catch errors before submission (because Companies House will now reject filings that do not meet its standards) ### Step 4: Connect Filing to Governance ECCTA makes it clear that corporate filing is a governance function, not an administrative one. Your board needs to: - Understand the new obligations and the consequences of non-compliance - Receive regular updates on filing status across all group entities - Approve governance procedures for identity verification and data quality - Treat Companies House compliance as a standing board agenda item ## How Simplif-i Automates the Heavy Lifting The challenge with ECCTA is not understanding what needs to be done. It is doing it consistently, across multiple entities, without it consuming your entire company secretary function. **Simplif-i's Company Secretary module is built for this:** - **Filing deadline tracker.** Every statutory deadline for every entity in your group. Automated alerts with escalation. No more missed confirmation statements. - **Director and PSC register.** Digital, searchable, audit-ready. Track identity verification status for every individual. Flag when new appointments need verification. - **Board governance support.** Agenda templates that include ECCTA compliance as standard. Resolution tracking. Minute storage with version control. - **Multi-entity management.** One dashboard for your entire group. See compliance status across all subsidiaries at a glance. - **Connected to GRC.** Filing obligations feed into your governance risk register. Non-compliance is a risk, and it should be treated like one. **Pricing:** Company Secretary module from £49/month. Full COO in a Box platform: £149/month founding member pricing. For a group managing five or more entities, the time saved on filing coordination alone pays for the platform in the first month. ## The Clock Is Ticking ECCTA implementation is not a future event. It is happening now. Identity verification requirements are live. Filing standards are tightening. Enforcement powers are active. The companies that prepare now will navigate the transition smoothly. The companies that wait will discover the new penalties firsthand. Do not be the company secretary who explains to the board why they received a Companies House enforcement notice because "we were going to get round to it." **Start your free trial at simplif-i.com. 7 days. Full access. No credit card.** --- Source: https://simplif-i.com/api/blog/readable/company-secretarial/companies-house-digital-transformation-2026-company-secretary Web Version: https://simplif-i.com/blog/company-secretarial/companies-house-digital-transformation-2026-company-secretary © Simplif-i - Unified Business Management Platform