A side-by-side look at the UK tools that actually send alerts when Companies House filings change — accounts, director appointments, PSC updates, charges, and insolvency events — and which ones cover the London Gazette.
A young limited company has asked for open-account terms. This 10-point checklist covers exactly what to check on Companies House, what the red flags mean, and how to structure the deal if you decide to proceed.
Companies House shows a director's name and role at the company you're looking at. The risky information sits one search away, on their appointment history. Here's how to check a UK director properly in under five minutes.
Companies House's free email alerts don't tell you when a company you're owed money by begins dissolving. Here's every option available in 2026, what each one catches, and how to build a full alert pipeline yourself.
A practical comparison of UK business credit monitoring tools — what each one covers, what most of them miss, and how to choose the right one for ongoing supplier and debtor risk management.
The warning signs that a company is in trouble are sitting in plain sight on Companies House. The problem isn't access to the data. It's that the data tells you nothing on its own.
Vigil monitors Companies House and the London Gazette for companies and directors you care about, then tells you what changed and what it means. Here's how the product works.
Most businesses only discover a supplier is in trouble when it's too late — a missed delivery, a bounced payment, or a phone that goes unanswered. Here's how to read the warning signs much earlier.