Insolvency Software
Insolvency Software for Australian Practitioners
Ender is AI insolvency software built for Australian insolvency and restructuring practitioners. It runs the whole administration in one place, manages matters, creditors and statutory deadlines, drafts statutory documents from the matter's own records, and investigates voidable transactions, from appointment to dividend, with client data kept in Australia.
An insolvency administration is a large, deadline-driven body of work. A single appointment can generate hundreds of documents, dozens of statutory obligations, a register of creditors and claims, and a financial record that must be read, reconciled and reported on. Insolvency software exists to hold all of that in one structured case file so nothing is missed and every step can be evidenced later. Ender does that, and adds a layer most insolvency software does not: it reads the records and produces a first draft of the work for the practitioner to review.
What insolvency software should do
Before comparing products, it helps to be clear on what the category is for. Good insolvency software should cover the full lifecycle of an administration and remove manual, repetitive work without removing the practitioner's control.
- Case management: matters, parties, documents and the case timeline in one defensible file.
- Statutory deadlines: every hard date across an administration, tracked so obligations are met.
- Creditor and claims management: creditors, proofs of debt, meetings and communications kept on the record.
- Document preparation: statutory reports, notices and correspondence in the Australian regulatory format.
- Investigation: reading the financial record for the patterns that matter, including voidable transactions.
- Audit trail: a defensible record of what was done, when, and on what basis.
Traditional insolvency software vs AI insolvency software
Traditional insolvency software stores data and produces forms. It holds the file and prints the documents, but the practitioner still does the reading, drafting and analysis by hand. That is a large amount of skilled time spent on assembly rather than judgment.
AI insolvency software changes the starting point. Instead of an empty template, the practitioner starts from a draft. Ender reads the records already on file and assembles a first version of the statutory documents, a first view of the creditor position, and a set of transactions classified for review. The practitioner then spends their time on judgment and narrative rather than reconstruction. Every AI output is framed as a candidate for review: the software flags and drafts, and the registered practitioner forms the opinion and makes the call.
Built for the Australian regime
Insolvency work in Australia is shaped by the Corporations Act 2001 and the Bankruptcy Act 1966, and by the expectations of ASIC and the courts. Software built for the local regime fits the way practitioners actually work: ARITA-aligned documents, statutory deadlines that flow from the date of appointment, ASIC lodgements, FEG and employee entitlements, and the corporate and personal insolvency regimes side by side. Ender handles that local detail directly, rather than leaving the practitioner to bridge a generic tool to Australian practice.
From appointment to dividend
Ender follows the administration through its full life. On appointment it assembles the day-one pack and a first view of the position. As bank statements and records arrive, it reads them, classifies the transactions, and surfaces what warrants a closer look. Through the administration it tracks every statutory deadline, manages creditors and meetings, and drafts the reports and notices that fall due. At the end it supports the dividend and closure, with the whole record kept defensible from start to finish.
Voidable transaction investigation
One of the most time-consuming parts of an administration is reading the financial record for voidable transactions. Ender scans the data and flags candidates under Part 5.7B of the Corporations Act, including unfair preferences, uncommercial transactions and related-party dealings, and annotates running-account candidates on the single-ultimate-effect basis confirmed in Bryant v Badenoch. Each flagged dealing is a candidate for practitioner review, never a determination. Only a court can void a transaction.
Security and data residency
For Australian practitioners, where the data lives matters. Ender keeps client data in Australia and does not train models on it. Matters are isolated, every action is recorded in an audit trail, and outputs are grounded in the source records so they can be verified. The confidentiality demands of insolvency practice are treated as a baseline, not an add-on.
At a glance
| Ender | Traditional insolvency software | |
|---|---|---|
| Drafts statutory documents with AI | Yes | Typically manual |
| Classifies transactions with AI | Yes | Typically manual |
| Voidable transaction investigation | Yes | Manual |
| Case management and statutory deadlines | Yes | Yes |
| Built for the Australian regime | Yes | Varies |
| Australian data residency | Yes | Varies |
Frequently asked questions
What is insolvency software?
A system that helps practitioners run an administration: matters, creditors, statutory deadlines, documents and the audit trail, from appointment to dividend.
What is AI insolvency software?
Insolvency software that uses AI to draft documents, classify transactions and surface findings for the practitioner to review, rather than only storing data.
Is Ender built for Australia?
Yes. Ender is built for the Corporations Act 2001 and Bankruptcy Act 1966, corporate and personal, with data kept in Australia.
Does AI replace the practitioner's judgment?
No. Ender flags and drafts; the registered practitioner forms the opinion and makes every decision.
Ender is AI insolvency software built for Australian insolvency and restructuring practitioners.
Book a demo →