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    Global Insolvencies Hit Record in 2026

    Sarah Lindberg• International Operations LeadMarch 26, 20265 min read
    global insolvency 2026business failures recordcommercial debt recoveryinsolvency riskaccounts receivable protectionUK construction insolvencyinternational debt collectioncredit risk management
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    Global Insolvencies Hit Record in 2026

    Five Years Running. No Sign of Stopping.

    24%

    Increase above pre-pandemic global insolvency averages

    Fifth Year

    2026 marks half a decade of consecutive rising business failures globally.

    2.1 Million

    Estimated total number of jobs currently at risk due to corporate insolvency acceleration.

    Structural Shift

    CFOs must treat this as a permanent market recalibration rather than a temporary economic correction.

    The Geography of Failure

    38%

    Year-to-date insolvency surge recorded in Italy

    The US & China

    Forecasted rises of 8% and 10% respectively drive the bulk of global risk exposure for 2026.

    Germany

    Anticipating 24,800 cases, a decade-high level reflecting deep-seated financial pressure in the EU's largest economy.

    Switzerland

    Unexpected 26% increase highlights that even traditional safe havens are susceptible to the current failure wave.

    The United Kingdom: Construction Leads the Collapse

    17%

    Total share of UK insolvencies attributed to the construction sector

    3,912 Firms

    The number of UK construction entities entering formal insolvency over the last 12-month reporting cycle.

    Critical Distress

    Nearly 7,000 firms are currently classified in critical financial danger, suggesting further collapses are imminent.

    7% Lift

    February figures showed a sharp month-on-month increase in liquidations and administrations across the UK.

    Three Structural Risks That Will Not Fade

    The Growth Gap

    Current economic expansion is failing to meet the minimum thresholds required to stabilize business integrity. With the US at 1.6% and the Eurozone at 0.9%, both economies fall significantly short of the GDP growth needed to offset rising costs. This gap results in diminished pricing power and eroded margins, forcing vulnerable firms to prioritize debt over supplier payments.

    The Financing Divide

    25bps

    Small rate hikes that could trigger an extra 4-5% rise in global failures

    SME Vulnerability

    Unlike large caps with cash reserves, SMEs are struggling with floating-rate bank debt and thin liquidity buffers.

    The Quiet Drowning

    Mid-market debtors often appear stable until an investigation reveals an unmanageable debt-service burden.

    New Business Fragility

    The post-pandemic surge in business formation has created a "backlog of vulnerability." While high startup rates are often viewed positively, these younger entities lack the capital reserves to withstand sustained high-interest environments. In jurisdictions like Portugal and Belgium, new business formation has outpaced bankruptcies, creating a high-density pool of fragile firms that increases systemic trade credit risk.

    What This Means for Your Receivables

    Timing

    : Recovery windows close the moment an insolvency practitioner is appointed.

    Jurisdiction

    : International recoveries face varying creditor hierarchies and legal timelines across borders.

    Visibility

    : Regular credit reviews are no longer optional for firms operating in high-risk sectors like retail or automotive.

    Acting Before the Statistics Catch Up

    Early Action

    The primary differentiator between debt recovery and total write-offs

    Shorten Terms

    Limit exposure by reducing payment windows for high-risk geographies and sectors.

    Review Concentration

    Identify and mitigate dependency on debtors within the construction or service industries.

    Immediate Recovery

    Initiate collections for overdue accounts now rather than waiting for standard quarterly cycles.

    Sources

    Allianz Trade — The Fifth Consecutive Year: Global Insolvencies Set to Hit a Record High Through 2026

    Allianz Trade — Three Structural Risks That Will Keep Business Insolvencies High in 2026

    Allianz Research — Global Insolvency Outlook 2026-27

    Coface — Global Insolvency Outlook 2026: Business Insolvencies Expected to Increase by 2.8% Worldwide

    UK Insolvency Service — Company Insolvency Statistics February 2026

    Creditsafe — Monthly Business Insolvency Figures 2026

    CRIF — Corporate Insolvencies in Germany 2025-2026

    Sarah Lindberg

    Sarah Lindberg

    International Operations Lead

    Sarah coordinates our global partner network across 160+ countries, ensuring seamless cross-border debt recovery.

    Need country-specific next steps?

    Get jurisdiction-specific guidance for your international debt recovery case.

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