You discover your business partner is making decisions that put the company at risk. Or maybe it’s a family member on the board who’s become impossible to work with. The question hits you: can shareholders actually remove a director without their consent?
The short answer is yes, but the path forward depends entirely on your company structure, governing documents, and whether you can muster the votes. More importantly, it depends on whether you can navigate the process without triggering a bigger dispute.
Can you confidently answer these three questions right now: What type of company do you have? What does your constitution say about director removal? And do you have the voting power to make it happen?
If you can’t, you’re not alone. Most business owners assume the law gives them straightforward power to remove directors. The reality is more nuanced.
Key Takeaways
- Proprietary companies: Shareholders can remove directors by ordinary resolution (more than 50% of votes) under the Corporations Act‘s replaceable rules
- Public companies: Removal requires special notice (at least 2 months) and cannot be overridden by the company constitution
- Your constitution matters: It can make removal easier or harder than the statutory defaults, so check it before acting
- Equal shareholdings create deadlocks: 50/50 splits often require your shareholders’ agreement to provide a resolution pathway
- Process compliance is critical: Poor meeting procedures or inadequate notice can invalidate the removal and trigger legal disputes
- Post-removal complications: Consider share ownership, replacement directors, and potential claims before you vote
The Statutory Framework: What the Law Actually Says
The Corporations Act gives shareholders the power to remove directors, but the rules vary dramatically based on your company type.
For proprietary companies, which covers most Australian businesses, section 203C provides the basic mechanism. Shareholders can remove a director by ordinary resolution. That means more than 50% of the votes cast at a properly convened meeting.
But here’s what most guides miss: this is a replaceable rule.
Your company constitution can modify, restrict, or even eliminate this power entirely. If your constitution requires unanimous consent for director removal, or sets a higher voting threshold, those rules override the statutory defaults.
For public companies, section 203D takes a harder line. Shareholders retain removal power, but the director must receive at least two months’ written notice. More critically, the company constitution cannot restrict this power, the law protects directors in public companies from surprise removals.
The Corporations Act sets the baseline, but your constitution writes the actual rules. Don’t assume you know your removal powers without reading both documents.
Proprietary Companies: The Shareholder Resolution Path
Most Australian businesses operate as proprietary companies, where the removal process hinges on your constitution and shareholder dynamics.
When the Replaceable Rules Apply
If your company adopted the replaceable rules (or has a constitution that mirrors them), removing a director requires:
- Calling a meeting with proper notice (typically 21 days minimum)
- Ensuring quorum requirements are met
- Passing an ordinary resolution (more than 50% of votes cast)
- Filing the change with ASIC within 28 days
Sounds straightforward? It can be, if you control the majority of votes and the director doesn’t mount a defence.
But consider this scenario: you own 60% of the shares in a family company, and you want to remove your co-director sibling who owns the remaining 40%. The law is on your side, but have you thought about whether they’ll challenge the meeting’s validity? Whether they’ll claim breach of their employment contract? Whether they’ll demand you buy their shares at a premium?
How Your Constitution Can Change Everything
Your constitution might impose additional requirements that make removal more complex:
- Higher voting thresholds (say, 75% instead of 51%)
- Specific notice periods beyond the statutory minimums
- Requirements for multiple meetings or cooling-off periods
- Restrictions on who can call removal meetings
Alternatively, your constitution might make removal easier by allowing written resolutions or reducing notice periods.
The critical step: pull your constitution and read the director appointment and removal clauses before you do anything else. If you can’t find your constitution, request it from your company secretary or download it from ASIC Connect.
Many constitutions contain dispute resolution clauses that require mediation or arbitration before director removal. Check these provisions early, ignoring them can invalidate your entire process.
Public Companies: Stronger Protections and Stricter Process
If you’re dealing with a public company, the rules tighten significantly in favour of director protection.
The Two-Month Notice Requirement
Section 203D mandates that any director facing removal must receive at least two months’ written notice before the meeting. This isn’t just courtesy, it’s a legal requirement that cannot be waived or shortened by your constitution.
The notice must:
- Identify the specific resolution to remove the director
- State the reasons for the proposed removal
- Give the director reasonable opportunity to respond at the meeting
Why Public Company Rules Are Different
The law recognises that public company directors often have professional reputations and career interests beyond their shareholding. The extended notice period allows them to:
- Prepare their defence and potentially negotiate an exit
- Arrange their affairs if removal seems inevitable
- Seek legal advice about potential claims
If you’re a major shareholder in a public company planning director removal, factor this two-month timeline into your strategy. Quick removals aren’t possible, and the director will have ample time to mount a counter-strategy.
When the Board Cannot Act
Unlike proprietary companies, public company boards have no power to remove fellow directors under section 203E. Only shareholders can initiate removal, regardless of what the constitution says.
This prevents boards from removing troublesome directors without shareholder oversight, a protection that doesn’t exist in the proprietary company context.
In public companies, director removal is exclusively a shareholder power. Boards cannot circumvent this protection, even with unanimous votes from remaining directors.
Your Company Constitution: The Real Rulebook
Most removal attempts succeed or fail based on what’s written in the company constitution, not the Corporations Act’s default rules.
Common Constitutional Variations
Your constitution might include provisions that:
Make removal easier:
- Allow removal by written resolution without a meeting
- Permit removal with shorter notice periods
- Set lower quorum requirements for removal meetings
- Give certain share classes enhanced voting rights on director matters
Make removal harder:
- Require unanimous or supermajority votes (75%, 90%)
- Mandate multiple meetings or staged voting processes
- Restrict who can propose director removal resolutions
- Require independent reasons or good cause for removal
When Constitutions Conflict with Shareholder Agreements
Here’s where things get legally messy. Your shareholders’ agreement might contain director removal provisions that conflict with your constitution.
For example, your constitution might allow removal by ordinary resolution, but your shareholders’ agreement requires unanimous consent. Which document controls?
Generally, shareholders’ agreements bind the shareholders personally, while the constitution binds the company. If there’s a conflict, you might need to comply with both, satisfying the constitutional requirements to validly remove the director from the company’s perspective, while avoiding breach of the shareholders’ agreement that could trigger damages claims.
The Replaceable Rules Trap
Many Australian companies adopted the replaceable rules without fully understanding their implications. If your company has no constitution, or your constitution states that the replaceable rules apply, then section 203C gives shareholders straightforward removal power.
But here’s the trap: replaceable rules can be modified by special resolution at any time. If relationships are deteriorating, a strategic shareholder might try to change the removal rules before you can use them.
Consider whether your current shareholder dynamics allow someone to modify the constitution against your interests. If so, act quickly or negotiate protective provisions.
If you’re planning director removal in a company with replaceable rules, check whether anyone has filed recent special resolutions with ASIC that might have changed the removal process.
Calling the Meeting: Notice, Quorum and Voting Essentials
Getting the legal technicalities right often determines whether your removal attempt succeeds or creates a bigger dispute.
Meeting Notice Requirements
Your constitution (or the replaceable rules) will specify minimum notice periods, but consider giving longer notice if:
- The director might negotiate an exit if given time to consider
- You want to demonstrate procedural fairness if disputes arise later
- Complex share structures require time for shareholders to consider their position
The notice must clearly state that director removal is on the agenda. Generic notices about “company business” won’t suffice if challenged later.
Quorum Considerations
Many removal attempts fail because insufficient shareholders attend the meeting to constitute quorum. Check your constitution’s quorum requirements early, and confirm attendance before scheduling.
In companies with dispersed shareholdings, consider whether you need to:
- Coordinate with other shareholders to ensure attendance
- Allow proxy voting to meet quorum requirements
- Schedule multiple meetings if initial attempts fail
The Voting Process
Assuming you meet notice and quorum requirements, the actual vote is typically straightforward. But consider these practical issues:
Vote counting: Who will act as scrutineer? If the removal is contentious, appoint an independent person to count votes and avoid disputes.
Proxy voting: Check whether your constitution allows proxy votes and whether shareholders have submitted valid proxy forms.
Share class rights: Some share structures give different voting rights on director matters. Confirm you understand which shares can vote and their relative weightings.
What Happens If the Director Attends
Directors facing removal have the right to speak at the meeting and defend their position. They might:
- Challenge the meeting’s validity on procedural grounds
- Present their side of any disputes that led to the removal motion
- Propose alternative solutions like mediation or negotiated exit
- Warn shareholders about potential legal consequences
Don’t be surprised if the meeting becomes heated. Have a clear agenda and chairperson who can maintain order while respecting everyone’s rights.
Procedural compliance isn’t just legal box-ticking. Poor meeting management often escalates disputes and gives removed directors grounds to challenge the entire process.
Handling Deadlocks and Equal Shareholdings
The trickiest removal scenarios involve 50/50 shareholder splits or other equal shareholding arrangements where no party has voting control.
When Standard Removal Rules Don’t Work
If you and your business partner each own 50% of the shares, ordinary resolution voting won’t remove either director. You need either:
- Constitutional provisions that break deadlocks (casting votes, independent arbitration)
- Shareholders’ agreement mechanisms that override equal voting
- Negotiated exits rather than contested removals
Common Deadlock Resolution Mechanisms
Well-drafted shareholders’ agreements often include:
Casting vote provisions: One party gets an additional vote on specified matters, including director removal.
Independent arbitration: Deadlocks get resolved by pre-agreed independent arbitrators who can order director removal.
Shotgun clauses: Either party can trigger a buy-sell mechanism that effectively removes the other from the company.
Mediation requirements: Mandatory alternative dispute resolution before any removal attempts.
The Danger of Acting Without Clear Authority
If your shareholders’ agreement requires specific deadlock resolution processes, jumping straight to a removal meeting can breach the agreement even if you follow the Corporations Act requirements.
The breaching party might face:
- Damages for breach of shareholders’ agreement
- Injunctions preventing the removal from taking effect
- Costs orders if disputes proceed to litigation
Always read your shareholders’ agreement alongside your constitution before planning removal strategies.
When Negotiation Becomes Essential
In true deadlock situations, negotiated exits often work better than contested removals. Consider:
- Independent valuations to establish fair share buyout prices
- Staged transitions where the outgoing director reduces involvement over time
- Non-compete agreements that protect the remaining business
- Releases that prevent future claims between the parties
In 50/50 deadlocks, the party who initiates removal proceedings often has weaker negotiating power than the party who waits. Consider your strategic position before acting.
After Removal: Shares, Replacements and Documentation
Removing a director doesn’t automatically resolve the underlying business relationship, particularly if they remain a shareholder.
The Continuing Shareholder Problem
Unless your constitution or shareholders’ agreement contains automatic share transfer provisions, removed directors typically retain their shareholding. This can create ongoing friction:
- They retain voting rights on future company matters
- They may still receive dividends and financial information
- They could potentially seek reinstatement as a director
- Exit disputes might arise over share valuations
ASIC Compliance Requirements
You have 28 days from the removal to lodge Form 484 with ASIC, updating the company’s director details. Failure to comply attracts penalties and can create complications if disputes arise later.
Also ensure:
- Company minutes properly record the removal resolution
- Updated company registers reflect the director change
- Banks and other third parties are notified of director changes
- Any director authorities (signing powers, bank mandates) are revoked
Appointing Replacement Directors
If the removed director was providing essential skills or industry knowledge, consider replacement appointments quickly. Your constitution will specify the appointment process, typically either board resolution or shareholder resolution depending on your company structure.
Managing Post-Removal Disputes
Removed directors sometimes launch legal challenges claiming:
- Procedural defects in the removal process
- Breach of their service contracts or employment terms
- Oppressive conduct by majority shareholders
- Breaches of directors’ duties by remaining board members
Good record-keeping during the removal process helps defend these challenges. Document:
- The reasons for seeking removal
- All meeting notices and procedural compliance steps
- Minutes showing proper voting and resolution passing
- Any offers of negotiated exit that were declined
Director removal often marks the beginning of relationship breakdown, not the end. Plan for post-removal complications before you call the meeting.
When It Gets Contentious: Negotiation, Disputes and Court Risks
Not all director removals proceed smoothly. When relationships have broken down, removal attempts can trigger broader disputes that cost far more than the original problem.
Common Escalation Triggers
Employment contract breaches: Many directors have service agreements that specify termination procedures. Removing them as a director doesn’t automatically terminate employment, and vice versa.
Oppression claims: Minority shareholders who are removed as directors sometimes claim majority oppression under section 232 of the Corporations Act.
Breach of shareholders’ agreements: Failing to follow agreed dispute resolution processes can trigger damages claims between shareholders.
Directors’ duties disputes: Remaining directors might face claims they breached duties when seeking the removal.
The Cost of Getting It Wrong
Legal disputes over director removal can easily cost $50,000–$200,000 or more in legal fees, even for relatively small companies. Factor these risks into your decision-making:
- Can you afford protracted litigation if the removal is challenged?
- Do you have insurance that covers shareholder disputes?
- Would a negotiated exit cost less than a contested removal?
When to Seek Early Legal Advice
Consider professional advice before acting if:
- Your shareholding is close to 50% or you’re not sure you have the votes
- The director has indicated they’ll challenge any removal attempt
- Complex constitutional provisions or shareholders’ agreements apply
- The director has employment contracts or other agreements that complicate removal
- Previous attempts at negotiated resolution have failed
Alternative Dispute Resolution Options
Before formal removal proceedings, consider:
Direct negotiation: Sometimes clear communication about problems can resolve issues without removal.
Mediation: Independent mediators can help find solutions that preserve relationships and avoid public disputes.
Expert determination: Independent experts can resolve specific disputes (like valuations) that are driving removal pressure.
Structured exits: Negotiated director resignation combined with share buybacks often achieves better outcomes than contested removal.
The Strategic Decision: Remove or Negotiate?
Director removal is a legal power, but it’s also a business decision with long-term consequences.
Before you call that meeting, ask yourself:
- Will removal actually solve the underlying business problems?
- Can you afford the relationship breakdown that often follows?
- Have you explored alternatives that might preserve valuable aspects of the working relationship?
- Do you have the votes, documentation, and legal compliance to make removal stick?
The companies that handle director changes best are those that plan strategically, comply meticulously with legal requirements, and never lose sight of their ultimate business objectives.
Remember: shareholders have clear legal power to remove directors in most circumstances. But having the power and using it wisely are two very different things.
The right approach depends on your specific circumstances, relationships, and business goals. When the stakes are high, procedural mistakes can cost far more than the original dispute.
This article provides general information about Australian corporate law and should not be relied upon as legal advice. The removal of company directors involves complex legal and procedural requirements that vary based on individual circumstances. For specific guidance on your situation, seek professional legal advice.


