A statement released by the club said that James Stephen, Malcolm Cohen and Shane Crooks of BDO had been apppointed as joint administrators.
A spokesperson for BDO said: “We can confirm a formal appointment has been made and Inverness Caledonian Thistle is now in administration.
“We understand this will be a difficult and uncertain time for the club, its staff, its loyal fan base and the local community.
“The administrators will be in a position to provide further information and their plan to seek to secure the long term future of the club in due course.”
It is unclear yet what the impact will be for playing and non-playing staff, as well as the manager Duncan Ferguson – although job losses are likely at the club.
Talks were held last week with businessman David Anderson about a possible takeover but they ended without agreement.
Then on Tuesday, the Court of Session confirmed that the club had appointment administrators.
Losses ran to £1.2m last season and the club has forecast a similar loss this year, but that figure does not include money spent on restructuring following relegation from the Championship last season.
Youth football teams and grassroots clubs across the country have held a minute’s silence at the start of their games to commemorate a 10-year-old girl who di
10-year-old Poppy Atkinson was killed when she was struck by a car during a training session at Kendal Rugby Club in Cumbria. Clubs from Leeds to London
The high court, sitting in Liverpool, heard Uefa had relied upon the principle that English courts will not inquire into the legality of actions by foreign gove
Caption: Alan Shearer?s Premier League predictions credit: Getty / Metro After some impressive results for English sides in Europe the focus is