A corporation is formed through a series of filing and record steps. You need to choose a business name, gather the required details, and follow each step in order. Each part helps create the corporation and place your business on the state record.
A corporation is a legal business structure that has its own identity, separate from its owners. This setup helps with ownership planning, issuing shares, and keeping internal records. The filing process will depend on the rules of the state where you register.
Check the filing requirements before you begin. This helps you catch and fix any mistakes early. In this post, we’ll take you through each step of registering a corporation in the United States.
What Is a Corporation?
A corporation is a business entity created under state law. It can own property, enter into contracts, open bank accounts, and handle business duties in its own name. The corporation can remain active even if an owner leaves, sells shares, or passes away; that’s one thing that makes it different from some other business forms. A corporation may also issue stock, giving owners a way to hold and transfer ownership.
Corporations have a formal structure. Owners are usually shareholders, while directors or managers handle daily business decisions. This setup helps organize control, recordkeeping, and ownership rights. Many businesses pick a corporation for its clear management, structured growth, and long-term stability.
When Do You Need to Register a Corporation?
You must register a corporation if you want your business to operate as one. Registration gives your company legal status under corporation law. It also adds your business name, filing details, and records to the state’s system. Your business is not officially a corporation until the state approves your filing.
You need to register a corporation when:
- You want to form a corporation under state law.
- You need legal approval before using a corporate business name.
- You plan to file Articles of Incorporation with the state office.
- A registered agent must be listed in the filing.
- The state requests business details, incorporator details, and an office address.
- Share information may also be required before the filing can be processed.
- State fees must be paid when the corporation registration is submitted.
- The corporation starts only after the state accepts the filing.
How Many Types of Corporations Are There?
Corporations can have different structures, legal purposes, and tax treatments. State rules may also limit which types you can form. Choose the corporation type that best fits your business and filing needs.
Here are the main types of corporations you can register:
- C Corporation: The most common corporate form recognized under state law. It is formed by filing with the state. For federal tax purposes, the corporation is treated as a separate business entity. Owners are treated separately from the corporation for tax reporting.
- S Corporation: A business doesn’t start as an S Corporation at the state filing level. It starts as a corporation, then applies for S corporation tax status with the IRS if it qualifies (using Form 2553). An S Corp is a tax election added after formation, not a separate corporation type created by the state.
- B Corporation: Starts with a state filing under benefit corporation law in a state that allows that entity type. A B Corp is still a for‑profit corporation, but it’s formed to pursue one or more public benefits alongside its business goals.
- Nonprofit: Formed for a charitable, religious, educational, scientific, or similar purpose. It begins with state formation, just like other corporations. Federal tax‑exempt status does not automatically begin with state filing; it’s a separate process.
- Professional Corporation: Used for licensed professions under state‑specific rules. The exact filing terms depend on the state and the regulated field. The corporation name must comply with state naming rules.
8 Essential Steps to Register a Corporation
Registering a corporation involves a set order of steps, each with its own purpose. Missing even one detail can cause problems. Before you submit anything to the state, gather all your business information. Once you’re prepared, you can move through the approval process step by step.
1. Choose the Corporation Structure
The first step is deciding to form your business as a corporation. You make this decision before preparing any state filing. It puts your business on the corporate filing track from the start.
At this point, you choose a corporation instead of another business structure (like an LLC or sole proprietorship). Once you decide on a structure, the registration process follows corporation filing rules.
2. Select a State for Formation
When you register a corporation, you need to choose the state where it will be formed. You must complete the registration in that state.
Every state has its own filing rules, forms, and fees. These rules decide what your corporation filing needs to include. Many business owners pick the state where their business will operate, which helps keep formation, records, and future filings organized in one place.
3. Choose a Corporation Name
You need a business name before you can prepare your corporation filing. The name must follow your state’s rules and be ready to use on your documents. It also has to be different from names already on record. Checking the name first helps avoid problems later.
- Pick a name for the corporation.
- Check if the name is available in your state.
- Follow state naming rules.
- Add the required corporation ending (e.g., Inc., Corp.) if needed.
- Remove restricted or blocked words if the state limits them.
- Make sure the name is different from existing records.
- Use the final approved name in your filing.
4. Appoint a Registered Agent
A registered agent is listed in your corporation filing to receive legal papers and state notices for the business. Most states require the agent to have a physical address in the state of formation.
MyCorporation provides registered agent services for businesses that want a separate contact on record. Using this service can keep your personal address private. It also helps organize official mail in one place, making it easier to track and respond, and can prevent missed notices if you travel or move.
5. Prepare the Corporation Details
Your corporation filing needs complete and accurate business details. The state checks this information when forming your corporation and uses it for the official record. Make sure you enter the right details in the correct spots on the form. Missing or incorrect information can slow down the process or cause rejection.
- Corporation name: Enter your corporation’s legal name. It should match the name you chose for registration and follow your state’s naming rules.
- Business purpose: A short purpose statement may be required. Many states accept broad wording; others require a purpose that matches your specific work.
- Principal office address: A business address may be required. The state uses it as part of the official record, so make sure it matches the format your state uses.
- Registered agent name and address: Include the agent’s details. The address must meet state filing rules; a P.O. box alone is not accepted in many states.
- Incorporator details: State forms may require the incorporator’s information (name, address, signature). The incorporator signs and files the Articles of Incorporation.
- Share structure: The state may ask how many shares your corporation can issue. That number becomes part of your formation filing. Some states also require stock classes or par value; it should match your ownership plan.
- Owner’s information: Some states require details about individuals associated with the corporation (directors, officers, or other responsible parties). Requirements vary by state.
6. File the Articles of Incorporation
The Articles of Incorporation are the papers you file with the state to start your corporation. They put your business on the official state record. The form needs your business details before it’s submitted. Once the state approves the filing, your corporation begins under state law.
- Complete the Articles of Incorporation form.
- Review the filing details to avoid errors.
- Sign the document where required.
- Submit it to the correct state office.
- Pay the state filing fee.
- Wait for state review and approval.
7. Create Your Internal Corporation Records
After the state approves your filing, you need to create internal records for your corporation. These records show how your business is organized and how ownership is documented. They also help support proper business operation after formation. These records may be used during meetings, ownership reviews, banking, tax work, and other formal business tasks.
- Bylaws: Written rules used within the corporation. Bylaws may cover voting, director duties, meetings, and record procedures. They help show how you’ll run your corporation after formation.
- Initial Meeting Minutes: A written record of your corporation’s first internal meeting. It may show early decisions such as manager selection, approval of bylaws, and other opening actions. This gives your corporation a written record of its first decisions.
- Stock Records: Maintain records of shares issued by your corporation. This record may include shareholder names, the number of shares, and issue dates. It helps track ownership inside the business.
8. Get an EIN from the IRS
An EIN, or Employer Identification Number, is your corporation’s federal tax ID. The IRS uses it to identify your business for tax purposes. Most banks also require an EIN before you can open a business bank account.
You may need to get an EIN soon after your corporation is approved by the state. You’ll use it for hiring employees, filing federal taxes, and managing payroll records. The EIN application is sent to the IRS and is separate from your state filing.
Ongoing Compliance Steps to Keep Your Corporation Active
Ongoing compliance keeps your corporation active after formation. State requirements don’t stop when your filing is approved. Your business may need reports, updated records, and current contact details to remain in good standing. MyCorporation provides support for several ongoing compliance needs, including annual reports, registered agent services, business amendments, and good‑standing filings.
- Annual reports: Many states require a report after formation and then at regular intervals. This keeps the state record up to date. MyCorporation offers an annual report filing service, and our MaintainMyBiz service supports annual business filing requirements.
- Registered agent maintenance: Your corporation must maintain an active registered agent. If that information changes, the state record may need to be updated.
- Minutes and resolutions: Internal records should stay up to date as major business decisions are made. Written minutes and resolutions help document those actions.
- Amendments when business details change: Changes to your corporation name, address, registered agent, or other filed details may require a state amendment.
- Good standing tracking: Your corporation remains in good standing when required reports and filings are kept up to date. We help businesses maintain good standing and offer a Certificate of Good Standing service.
How Long Does It Take to Register a Corporation?
A corporation registration can take a week or more. The exact timeline depends on the state and the documents you submit. It can increase if there are errors in your filing or if the state has a large number of applications to review. Manual processing may also add time.
The state can approve your filing if it finds no errors. You can shorten the timeline by keeping your filing accurate and complete. In many cases, expect the filing process to take 1 to 3 weeks.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Registering a Corporation
Small errors in a corporation filing can lead to bigger problems. A missing, incorrect, or incomplete detail may affect approval. You can reduce that risk by reviewing your form, checking state requirements, and keeping your business records organized from the beginning. A careful review before submission can prevent avoidable filing problems and help your corporation move through state review with fewer issues.
- Using a corporation name that’s already taken
- Leaving out required information in the filing
- Listing the wrong registered agent details
- Adding share information that doesn’t fit your business
- Sending the form to the wrong state office
- Paying the wrong filing fee amount
- Forgetting to create internal records after approval
Conclusion
Registering a corporation means filing carefully and keeping good business records. Each step matters. If you follow the steps in order, your corporation is more likely to form smoothly. Being well prepared also helps you keep your business records complete from the beginning.
Once your corporation is approved, you still need to keep your records up to date to meet state rules. MyCorporation can help with corporation filing and other business services. A well-prepared corporation is easier to manage as your business grows.