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Where Should I Form My
Corporation?
One of the first decisions a business must
make after deciding to incorporate involves selecting the
proper state of incorporation. You are not required to incorporate
in the state where your business operates; you can choose
from any one of the 50 states or the District of Columbia.
In making the decision of where to incorporate,
three factors typically are weighed: the location of your
physical facilities, a cost analysis comparing incorporating
in the state of operation versus qualifying to do business
as a foreign corporation in the state under consideration,
and determining the advantages and disadvantages of each state's
corporate laws and tax structure.
The decision typically is between the state
of operations and Delaware, Nevada or Florida. If the corporation
is a closely held corporation that does business primarily
within a single state, local incorporation is typically the
best decision. The cost of local incorporation will usually
be less than incorporating in another state and qualifying
to do business as a foreign corporation in that state.
A foreign corporation that qualifies to do
business in another state is subject to taxes and annual report
fees from both the state of incorporation and the qualifying
state. Thus, the actual advantage of incorporating in a state
with very low or no corporate income tax is not as great as
it appears, if your business must still qualify to do business
in its state of operations.
Check the status of your Incorporation or LLC at
our Status Center
For newly formed Corporations,
LLC's, or existing companies.
Included with our full service
corporation package.