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You file articles of incorporation with your state's business filing agency. You must pay a filing fee when you submit your paperwork. Once the corporation has been approved, you will receive a certificate of formation from the state. Most states also require corporations to have corporate bylaws.
Most states require you to use the state's own Articles of Incorporation form. A few states allow you to draft your own Articles of Incorporation if you title the document appropriately and include your business's name, business address, desire to form an LLC, and business owners' names.
A limited liability company, or LLC, is not an incorporation, hence it would be inappropriate to call its organizing document articles of incorporation. An LLC does have an organizing document, however, which must meet the statutory requirements of the state in which it is filed.
In many instances, the Secretary of State's office allows businesses to request a copy of their articles of incorporation by phone, or in person. In some instances, a request for copies of incorporation may be initiated by fax, email, or by writing the Secretary of State or Department of State's office.
A state agency is the Secretary of State or Corporation Division in your home state to form your new LLC. Upon filing Articles of Organization, some states give you back a certificate of organization. Others just return the LLC Articles of Organization with a stamping showing the filing, a filing number, and a date.
Articles of incorporation is a set of formal documents filed with a government body to legally document the creation of a corporation. Articles of incorporation must contain pertinent information such as the firm's name, street address, agent for service of process and the amount and type of stock to be issued.
Articles of incorporation is a set of formal documents filed with a government body to legally document the creation of a corporation. Articles of incorporation must contain pertinent information such as the firm's name, street address, agent for service of process and the amount and type of stock to be issued.
Contact the Department of State or Secretary of State's office where your business filed its articles of incorporation. In many instances, the Secretary of State's office allows businesses to request a copy of their articles of incorporation by phone, or in person.
The information included in the Articles of Incorporation is a matter of public record, meaning that anyone can access it.
Most states require you to use the state's own Articles of Incorporation form. A few states allow you to draft your own Articles of Incorporation if you title the document appropriately and include your business's name, business address, desire to form an LLC, and business owners' names.
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