The Corporate Transparency Act
The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) mandates “reporting companies” to file reports with FinCEN, disclosing their beneficial owners and information about company applicants. Companies formed through a U.S. state filing or companies formed in a foreign country but registered to do business in the U.S. are subject to these reporting requirements. Simply put, if a company is formed by filing a document in applicable state jurisdictions, it is subject to these new reporting requirements. Whether an LLC, corporation, partnership, or trust, each state requires a filing with the applicable state agency to form a company.
Exemptions
Certain exceptions preclude a company from filing such information with FinCEN. Examples of entities exempt from the reporting requirements include:
- Revocable living trusts
- Sole proprietorships
- General partnerships
- Highly regulated entities such as:
- Banks
- Federal and state credit unions
- Government entities
- Publicly traded companies
- PCAOB-registered accounting firms
- Insurance companies
- 501(c)(3) tax-exempt entities
- Tax-exempt political organizations
- Companies with more than 20 U.S. full-time employees and exceeding $5 million in gross receipts or sales on their prior year federal income tax returns
Beneficial Owners and Company Applicants
Once established that an entity is a reporting corporation, tax practitioners must analyze company records to determine beneficial owners who exceed a percentage of ownership or control. The company must report such information to FinCEN once the threshold is met. A beneficial owner is defined as:
- Persons with substantial control
- Persons owning 25% or more of a company, either directly or indirectly
- Company applicants
The term “owner” is broadly defined by the CTA and includes companies with tiered ownership. If a parent company owns a reporting company, the reporting company must “look through” the parent company to disclose the person who owns the company. For purposes of the CTA, the beneficial owner must be a natural person.
Substantial Control
The term “substantial control” is a qualitative, facts-and-circumstances-based analysis. A person may exhibit substantial control if they can:
- Merge or dissolve the company
- Control major expenditures
- Direct its service lines
- Determine compensation
- Enter the company into contracts
A person with the ability to perform such actions on the company’s behalf will be deemed a beneficial owner, even if the person doesn’t have an ownership interest. This category includes officers and directors of a reporting company.
Ownership Threshold
Parties who own 25% of the reporting company, either directly or indirectly, are also subject to these reporting requirements. This includes joint ownership, direct ownership of stock, or ownership of a membership interest.
Company Applicants
Those who filed the formation documents within the company’s jurisdiction to establish the entity are also treated as beneficial owners. Anyone who has signed a certificate of formation or incorporation, or another similar document, is deemed a beneficial owner.
What and When to File
The FinCEN BOI report requires a company to disclose the following:
- Legal name and jurisdiction of the beneficial owners
- Date of birth
- Street address for beneficial owners and business address for company applicants
- Unique identifying number (e.g., Driver’s License or Passport Number)
- A picture of the identification
While these disclosures are substantial, there is no requirement for reporting companies to disclose financial information or the company’s business purpose. Companies formed after January 1, 2024, have 90 days from the effective date of formation to file a BOI report with FinCEN. Reporting companies existing prior to January 1, 2024, must file the report by December 31, 2024.
Failure to File Penalties
Failure to file a BOI report or filing fraudulent beneficial owner information can result in significant penalties. If FinCEN can prove fraudulent information was willingly filed, rather than a good faith error, the company can incur penalties of $500 per day up to $10,000 and its shareholders up to two years of imprisonment. If an error is made due to reasonable cause, rather than willful negligence, the penalties may be waived.
Potential criminal penalties for the misuse or unauthorized disclosure of beneficial ownership include fines up to $250,000 and imprisonment not to exceed 5 years, or both.