Corporate Transparency Act
On January 1, 2024, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”) enacted a new Federal law that requires compliance by closely held entities in 2024: the Corporate Transparency Act. The Act requires all foreign and domestic corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, and other entities created through a government filing (subject to certain exemptions), to identify and provide personal information for key personnel—including any individual who owns a 25% or greater ownership interest in, or who exercises substantial control over, the company — by filing a beneficial ownership information (“BOI”) report with FinCEN. Existing companies have until January 1, 2025, to file an initial BOI report with FinCEN, but new companies must report within 90 days of formation (and starting in 2025, new companies will have only 30 days to report). Moreover, any changes in previously reported beneficial ownership information must be reported within 30 days of the change. The Act provides an exemption from filing a BOI report for various entities including governmental authorities, money service businesses, accounting firms, public utilities firms, insurance companies, investment companies, 501(c) tax-exempt entities, large operating companies that have more than twenty full time employees in the U.S., and inactive entities. To be considered inactive, an entity must meet the following six requirements: (1) the entity was in existence on or before January 1, 2020; (2) the entity is not engaged in active business; (3) the entity is not owned by someone who is not a U.S. resident or citizen; (4) the entity has not experienced a […]
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