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Florida Incorporation
Florida Corporate Kits
Services
Florida Incorporate -
Incorporation - Corporation Network
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- A -
Accrual Method back
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An accounting method under which income is subject to
tax after all events have occurred which fix the right
to receive such income and deductions are allowed when
all the events have occurred to fix the obligation to
pay the debt.
Aggregate Par Value
Aggregate par value is the par value multiplied by the
number of authorized shares. This amount is important
in determining initial fees and annual franchise taxes
in many states.
Annual Meeting of Shareholders
Nearly all states require a corporation to hold an annual
meeting of shareholders at which time directors are
elected and other corporate issues are voted on.
Annual Report
A required annual filing in a state, usually requiring
names of the directors (for corporations), members (for
LLCs) and financial information. This term can also
refer to an annual statement of business and affairs
furnished by a corporation to its shareholders.
Apostille
Is a method of certifying a document for use in another
country pursuant to the 1961 Hague Convention. With
this certification by apostille, a document is entitled
to recognition in the country of intended use, and no
additional certification or legalization by the embassy
or consulate of the foreign country where the document
is to be used is required. An apostillized copy of the
articles of incorporation or articles of organization
is often required to open a bank account in another
country for a US-incorporated business. Note, certain
countries require a certified copy of the articles of
incorporation/organization with an appropriate gold
seal instead of an apostillized copy.
Incorporate-corporation' International Package includes
either an apostille or a certified copy with gold seal
for the country of intended use.
Articles of Incorporation
(Certificate of Incorporation or charter). The articles
are the primary legal document of a corporation; they
serve as a corporation's constitution. The articles
are filed with the state government to begin corporate
existence. The articles contain basic information on
the corporation as required by state law. Incorporate-corporation
Incorporated prepares the articles as part of its incorporation
service.
Articles of Organization
LLCs must file the articles with the proper state authorities
to begin existence. The articles of organization are
very similar to a corporation's articles of incorporation.
Incorporate-corporation Incorporated prepares the articles,
as part of its formation service.
Asset
Anything having commercial or exchange value that is
owned by a business, government, institution, or individual.
This can include stocks, bonds, real estate, equipment,
a brand name, or the value of a company as an operating
business, sometimes known as goodwill.
Assumed Name
A name under which a corporation conducts business that
is not the legal name of the corporation as shown in
its articles of incorporation. Assumed names (also called
a fictitious name and Doing Business As or DBA) could
be filed at the city, county or state level depending
on state requirements. A corporation can use multiple
assumed names.
Authorized Shares or Stock
The total number of shares a corporation is authorized
to issue. This number is specified in the articles of
incorporation. All of the shares authorized need not
be issued to shareholders; the corporation can have
unissued shares that can distributed at a latter time.
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Board of Directors
The governing body of a corporation. Elected by shareholders,
the directors are responsible for selecting the officers
and their supervisory roles, and the general control
of the corporation.
Business Entity
An organization that possesses a separate existence
for tax purposes. Some types of business entities include
corporations and limited liability companies.
Business Plan
A written document that details a proposed or existing
venture. It will typically explain the vision, current
status, expected needs, defined markets, and projected
results of the business.
Bylaws
Bylaws are the rules and regulations adopted by a corporation
for its internal governance. It usually contains provisions
relating to shareholders, directors, officers and general
corporate business. The bylaws are adopted at the corporation's
initial meeting.
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Capital Gains or Losses
Gains or losses realized from the sale or exchange of
capital assets. The amount is determined by calculating
the difference between an asset's purchase and sale
price.
Capital Stock
See Authorized stock.
Cash Method
An accounting method under which income is subject to
tax when actually received and deductions are allowed
when actually paid.
C Corporation
A C corporation is simply a standard business corporation.
It is called a C corporation because it is taxed under
subsection C of the IRS code.
Certificate of Authority or Application
for Authority
Is a document issued by the proper state authority to
a foreign corporation granting the corporation the right
to do business in that state upon filing an application
of authority. See our Foreign Qualification service
for more information.
Certificate of Good Standing
A certificate issued by a state official as conclusive
evidence that a corporation or LLC is in existence or
authorized to transact business in the state. The certificate
generally sets forth the corporation's or LLC’s name;
that it is duly incorporated or organized and authorized
to transact business; that all fees, taxes and penalties
owed the state have been paid; that its most recent
annual report has been filed; and, that articles of
dissolution have not been filed. Also known as a certificate
of existence or certificate of authorization.
Common Stock
The primary stock of a corporation. This stock gives
shareholders the right to participate in management
of the corporation and give the shareholder a proportionate
share of the dividends.
Conversion
The process of converting a corporation to an LLC or
converting an LLC to a corporation. Not all states allow
this procedure, and the fees vary within the states
that do.
Corporate Kit
A binder usually containing essential items for the
routine maintenance and administration of a corporation.
Corporate kits include sample minutes, resolutions and
bylaws, stock certificates, a corporate seal, and stock
ledger.
Corporate Record Book
Maintaining the proper records is very important to
assure limited liability to corporate shareholders.
The corporation should have a record book which contains
a copy of the articles of incorporation, bylaws, initial
and subsequent minutes of directors and shareholders
meetings and a stock register.
Corporate Seal
A device made to either emboss or imprint certain company
information onto documents. This information usually
includes the company's name and date and state of formation.
Corporate seals are often required when opening corporate
bank accounts, distributing stock or conducting other
corporate business.
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Delayed Effective Date
Certain states allow for a business to choose an effective
date for when the business will officially be formed
as a corporation or LLC in that state. For instance,
a business owner submitting a formation order in November
of 2004 can choose an effective date of January 1, 2005,
when his company will be officially recognized as a
corporation or LLC in that state.
Directors
Directors are elected by the shareholders. They manage
or direct the affairs of a corporation. Typically, the
directors make only major business decisions and monitor
the activities of the officers.
Dissolution
The termination of a corporation's legal existence.
Dissolution may be caused in many ways including, failure
to file annual reports, failure to pay certain taxes,
bankruptcy, or voluntary dissolution of the corporation
by the shareholders and directors. Incorporate-corporation
performs voluntary dissolution filings. See the dissolution
product page for more information.
Dividend
A dividend is a distribution of money or property paid
by the corporation out of the corporation's profits
to shareholders. Dividend payments are subject to double
taxation, the corporation pays tax on its profits and
the dividend recipient must pay income taxes on the
dividend payment, the same money is taxed twice. The
directors of the corporation decide if a dividend payment
is to be made.
Doing Business As (DBA)
A "DBA", also known as an "assumed name",
is typically completed by making a filing at the county
level where the business is located. This filing does
not change the official name of the corporation; however,
it allows the company to use additional names.
Domestic Corporation
A corporation is a domestic corporation in the state
where it has incorporated.
Double Taxation
Corporations are treated as a separate legal taxable
entity for income tax purposes. Therefore, corporations
pay tax on their earnings. If corporate earnings are
distributed to shareholders in the form of dividends,
the corporation does not receive the reasonable business
expense deduction, and dividend income is taxed as regular
income to the shareholders. Thus, to the extent that
earnings are distributed to shareholders as dividends,
there is a double tax on earnings at the corporate and
shareholder level. S corporations and LLCs are pass-through
entities which are not subject to the double tax.
- E -
Equity
The ownership of a shareholder in a corporation.
- F -
Fictitous Name
See "Doing Business As".
Fiscal Year
Any twelve-month period used by a business as its fiscal
accounting period.
Federal Tax Identification Number
This is a number assigned to a corporation or other
business entity by the federal government for tax purposes.
Banks generally require a tax identification number
to open bank accounts. The federal tax identification
number is also known as the Employer Identification
Number (EIN).
Foreign Corporation
A corporation is referred to as a foreign corporation
in all states except for the state where it is incorporated.
If a corporation is "transacting business"
in a state other than where it is incorporated, it must
register for a certificate of authority to transact
business in the other state or possibly lose access
to that state's courts and face fines. See Foreign Qualification
for more information.
Franchise Tax
Is a tax on the privilege of carrying on business as
a corporation or LLC in a state. The value of the franchise
tax may be measured by amount of earnings, total value
of capital or stock, or by amount of business done.
In some states, like California, the franchise tax is
simply an income tax.
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- H -
Holding Company
A corporation that owns a large number of shares in
other companies. Holding companies use the voting rights
that come with their shares to exert influence over
the companies under them.
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Incorporation
The act of creating or organizing a corporation under
the laws of a specific jurisdiction.
Incorporator
The person or entity that prepares, files and signs
the articles of incorporation. Incorporate-corporation
Incorporated acts as an incorporator for many new companies.
Involuntary Dissolution
The termination of a corporation's legal existence pursuant
to an administrative or judicial proceeding; dissolution
forced upon a corporation rather than decided upon by
the corporation.
IRS Form 1023
This form is used to apply for tax-exempt status with
the IRS.
IRS Form 1120
This form is used to report the income, gains, losses,
deductions, credits, and to figure the income tax liability
of a corporation.
IRS Form 1120S
This form is used to report the income, deductions,
gains, losses, etc. of a domestic corporation that has
elected to be an S Corporation by filing Form 2553,
and whose election is in effect for the tax year.
IRS Form 2553
This form is used to apply for S corporation status.
IRS Form 8822
This form is used to change your address on file with
the IRS.
IRS Form SS-4
This form is used to apply for a federal tax ID number.
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Judicial Dissolution
Involuntary dissolution of a corporation by a court
at the request of the state’s Attorney General’s office,
a shareholder or a creditor.
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- L -
Limited Liability Company (LLC)
A business entity formed upon filing articles of organization
with the proper state authorities and paying all fees.
LLCs provide the limited liability to their members,
and are taxed like a partnership, preventing double
taxation. LLCs can be formed in every state.
LLC Kit
A binder usually containing essential items for the
routine maintenance and administration of a limited
liability company. LLC kits include membership certificates,
an LLC seal and sample operating agreements.
LLC Seal
A device made to either emboss or imprint certain company
information onto documents. This information usually
includes the company's name and date and state of formation.
LLC seals may be required when opening bank accounts,
distributing membership certificates or conducting other
company business.
- M -
Manager
An LLC may be operated by a group of managers who act
much like a board of directors. If an LLC is to controlled
by mangers this fact must be stated in the articles
of organization.
Member
A member is a person or entity who is an owner of some
or all of a LLC. The business decisions of an LLC are
made by the members unless the articles of organization
provide that the LLC will controlled by a manager or
managers.
Membership Interest
A member's ownership of an LLC is represented by "interests"
just as a partner has an interest in a partnership and
shareholders own stock in a corporation.
Merger
A merger occurs when two corporations join together
into one, with one corporation surviving and the other
corporation disappearing. The assets and liabilities
of the disappearing entity are absorbed into the surviving
entity.
Minutes
A written record which details the events of the corporation.
These records should be kept in the corporation's or
LLC's record book.
- N -
Name Reservation
The name of a corporation or LLC must be distinguishable
on the records of the state government. If the name
is not unique, the state will reject the articles of
incorporation or articles of organization (for LLCs).
A name can be reserved, usually for 120 days, by applying
with the proper state authorities and paying a fee.
See "Other Filings" for more information.
No-Par-Value Stock
Stock with no minimum value. Most states allow no-par
stock. If the stock is no-par stock then the amount
of stated capital is typically an arbitrary amount assigned
by the board of directors. Some states, though, assign
a value of $1.00 to stock when filed as being no-par-value
stock. Further, the value of capital for franchise tax
purposes is determined by the state and this may result
in higher franchise taxes in comparison with low par-value
stock.
Not For Profit (or Nonprofit) Corporation
A corporation organized for some charitable, civil or
other social purpose which does not entail the generation
of profits for shareholders. These corporations can
apply for tax-exempt status at both the federal and
state level. Not-for-profit corporations, also often
called nonprofit corporations, must file not-for-profit
articles of incorporation with the state.
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Officers
The directors appoint officers. They manage the daily
affairs of the corporation. A corporation's officers
usually consist of a president, vice-president, treasurer,
and secretary. In most states, one person can hold all
of these posts.
Operating Agreement
An agreement among the LLC's members which govern the
LLC's operations and the rights of its members. It is
analogous to corporate bylaws.
Organizational Meeting
The initial meeting where the formation of the corporation
is completed. At the organizational meeting a number
of initial tasks are completed such as: the articles
of incorporation are ratified, the initial shares are
issued, officers are elected, bylaws approved, and a
resolution authorizing the opening of bank accounts
is passed.
Organizer
The person who or the entity that prepares, files and
signs the articles of organization. Incorporate-corporation
Incorporated serves as an organizer for many new companies.
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Paid in Capital
A few states require corporations to have a specified
amount of paid in capital prior to starting business.
Broadly defined it is all the money and other property
belonging to a corporation.
Parent Corporation
A corporation that owns a controlling interest in another
corporation.
Partnership
A partnership is an association of two or more persons.
In contrast to a corporation, a general partnership
can come into existence without the need to file any
formal papers with any state official. The owners of
a partnership are personally and fully liable for all
business debts; thus, personal property could be taken
to pay business debts.
Par-Value
The stated minimum value of a share of stock.
Pass-Through Taxation
The income to the entity is not taxed at the entity
level; however, the entity does complete a tax return.
The income or loss as shown on this return is "passed
through" the business entity to the individual
shareholders or interest holders, and is reported on
their individual tax returns. S corporations and LLCs
are both pass-through tax entities.
Preferred Shares
A class of shares that entitles the holders to preferences
over the holders of common shares, usually with regard
to dividends and distributions of assets upon dissolution
or liquidation.
Professional Corporation
A corporation which is organized for the purpose of
engaging in a learned profession such as law, medicine
or architecture. Professional Corporations must file
articles of incorporation with the state which meet
the state's requirements for professional corporations.
Proxy
If a shareholder can not attend a meeting, the shareholder
is allowed to vote by proxy.
- Q -
Quorum
The minimum attendance required to conduct business
at a shareholder or board of directors meeting. Usually,
a quorum is achieved if a majority of directors are
present (for directors meetings) or outstanding shares
are represented (for shareholder meetings).
- R -
Registered Agent
The agent named in the articles of incorporation. The
agent will receive service of process on the corporation
and other important documents. The agent must be named
in the articles of incorporation, and must be located
in the state of incorporation or organization.
Registered Office
The office named in the articles of incorporation. The
registered office must be where the registered agent
is located, and need not be the principal office or
place of business of the corporation.
Reinstatement
Returning a corporation or LLC that has been administratively
dissolved or had its certificate of authority revoked,
to good standing with the state of formation or qualification.
Resolution
A resolution is a formal decision of the corporation,
which has been adopted by either the shareholders or
the board of directors.
- S -
S Corporation
A corporation which elects subchapter S
tax treatment. This tax treatment allows the corporation
to avoid entity level taxation.
Section 1244 Stock
An individual investor in a corporation which meets
the Section 1244 requirements is entitled to treat up
to $50,000 (or $100,000 if filing a joint return) of
losses on the 1244 section stock as ordinary losses.
Share
An interest in a corporation. The total ownership of
a corporation is divided into shares of stock.
Shareholder
Any holder of one or more shares in a corporation. A
shareholder usually has evidence that they are a shareholder;
this evidence is represented by a stock certificate.
Shelf Company
Companies (either corporations or LLCs) that are formed,
but have never been used. Each shelf company created
by Incorporate-corporation Incorporated was filed for
the specific purpose of being a shelf company. Incorporate-corporation'
shelf companies include a certificate of incorporation
and franchise tax documents that have been filed with
the Secretary of State.
Sole Proprietorship
A business carried on by the owner as an individual.
The owner of a sole proprietorship is personally and
fully liable for all business debts; thus, personal
property could be taken to pay business debts.
Stated Capital
The par value of shares multiplied by the number of
shares outstanding.
Stock
An equity or ownership interest in a corporation, measured
in shares. Ownership of shares is demonstrated by stock
certificates.
Stock Certificate
A written instrument that shows ownership of shares
in a corporation.
Stockholder
See shareholder.
Stock Transfer Book
A record book, also called a stock transfer ledger,
which lists the owners of shares of stock in a corporation.
Subsidiary
A corporation that is either wholly owned or controlled
through ownership of a majority of its voting shares,
by another corporation or business entity.
- T -
Tax-exempt Organization
Any organization that is determined by the IRS to be
exempt from federal taxation of income. This determination
is based off of IRS acceptance of Form 1023. A tax-exempt
organization may be required to operate exclusively
for charitable, religious, literary, educational or
similar types of purposes.
Treasury Shares
Shares of stock which were issued and later acquired
or bought back by the corporation.
- U -
Underwriter
A company that purchases shares of a corporation and
arranges for sale of the shares to the general public.
- V -
Voluntary Dissolution
Action taken by shareholders, incorporators or initial
directors to dissolve a corporation. Or action taken
by members or organizers to dissolve an LLC. The process
is completed by filing Articles of Dissolution with
the Secretary of State.
Voting Rights
Rights of shareholders to vote their shares pursuant
to provisions of state statutes, the articles of incorporation
and the bylaws.
- W -
Withdrawal
The statutory procedure whereby a foreign corporation
or foreign LLC obtains he consent of a state to terminate
its authority to transact business there.
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- Y -
- Z -
Business choose Florida as
one of the top few states to incorporate. Florida has
become one of the most desirable states in the country
in which to conduct business. The State consistently
leads the nation in new business incorporations. With
one of the largest supplies of business parks, an advantageous
business tax system, transportation availability, 14
foreign trade zones, an abundance of electrical power,
and a large population of skilled human resources, Florida
provides everything that a business requires to function.
Some reasons why business choose
to incorporate in Florida are:
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No personal income
tax: Florida S corporations are not subjected
to a 5.5% federal income tax for earnings over $5000.00
and are not required to file state income tax return
after the first year.
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No mimimum capital
requirement to start a business in Florida:
While other states require business capital of $1000.00
or more, the State of Florida DOES NOT require that
of its businesses.
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Business privacy:
Name and addresses of directors, officers, or
shareholders are not required to be listed in the
articles of incorporation.
Florida Division of Corporations
handles all business incorporations in Florida. The
Division of Corporations is a ministerial filing agency
which serves as the statewide central repository for
business entity filings and Uniform Business Reports
/ annual reports, the statewide central filing office
for judgment lien filings, and the statewide central
registration office for fictitious names, trademarks
and service marks.
Florida is a Global Business Friendly Environment
Source: http://www.eflorida.com/
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Florida’s knowledge base continues
to blossom through the support of strong research
& development efforts and technology transfer.
Government, industry and academia have converged
to create partnerships that will continue to advance
Florida’s technology leadership and workforce talent.
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Florida is also considered a global
gateway for international commerce. Whether your
organization needs to move products, services or
data, Florida’s infrastructure provides ready worldwide
connectivity.
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Florida also offers an environment
conducive to the entrepreneurial spirit. Numerous
venture capital firms, angel investors, technology
incubators and strong university research programs
help fuel business development and expansion.
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While businesses enjoy a stable tax
structure and exceptional incentives, the people
of Florida also benefit from no state personal income
tax, a strong educational system, affordable housing
and an enviable quality of life.
Incorporate A.S.A.P. ! provides
complete Florida business incorporation services. Our
LOW INCORPORATION COST will save your time and money
for hiring an attorney. Our Florida Incorporation service
includes everything you need for forming a Florida profit
or non-profit Corporation or LLC. Business Registration
is easy. Setting up an LLC or starting a corporation
is easy. Just fill in our secure online incorporation
form and we will do the rest. You save more time by
incorporating your business through incorporate-corporation.com
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We make a preliminary check of your
name choice(s) for your Florida Incorporation or
Florida LLC.
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We prepare and submit required documents
that will form your Flroida Corporation
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We forward original Florida incorporation
or LLC documents that we receive from the Florida
Secretary of State.
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We update the status of your incorporation
or LLC at our web site for you to monitor.
Basic requirement to incorporate:
Florida
Profit Corporations | Non
Profit Corporations | Limited
Liability Company
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