Purpose of Dissolution Filings
Formal guide and process to legally dissolve a Corporation (C-Corp or S-Corp). This process terminates the corporation's legal existence with the state, closing out tax responsibilities and protecting directors and shareholders from ongoing state fees and penalties.
Mandatory Compliance Roadmap
How to Dissolve a Corporation (C-Corp or S-Corp)
A corporate dissolution is a legal winding-down process that officially terminates a corporation's status. Because a corporation is a distinct legal entity with its own assets, debts, and regulatory requirements, dissolving it requires strict adherence to corporate bylaws, state statutes, and tax regulations.
Key Steps to Legally Dissolve a Corporation:
- Board of Directors Resolution: The board of directors must draft and approve a resolution proposing dissolution.
- Shareholder Vote: Shareholders must vote on and approve the proposal to dissolve. Typically, this requires a majority or two-thirds vote, depending on state law and corporate bylaws. Document the vote in meeting minutes.
- File Certificate of Dissolution: File the Certificate of Dissolution (or Articles of Dissolution) with the Secretary of State in your home state. This begins the formal wind-up process.
- Obtain State Tax Clearance: File all final state corporate tax returns. Many states require a Tax Clearance Certificate from the department of revenue, confirming all taxes have been paid, before the dissolution is fully finalized.
- Liquidate and Distribute Assets: Pay off all outstanding corporate debts, creditors, and loans. Remaining assets are distributed to shareholders according to their ownership share and stock class.
- Close Federal Accounts: File a final federal tax return (Form 1120 or 1120-S) with the IRS and check the "Final Return" box. Report any liquidating distributions on Form 1099-DIV. Cancel the corporate Employer Identification Number (EIN).
Warning:
Failing to formally dissolve a corporation leads to ongoing tax filing requirements, minimum franchise taxes, and administrative penalties. Directors may also face personal exposure if the corporation is neglected rather than formally closed.
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What happens if I do nothing?
The state will assess late fees and back-taxes. Even inactive companies accumulate mandatory franchise fees until the official dissolution form is accepted.
Submission Execution
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