Articles of Incorporation: Create, Replace, or Amend
The articles of incorporation are legal documents that solidify the presence of a business entity within a state. The term articles of incorporation are assigned to a corporation, while the term articles of organization apply to a limited liability company (LLC). Along with corporate by-laws, the articles of incorporation outline the jurisdiction of a corporation, as granted by the state government.
If you’d like to create, replace, or amend your Articles of Incorporation, call our main office at (800) 603-3900 or Click Here to order online. For a call-back within 4 hours, please fill out the form below. Thank you.
Certified Articles of Incorporation
Spiegel & Utrera, P.A. can draft the articles of incorporation or organization with the well-being of your business in mind. Our complete incorporating package includes the articles of incorporation along with:
INCLUDES State Filing Fee, “YES! Includes State Filing Fee”
INCLUDES Corporate or Company Seal and Book
INCLUDES Certificate or Articles of Incorporation or Organization
INCLUDES Company or Corporate Minutes
INCLUDES Corporate By Laws or LLC Regulations
INCLUDES Corporate or LLC Ownership Register
INCLUDES Banking Resolution
INCLUDES Membership or Stock Certificate
INCLUDES Preliminary Name Search
INCLUDES 110% Lowest Price Guarantee !
Yes, even INCLUDES Attorney’s Fee (No Hidden Attorney Fees).
Contents of the Articles of Incorporation
Articles of Incorporation typically (depends on state requirements) include:
- Name of Corporation
- Principal Office – Address
- Purpose of Corporation – “Any Lawful Purpose”
- Type of Business – For Profit, Non-Profit, Partnership
- Registered Agent – Initial Agent for Service of Process
- Number of Shares – Corporate Capitalization
- Term of Existence – Perpetual or otherwise
- Registered Owners
- Effective Date
- By-Laws
Getting your Articles of Incorporation When Starting a Corporation
Articles of incorporation or articles of organization outline the structure of your entity. They declare whether or not the entity structure will be a for-profit corporation, limited liability company, or non-profit corporation. You get a ton of perks for doing so; like state and business-specific tax advantages, protection from creditors, immunity to personal liability, gaining anonymity and protecting your personal assets, easier access to capital, enhanced business credibility and authority, and transferable ownership.