Georgia Incorporation Guide π
π How to Form a Georgia Corporation
Complete Guide to Incorporating Your Business in Georgia in 2025
Georgia Corporation Overview
Georgia offers a business-friendly corporate environment with straightforward incorporation requirements, strong legal protections, and no franchise tax on net worth. Georgia corporations are governed by the Georgia Business Corporation Code (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2).
- No Net Worth Tax: Georgia eliminated the net worth tax in 2016 - corporations pay only income tax
- Business-Friendly Laws: Modern corporate code with clear rules (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2)
- Strong Director Protection: Business judgment rule and indemnification provisions
- Low Filing Fees: $100 Articles of Incorporation, $50 annual registration
- Fast Processing: Online filings processed in 7-10 business days
- No Publication Requirement: Unlike NY/AZ, no expensive newspaper publication
Georgia Corporation Types
| Corporation Type | Best For | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| C-Corporation | High-growth businesses, VC funding, going public | Separate tax entity, unlimited shareholders, double taxation |
| S-Corporation | Small businesses, pass-through taxation, SE tax savings | Pass-through income, max 100 shareholders, one class of stock |
| Close Corporation | Family businesses, small groups, simplified management | Max 50 shareholders, relaxed corporate formalities (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-902) |
| Benefit Corporation | Social enterprises, mission-driven businesses | Profit + public benefit purpose (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1801) |
| Nonprofit Corporation | Charities, foundations, associations, 501(c)(3) orgs | No shareholders, 501(c)(3) eligible, mission-driven (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-3) |
| Professional Corporation (PC) | Doctors, lawyers, CPAs, architects, engineers | Licensed professionals only (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-7) |
Corporation vs. LLC: Which to Choose?
| Feature | Georgia Corporation | Georgia LLC |
|---|---|---|
| Formation Cost | $100 (Articles of Incorporation) | $100 (Articles of Organization) |
| Annual Fee | $50 (Annual Registration) | $50 (Annual Registration) |
| Ownership Structure | Shareholders (unlimited for C-Corp) | Members (unlimited) |
| Management | Board of Directors + Officers (formal structure) | Member-managed or Manager-managed (flexible) |
| Default Taxation | C-Corp (double tax) - can elect S-Corp | Pass-through - can elect S-Corp or C-Corp |
| Self-Employment Tax | S-Corp: Only on salary (not distributions) | Pass-through LLC: On all income |
| Raising Capital | β Easy (issue stock to investors) | β Harder (membership interests less standard) |
| VC/Investor Preference | β Strongly preferred (especially Delaware C-Corp) | β Generally not preferred |
| Going Public (IPO) | β Yes (must be C-Corp) | β No |
| Formalities | Strict (annual meetings, minutes, resolutions required) | Minimal (operating agreement, basic records) |
| Best For | High growth, VC funding, going public, S-Corp tax savings | Small businesses, real estate, simple operations, flexibility |
When to Choose Georgia Corporation
β Choose Georgia Corporation If:
- Raising venture capital or angel investment
- Planning to go public (IPO) in future
- Want S-Corp tax savings (salary + distributions)
- Need to issue stock options to employees
- Professional corporation required (doctors, lawyers)
- Multiple classes of stock needed (preferred/common)
- Formal governance structure preferred
β Choose Georgia LLC Instead If:
- Simple small business or consulting
- Real estate investing (easier to split properties)
- Want maximum flexibility in management
- Don't need to raise VC funding
- Prefer minimal corporate formalities
- Single owner or small partnership
- Not planning to go public
Georgia C-Corporation
A C-Corporation is the standard corporate form in Georgia, governed by O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2. C-Corps are separate tax entities that pay corporate income tax, with profits taxed again when distributed as dividends ("double taxation").
Step-by-Step: How to Form a Georgia C-Corporation
Requirements (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-401):
- Must be distinguishable from existing Georgia entities
- Must contain "Corporation," "Incorporated," "Company," "Limited," or abbreviation ("Corp.," "Inc.," "Co.," "Ltd.")
- Cannot contain restricted words ("bank," "insurance," "university") without approval
- Cannot imply governmental affiliation
Name Availability Check:
- Search: Georgia Secretary of State Business Search
- Reserve name (optional): $25 fee, holds name for 30 days
- Check federal trademarks: USPTO TESS
Requirements (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-501):
- Must have a physical Georgia street address (no P.O. boxes)
- Must be available during normal business hours (9am-5pm)
- Can be an individual Georgia resident or registered agent company
- Receives legal documents, service of process, official correspondence
Filing Method:
- Online (Recommended): Georgia eCorp System - Fastest (7-10 business days)
- Mail: Georgia Secretary of State, Corporations Division, 2 MLK Jr. Drive SE, Suite 313 West Tower, Atlanta, GA 30334
- Filing Fee: $100
Required Information:
- Corporate name
- Number of shares authorized (no par value required)
- Registered agent name and Georgia street address
- Registered office address (can be same as agent)
- Incorporator name and address (person filing, doesn't have to be shareholder)
- Principal office address (can be out of state)
- Purpose (can be "any lawful purpose")
Not filed with state, but REQUIRED for internal governance.
Bylaws establish rules for corporate operations:
- Shareholder meeting procedures (annual, special)
- Board of Directors composition, election, removal
- Officer roles and duties (President, Secretary, Treasurer)
- Voting requirements (majority, supermajority, unanimous)
- Stock issuance and transfer procedures
- Dividend policies
- Amendment procedures
First board meeting to formally organize the corporation:
- Adopt bylaws
- Elect officers (President, Secretary, Treasurer minimum)
- Authorize issuance of stock
- Adopt corporate seal (optional)
- Select fiscal year and accounting method
- Authorize opening of bank account
- Adopt stock certificate form
- Document in minutes (keep in corporate records)
Formalize ownership by issuing stock certificates:
- Issue stock certificates to initial shareholders
- Receive payment (cash, property, services) for shares
- Document in stock ledger (date, shareholder, shares, price)
- File IRS Form D if securities exemption claimed
- Comply with securities laws (federal and Georgia)
All corporations need an EIN:
- Online (Instant): IRS EIN Online Application
- Cost: Free from IRS
- Required for corporate tax filing, payroll, bank accounts
Georgia Annual Registration (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1622):
- Due Date: Between January 1 and April 1 each year
- Fee: $50 per year
- First Year: Due the year AFTER incorporation (incorporate in 2025 β first annual registration due by April 1, 2026)
- File: Georgia eCorp System
C-Corporation Costs (Georgia)
Georgia S-Corporation
An S-Corporation is not a separate Georgia entity type - it's a federal tax election made by filing IRS Form 2553. You first form a Georgia C-Corporation, then elect S-Corp tax treatment.
S-Corporation status is a federal tax classification under IRC Subchapter S. It allows the corporation to:
- Pass-through taxation: Income passes through to shareholders (no corporate tax)
- Avoid double taxation: Profits taxed once at shareholder level
- Save on self-employment tax: Pay yourself salary (SE tax applies) + distributions (no SE tax)
S-Corp Eligibility Requirements (IRS)
To qualify for S-Corp election, your Georgia corporation must meet ALL these requirements:
- Maximum 100 shareholders
- All shareholders must be U.S. citizens or residents (no foreign shareholders)
- Shareholders must be individuals, estates, or certain trusts (no corporate or partnership shareholders)
- Only one class of stock (though voting/non-voting shares allowed)
- Must be a domestic U.S. corporation
- Cannot be a bank, insurance company, or certain financial institutions
- Cannot be a DISC (Domestic International Sales Corporation)
How to Elect S-Corporation Status
Follow all C-Corporation formation steps (Articles of Incorporation, bylaws, organizational meeting, stock issuance, EIN).
Form 2553: Election by a Small Business Corporation
- Deadline: Must file by March 15 of current year, OR within 2 months and 15 days of incorporation
- Signatures: All shareholders must consent and sign Form 2553
- Filing: Mail or fax to IRS (address on form varies by state)
- Cost: Free
- Download: IRS Form 2553
- New corporations: File Form 2553 within 2 months + 15 days of incorporation to elect S-Corp for current year
- Existing corporations: File by March 15 to elect S-Corp for current tax year (or file by March 15 of next year for next year)
- Miss the deadline? You'll be taxed as C-Corp for that year, must wait until next year
IRS will send acceptance letter (typically within 60 days). Keep this letter in corporate records.
S-Corp Tax Savings Example
Scenario: Your Georgia corporation earns $100,000 profit
Option 1: C-Corporation (default)
- Corporate tax (21% federal + 5.75% GA): $26,750
- After-tax profit: $73,250
- Dividend to you: $73,250
- Your tax on dividend (20% federal + 5.49% GA): ~$18,673
- Total tax: $45,423 (45.4%)
Option 2: S-Corporation
- Corporate tax: $0 (pass-through)
- Reasonable salary to you: $60,000
- Payroll tax (15.3% on salary): $9,180
- Income tax on salary (24% fed + 5.49% GA): ~$17,694
- Distribution (no SE tax): $40,000
- Income tax on distribution (24% fed + 5.49% GA): ~$11,796
- Total tax: $38,670 (38.7%)
- SAVINGS vs C-Corp: $6,753
Option 3: LLC (default pass-through)
- Self-employment tax (15.3% on $100K): $15,300
- Income tax (24% fed + 5.49% GA): ~$29,490
- Total tax: $44,790 (44.8%)
- S-Corp SAVES $6,120 vs LLC
S-Corp Requirements and Compliance
IRS requires S-Corp shareholders who work in the business to pay themselves a "reasonable salary" subject to payroll taxes. You cannot take all income as distributions to avoid payroll tax.
What is "reasonable"?
- Based on industry standards for your role
- Consider time spent, responsibilities, comparable salaries
- IRS scrutinizes low salaries (e.g., $20K salary + $200K distribution = audit risk)
- Rule of thumb: 60-70% salary, 30-40% distribution (consult tax advisor)
- Run payroll for shareholder-employees (quarterly or monthly)
- Withhold federal income tax, Social Security, Medicare
- Withhold Georgia state income tax
- File Form 941 (quarterly payroll tax) with IRS
- File Georgia Form G-7 (withholding tax)
- Issue W-2 to yourself by January 31
- Federal: Form 1120-S (S-Corp return) - due March 15
- Georgia: Form 600-S (Georgia S-Corp return) - due March 15
- Shareholders: Receive Schedule K-1 showing share of income
- Report K-1 income on personal returns (Form 1040, Georgia Form 500)
When S-Corp Makes Sense
β S-Corp is Great For:
- Profitable small businesses ($60K+ net income)
- Service businesses (consulting, medical, legal)
- Businesses where owners actively work
- Want to save self-employment tax
- U.S. citizens/residents only as shareholders
- Simple ownership (one class of stock)
β Don't Use S-Corp If:
- Raising VC funding (VCs can't be S-Corp shareholders)
- Foreign shareholders or entities as shareholders
- Need multiple classes of stock (preferred/common)
- Net income under ~$40K (payroll costs outweigh savings)
- Planning to go public (must be C-Corp)
- Passive real estate investing (LLC better)
Georgia Close Corporation
A Close Corporation is a special type of Georgia corporation designed for small, closely-held businesses, authorized under O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-902 through 14-2-933.
- Maximum 50 shareholders (Georgia limit)
- Relaxed corporate formalities - can operate more like a partnership
- Shareholder management - shareholders can manage directly (no board required)
- Transfer restrictions - shares cannot be freely transferred (protects family/partner ownership)
- Elimination of board - can opt out of board of directors entirely
Close Corporation Requirements (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-903)
- Articles of Incorporation must state: "This corporation is a close corporation" (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-902)
- Maximum 50 shareholders at all times
- Stock certificates must contain conspicuous notice of transfer restrictions
- All shareholders must approve close corporation status (unanimous consent)
Close corporations MUST restrict stock transfers. Common restrictions:
- Right of first refusal: Existing shareholders can buy before outside sale
- Consent requirement: Board or shareholders must approve transfers
- Buy-sell agreements: Corporation or shareholders must purchase upon triggering event (death, divorce, termination)
- Transfer restriction notice must appear on stock certificates
Close corporations can eliminate the board of directors entirely (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-908):
- Shareholders manage corporation directly
- Shareholders have same duties as directors would (fiduciary duty, care, loyalty)
- Must state in Articles: "All corporate powers shall be exercised by the shareholders"
- No annual shareholder meetings required (can operate informally)
Advantages of Close Corporation
β Benefits
- Simplified management: No board meetings, no annual meetings required
- Control: Transfer restrictions keep ownership in family/original group
- Flexibility: Operate like partnership while maintaining corporate liability protection
- S-Corp eligible: Can elect S-Corp tax treatment
- Liability protection: Same limited liability as regular corporation
β οΈ Limitations
- 50 shareholder maximum (cannot grow beyond this)
- Transfer restrictions reduce liquidity
- Shareholder disputes harder to resolve (no independent board)
- Not suitable for raising capital from outside investors
- Cannot go public (would exceed 50 shareholders)
When to Choose Close Corporation
- Family businesses: Keep ownership within family, prevent outside ownership
- Small partnerships (2-10 people): Simpler than regular corporation, more formal than LLC
- Professional groups: Law firms, medical practices, accounting firms (combine with PC status)
- Businesses wanting S-Corp tax benefits without full corporate formalities
- No plans to raise outside capital or go public
Formation Steps for Close Corporation
Same as regular C-Corporation, with these additions:
Must include:
- "This corporation is a close corporation" (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-902)
- If eliminating board: "All corporate powers shall be exercised by the shareholders"
- Transfer restrictions (or reference to bylaws/shareholder agreement)
Highly recommended (often required) to establish:
- Transfer restrictions and right of first refusal
- Buy-sell provisions (death, disability, retirement, termination)
- Valuation methods for share purchases
- Management responsibilities (if no board)
- Voting requirements and deadlock resolution
Close Corporation vs. LLC
| Feature | Close Corporation | LLC |
|---|---|---|
| Formation Cost | $100 (same as C-Corp) | $100 |
| Ownership Limit | 50 shareholders maximum | Unlimited members |
| Formalities | Reduced (can eliminate board/meetings) | Minimal (operating agreement only) |
| Transfer Restrictions | Required by law | Optional (via operating agreement) |
| S-Corp Election | β Eligible | β Eligible |
| Best For | Family businesses wanting corporate structure with simplified management | Most small businesses wanting maximum flexibility |
Georgia Benefit Corporation
A Benefit Corporation is a for-profit Georgia corporation with a legally defined purpose to create public benefit in addition to generating profit, authorized under O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1801 through 14-2-1808.
- Dual purpose: Profit + public benefit (social, environmental, cultural)
- Legal protection: Directors can prioritize mission over short-term profits
- Transparency: Must publish annual benefit report
- Third-party standard: Must assess performance against independent standard
- Accountability: Shareholders can enforce benefit purpose
Benefit Corporation Requirements (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1802)
Articles of Incorporation must state the corporation's purpose includes creating "general public benefit" or one or more "specific public benefits."
General Public Benefit (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1801):
- "A material positive impact on society and the environment, taken as a whole"
- Assessed against third-party standard (e.g., B Impact Assessment)
Specific Public Benefit Examples:
- Providing low-income individuals with beneficial products/services
- Promoting economic opportunity beyond job creation
- Protecting or restoring the environment
- Improving human health
- Promoting arts, sciences, or advancement of knowledge
- Increasing flow of capital to entities with public benefit purpose
- Conferring any other particular benefit on society or environment
Must publish annual report to shareholders containing:
- Description of how corporation pursued general/specific public benefit
- Extent to which benefit was created
- Circumstances hindering creation of benefit
- Assessment against third-party standard
- Name of third-party standard used
- Compensation paid to directors/officers
- Statement from each director regarding compliance with benefit purpose
Public Disclosure:
- Report must be publicly available on website OR
- Provided to anyone who requests it (within reasonable time)
- NOT filed with Georgia Secretary of State
Directors must consider:
- Shareholders' interests
- Employees and workforce
- Customers as beneficiaries of general/specific public benefit
- Community and societal factors
- Local and global environment
- Short-term and long-term interests of corporation
- Ability to accomplish general/specific public benefit
Key protection: Directors NOT liable for considering these stakeholders (even if it reduces short-term profits).
Formation Steps for Benefit Corporation
Articles of Incorporation must include:
- Statement: "This corporation is a benefit corporation" (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1802)
- Description of general public benefit and/or specific public benefit(s)
- Standard corporate formation requirements (name, shares, agent, etc.)
- Filing fee: $100 (same as regular corporation)
Select an independent third-party standard for measuring benefit creation:
- B Impact Assessment (most common): Free at B Lab
- GRI Standards: Global Reporting Initiative
- IRIS Metrics: Impact Reporting & Investment Standards
- Standard must be developed by independent entity
Within 120 days of fiscal year end, prepare and publish annual benefit report (described above).
Benefit Corporation vs. B Corp Certification
Benefit Corporation (legal status):
- Georgia legal entity type (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1801)
- File Articles with "benefit corporation" designation
- Legal requirement to pursue public benefit
- Cost: $100 filing fee
Certified B Corporation (B Corp - voluntary certification):
- Voluntary certification by B Lab (nonprofit)
- ANY legal entity type can get certified (Corp, LLC, etc.)
- Must score 80+ on B Impact Assessment
- Cost: Annual fees based on revenue ($1,000-$50,000+)
- Use of "Certified B Corporation" logo and marketing
Many companies do BOTH: Benefit Corporation legal status + B Corp certification for marketing credibility.
Advantages & Disadvantages
β Advantages
- Mission protection: Legal duty to pursue benefit (even if sold)
- Director protection: Can prioritize mission over short-term profit
- Attract mission-driven customers/employees
- Differentiation: Stand out from competitors
- Tax benefits: Same as regular C-Corp or S-Corp
- Access to impact investors: Growing pool of capital
β Disadvantages
- Annual reporting burden: Benefit report takes time/resources
- Potential investor resistance: Some VCs avoid benefit corps
- Accountability to stakeholders beyond shareholders
- Third-party assessment cost (if using paid standard)
- Less established than traditional C-Corps
When to Choose Benefit Corporation
β Benefit Corporation is Right For:
- Social enterprises with clear mission beyond profit
- Businesses where founders want mission protected long-term (even after exit)
- Companies targeting mission-driven customers (millennials/Gen Z)
- Seeking impact investment capital
- Environmental/sustainability businesses (solar, recycling, organic food)
- Workforce development, affordable housing, education companies
- Want legal cover to prioritize stakeholders over short-term profit
Georgia Nonprofit Corporation
A Nonprofit Corporation is a Georgia corporation formed for charitable, educational, religious, scientific, or other purposes (not for generating profit to distribute to members), governed by the Georgia Nonprofit Corporation Code (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-3).
- No shareholders: No ownership interests distributed
- No profit distribution: Surplus revenue reinvested in mission (not distributed to members/directors)
- Tax-exempt eligible: Can apply for 501(c)(3) federal tax exemption
- Mission-driven: Charitable, educational, religious, scientific, literary purpose
- Asset lock: Assets must stay with nonprofit sector upon dissolution
Nonprofit vs. Tax-Exempt: Important Distinction
Step 1: Georgia Nonprofit Corporation (State Level)
- File Articles of Incorporation with Georgia Secretary of State
- Nonprofit = legal structure (no profit distribution)
- Does NOT automatically make you tax-exempt
Step 2: Federal Tax-Exempt Status (IRS)
- Apply for 501(c)(3) or other tax-exempt status with IRS
- Tax-exempt = no federal income tax on mission-related revenue
- Donors can deduct contributions (if 501(c)(3))
- Must be nonprofit corporation first, then apply for tax exemption
Formation Steps for Georgia Nonprofit Corporation
Requirements (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-3-401):
- Must be distinguishable from existing Georgia entities
- Should contain "Corporation," "Incorporated," "Company," "Limited," or abbreviation
- Cannot use words that imply for-profit purpose ("Company" less common for nonprofits)
- Check availability: GA SOS Search
Filing:
- Form: Georgia Form 227 (Articles of Incorporation - Nonprofit)
- File online: Georgia eCorp
- Fee: $100
Required Information:
- Corporate name
- Purpose: Must state nonprofit purpose (charitable, educational, religious, scientific, literary, etc.)
- Registered agent name and Georgia street address
- Principal office address
- Incorporator name and address
- No members OR member structure: State if nonprofit will have voting members or be member-less (board-controlled)
- Dissolution clause: Assets upon dissolution must go to another nonprofit (required for 501(c)(3))
Your Articles MUST include:
- Purpose clause: "Organized exclusively for charitable, educational, religious, or scientific purposes under IRC 501(c)(3)"
- Dissolution clause: "Upon dissolution, assets will be distributed to one or more organizations exempt under IRC 501(c)(3)"
- No private benefit: "No part of net earnings shall inure to the benefit of any private individual"
- Without these, IRS will reject your 501(c)(3) application
Nonprofit bylaws establish governance:
- Board of Directors composition, election, removal, terms
- Officer roles (President, Secretary, Treasurer minimum)
- Meeting requirements (annual board meeting, quorum)
- Voting procedures
- Conflict of interest policy (required for 501(c)(3))
- Amendment procedures
- Member rights (if membership nonprofit)
- Adopt bylaws
- Elect initial board of directors
- Elect officers
- Adopt conflict of interest policy
- Authorize EIN application
- Authorize opening bank account
- Document in minutes
All nonprofits need an EIN (even before 501(c)(3) approval):
- Apply online: IRS EIN Application
- Free
- Instant approval
- Needed for bank account and 501(c)(3) application
File IRS Form 1023 or 1023-EZ:
- Form 1023-EZ (Streamlined): $275 fee, for small nonprofits (under $50K annual revenue, under $250K assets)
- Form 1023 (Full): $600 fee, for larger nonprofits or complex situations
- Processing time: 3-12 months
- Apply online: IRS Tax Exempt Application
Required documents:
- Georgia Articles of Incorporation (with 501(c)(3) language)
- Bylaws
- Conflict of interest policy
- Financial projections (3-year budget)
- Description of programs and activities
- Board composition and governance
After receiving 501(c)(3) determination letter:
- Apply for Georgia sales tax exemption: GA DOR Exemptions
- Allows nonprofit to make purchases without paying sales tax
- File Form ST-5 (Application for Sales and Use Tax Certificate of Exemption)
If soliciting donations in Georgia:
- Register with Georgia Secretary of State (Charities Division)
- Form CRF-002 (Charitable Organization Registration)
- Fee: $35/year
- Required if raising over $25,000/year or using paid fundraisers
- Info: GA SOS Charities Division
Nonprofit Corporation Costs
Annual Compliance for Georgia Nonprofits
- Annual Registration: $50/year, due January 1 - April 1
- Charitable Solicitation Renewal: $35/year (if fundraising)
- Form 990 (Annual Return): Due 5 months + 15 days after fiscal year end
- Form 990-N (E-Postcard): If gross receipts under $50,000
- Form 990-EZ: If gross receipts $50K-$200K
- Form 990 (Full): If gross receipts over $200K or assets over $500K
- Penalty: Lose tax-exempt status if fail to file 3 consecutive years
Georgia Professional Corporation (PC)
A Professional Corporation (PC) is a Georgia corporation for licensed professionals, authorized under the Georgia Professional Corporation Act (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-7).
If you provide professional services requiring a Georgia state license, you must form a PC (cannot use regular C-Corp).
Professions Requiring PC in Georgia (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-7-2):
- Medical: Physicians (M.D., D.O.), dentists, veterinarians, optometrists, chiropractors, podiatrists
- Legal: Attorneys
- Accounting: Certified Public Accountants (CPAs)
- Architecture & Engineering: Architects, professional engineers, land surveyors, landscape architects
- Mental Health: Psychologists, licensed professional counselors, marriage/family therapists, social workers
- Other Licensed Professions: Real estate brokers/appraisers (if authorized by licensing board)
PC Formation Requirements
BEFORE filing Articles of Incorporation, obtain approval/certificate from your licensing board:
- Georgia Composite Medical Board (physicians, DOs)
- Georgia Board of Dentistry
- State Bar of Georgia (attorneys)
- Georgia State Board of Accountancy (CPAs)
- Georgia Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors
- Etc. (varies by profession)
Each board has specific requirements for PC formation (some require name approval, certificate of good standing, etc.).
Must include:
- Corporate name ending in "Professional Corporation," "Professional Association," "P.C.," or "P.A."
- Statement: "This corporation is a professional corporation"
- Specific professional service(s) to be rendered
- Statement that all shareholders are licensed to render the professional service
- Certificate/approval from licensing board (attached)
- Filing fee: $100 (same as regular corporation)
All shareholders must be licensed in the profession:
- Cannot have non-licensed shareholders (exception: estates/trusts for brief transition)
- Some professions allow related professions (e.g., medical PC can have MDs, DOs, PAs)
- If shareholder loses license β must sell shares within reasonable time
PC Liability: What's Protected, What's Not
β PC Protects You From:
- Business debts and contracts
- Lease obligations
- Employee actions (if not under your supervision)
- Other shareholders' malpractice (you're not liable for their mistakes)
β PC Does NOT Protect You From:
- Your own professional malpractice
- Malpractice by employees you directly supervised
- Professional negligence or errors you personally made
- Licensing board discipline
Because PCs don't protect against professional malpractice, you MUST carry professional liability insurance (errors & omissions). This is typically required by licensing boards, hospitals, and lenders.
PC vs. PLLC (Professional LLC)
Georgia allows BOTH Professional Corporations (PC) and Professional LLCs (PLLC). Here's how they compare:
| Feature | Professional Corporation (PC) | Professional LLC (PLLC) |
|---|---|---|
| Formation Cost | $100 | $100 |
| Annual Fee | $50 | $50 |
| Default Taxation | C-Corp (double tax) - must elect S-Corp | Pass-through (like partnership) |
| Formalities | Strict (bylaws, annual meetings, minutes, resolutions required) | Minimal (operating agreement, basic records) |
| Management | Board of Directors + Officers (formal) | Member-managed or Manager-managed (flexible) |
| S-Corp Election | β Yes (Form 2553) | β Yes (Form 2553) |
| Self-Employment Tax Savings | β Yes (if elect S-Corp) | β Yes (if elect S-Corp) |
| Best For | Larger practices, multiple locations, want formal structure, planning growth | Solo practitioners, small groups, simplicity, flexibility |
S-Corp Election for PCs
Because PC default taxation is C-Corp (double taxation), most professional corporations immediately elect S-Corp status to get:
- Pass-through taxation (avoid double tax)
- Self-employment tax savings (salary + distributions)
- Same liability protection as C-Corp
File IRS Form 2553 within 2 months + 15 days of incorporation.
When to Choose PC vs. PLLC
Choose PC (Professional Corporation) If:
- Larger professional practice (5+ professionals)
- Multiple locations or offices
- Planning significant growth
- Want formal governance structure
- Comfortable with corporate formalities
- Hospital/institutional affiliations (some require PC)
Choose PLLC (Professional LLC) If:
- Solo practitioner or small group (2-4)
- Want maximum simplicity and flexibility
- Prefer minimal formalities
- Pass-through tax default preferred
- Not planning rapid growth
- Small consulting/advisory practice
Corporate Governance & Compliance
Georgia corporations must maintain proper governance to preserve limited liability protection and comply with state law.
Corporate Bylaws
Bylaws are the internal rules governing your corporation's operations. They are NOT filed with the state but are required under Georgia law (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-206).
Bylaws should include:
- Shareholders: Annual meeting date/location, special meeting procedures, voting rights, quorum requirements
- Board of Directors: Number of directors, election procedures, terms, meeting frequency, quorum, removal
- Officers: Roles and duties (President, Secretary, Treasurer), appointment/removal, terms
- Stock: Issuance procedures, transfer restrictions, stock certificates
- Amendments: How bylaws can be amended (typically board or shareholder vote)
- Fiscal Year: Corporation's fiscal year
- Indemnification: Director/officer indemnification provisions
Board of Directors
- Minimum: 1 director (Georgia allows one-person corporations)
- Qualifications: No residency requirement (directors can live anywhere)
- Election: Directors elected by shareholders at annual meeting
- Term: Typically one year (or staggered terms if multiple classes)
- Removal: Shareholders can remove directors with or without cause (unless bylaws require cause)
Duty of Care:
- Must act with care an ordinarily prudent person would exercise in similar position
- Duty to be informed before making decisions
- Can rely on officers, employees, advisors if reasonable
Duty of Loyalty:
- Must act in best interests of corporation (not personal interests)
- Disclose conflicts of interest
- No self-dealing or corporate opportunity usurpation
- Frequency: At least annual board meeting (typically quarterly for active businesses)
- Notice: Must provide notice (unless waived) per bylaws
- Quorum: Majority of directors (unless bylaws specify different)
- Action: Majority vote of directors present (unless bylaws require higher threshold)
- Minutes: Must document actions taken in written minutes
- Unanimous Consent: Can take action without meeting if all directors consent in writing
Officers
Georgia requires at least these officers:
- President (or CEO): Chief executive, manages day-to-day operations
- Secretary: Maintains corporate records, minutes, stock ledger
- Treasurer (or CFO): Manages finances, accounting (optional in Georgia but recommended)
Additional officers (optional): VP, COO, General Counsel, etc.
Important: One person can hold multiple officer positions (President can also be Secretary and Treasurer).
Shareholder Meetings
- Required: Must hold annual meeting to elect directors
- Notice: 10-60 days advance written notice to shareholders
- Location: Can be anywhere (in or out of Georgia)
- Quorum: Majority of shares entitled to vote (unless bylaws specify different)
- Actions: Elect directors, approve major transactions, amend bylaws (if reserved to shareholders)
- Can be called by board, president, or holders of 10%+ shares (or as bylaws specify)
- 10-60 days notice required
- Purpose must be stated in notice (can only act on stated purposes)
Corporate Records (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2-1601)
Georgia corporations must maintain:
- Articles of Incorporation (as amended)
- Bylaws (as amended)
- Board resolutions creating classes of stock, fixing rights
- Minutes of shareholder meetings for past 3 years
- All written shareholder communications for past 3 years
- Financial statements for past 3 years
- List of current directors and officers (names and addresses)
- Stock ledger (list of shareholders, shares owned, transfers)
- Copies of all reports/statements sent to shareholders
Where to keep: Principal office or registered office in Georgia
Shareholder inspection rights: Shareholders can inspect and copy records (with 5 days' advance notice)
Shareholder Agreements
A shareholder agreement is a contract among shareholders establishing:
- Buy-Sell Provisions: What happens when shareholder dies, becomes disabled, wants to leave, gets divorced
- Transfer Restrictions: Right of first refusal, consent requirements before selling to outsiders
- Valuation: How to value shares for buyouts (formula, appraisal, etc.)
- Deadlock Resolution: What happens if shareholders can't agree (mediation, shotgun clause, forced sale)
- Management Rights: Board representation, voting agreements, veto rights
- Drag-Along/Tag-Along: Majority can force minority to join sale (drag), minority can join majority sale (tag)
Annual Compliance Checklist
- β Hold annual shareholder meeting (elect directors)
- β Hold annual board meeting (elect officers, approve financials)
- β Prepare and approve minutes
- β File Georgia Annual Registration ($50, due Jan 1 - April 1)
- β File federal tax return (Form 1120 or 1120-S)
- β File Georgia tax return (Form 600 or 600-S)
- β Update stock ledger (if any transfers)
- β Review and update bylaws/shareholder agreement if needed
If you don't maintain proper governance (meetings, minutes, separate finances), courts can "pierce the corporate veil" and hold shareholders personally liable for corporate debts. This defeats the entire purpose of incorporation!
Protect yourself:
- Hold annual meetings (even if just 1-2 people)
- Document important decisions in minutes
- Keep corporate and personal finances completely separate
- Maintain corporate records
- Follow your bylaws
Georgia Corporation Taxes & Fees
Georgia State Taxes
C-Corporations:
- Rate: 5.75% flat tax on Georgia taxable income
- File: Form 600 (Georgia Corporate Income Tax Return)
- Due: 15th day of 4th month after fiscal year end (April 15 for calendar year)
- Estimated Payments: Quarterly if expect to owe $1,000+ (April 15, June 15, Sept 15, Dec 15)
S-Corporations:
- Corporate level: No Georgia tax (pass-through to shareholders)
- File: Form 600-S (Georgia S-Corporation Tax Return) - due March 15
- Shareholders: Report income on personal Georgia return (Form 500)
- Rate: Shareholders pay 5.49% on distributive share of income
Georgia ELIMINATED the corporate net worth tax in 2016. Unlike Delaware ($400+ minimum) or California ($800 minimum), Georgia corporations pay NO annual franchise tax or net worth tax. Only the $50 annual registration fee + income tax on profits.
Federal Taxes
- Rate: 21% flat federal corporate tax (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017)
- File: Form 1120 (U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return)
- Due: 15th day of 4th month after fiscal year end (April 15 for calendar year)
- Estimated Taxes: Quarterly (Form 1120-W) if expect to owe $500+
- Double Taxation: Corporate profits taxed at 21%, then dividends to shareholders taxed at 0-20% (qualified dividends)
- Corporate level: No federal tax (pass-through)
- File: Form 1120-S (U.S. Income Tax Return for S-Corp) - due March 15
- Schedule K-1: Issued to each shareholder showing share of income/loss
- Shareholders: Report K-1 income on personal Form 1040
- Rate: Shareholders pay income tax at personal rates (10-37%)
- Self-Employment Tax Savings: Only salary subject to payroll tax (15.3%), distributions NOT subject
Payroll Taxes (If Employees or S-Corp)
Payroll Filing Requirements:
- Federal Form 941: Quarterly payroll tax return
- Georgia Form G-7: Withholding tax (monthly, quarterly, or annually)
- Georgia Form DOL-4: Unemployment tax (quarterly)
- W-2: Employee wage statements (by Jan 31)
- Form 940: Federal unemployment tax (annually by Jan 31)
Georgia Annual Fees
Tax Comparison: C-Corp vs. S-Corp vs. LLC
C-Corporation:
- Federal corporate tax (21%): $21,000
- Georgia corporate tax (5.75%): $5,750
- After-tax profit: $73,250
- Dividend to you: $73,250
- Federal tax on dividend (20%): $14,650
- Georgia tax on dividend (5.49%): $4,021
- Total tax: $45,421 (45.4%)
S-Corporation (Georgia):
- Reasonable salary: $60,000
- Payroll tax (15.3%): $9,180
- Federal income tax on $100K (24% bracket): $24,000
- Georgia income tax (5.49%): $5,490
- Total tax: $38,670 (38.7%)
- SAVES $6,751 vs C-Corp
LLC (default pass-through):
- Self-employment tax (15.3%): $15,300
- Federal income tax (24%): $24,000
- Georgia income tax (5.49%): $5,490
- Total tax: $44,790 (44.8%)
- S-Corp SAVES $6,120 vs LLC
Georgia Corporation Formation Services
As a Georgia-licensed attorney, I offer three comprehensive packages to help you form your Georgia corporation quickly and correctly. All packages include my personal legal guidance and ensure your corporation is set up for long-term success.
My Georgia Corporation Packages
π¦ Standard Package - $899
Best for: Simple C-Corp or S-Corp, 1-3 shareholders
Includes:
- β Georgia name availability search
- β Preparation and filing of Articles of Incorporation
- β State filing fee ($100) included
- β Corporate bylaws (attorney-drafted)
- β Organizational meeting minutes
- β Stock certificates (up to 3 shareholders)
- β EIN application (federal tax ID)
- β S-Corp election assistance (Form 2553)
- β Compliance calendar (annual deadlines)
- β Email support
Timeline: 7-10 business days
β Professional Package - $1,799
Best for: Multi-shareholder corps, professional corporations (PC), S-Corp election
Everything in Standard, plus:
- β Customized bylaws (tailored voting, governance)
- β Shareholder agreement (buy-sell, transfer restrictions)
- β Registered agent service (1 year included, $125 value)
- β Bank account setup assistance
- β Initial tax structure consultation (30-min)
- β S-Corp filing (Form 2553 prepared and filed)
- β Stock ledger and corporate record book
- β Priority support (phone + email)
Timeline: 5-7 business days
π Premium Package - $2,999
Best for: Complex ownership, professional corporations, benefit corps, significant capital
Everything in Professional, plus:
- β Comprehensive shareholder agreement (custom profit allocation, drag/tag, deadlock resolution)
- β 1-hour personal consultation with me
- β Professional Corporation (PC) formation and licensing board coordination
- β Benefit Corporation formation (third-party standard selection, benefit report template)
- β Close Corporation provisions (if applicable)
- β Multi-class stock structure (preferred/common shares)
- β Director/officer indemnification provisions
- β Registered agent service (3 years included, $375 value)
- β First-year annual registration filing ($50 value)
- β Asset protection planning consultation
- β Ongoing compliance support (quarterly check-ins with me)
- β White-glove personal service with direct attorney access
Timeline: 3-5 business days
Add-On Services
Why Work With Me?
βοΈ Real Attorney, Not a Paralegal
As a Georgia-licensed attorney, I personally handle:
- Georgia Business Corporation Code (O.C.G.A. Β§ 14-2) compliance
- Georgia Secretary of State procedures
- Legal strategy and governance planning
- All bylaws and shareholder agreements are drafted by me, not templates
- Professional corporations and licensing board coordination
β‘ Fast, Accurate Filing
I've filed 300+ Georgia corporations with:
- 99.8% first-time approval rate
- Average 6-day turnaround
- Zero name rejections (I pre-clear names)
- Complete accuracy (I personally review everything)
π‘οΈ Governance & Asset Protection
I ensure your corporation is structured properly:
- Bylaws tailored to your governance needs
- Shareholder agreements with buy-sell provisions
- Director/officer protection and indemnification
- Corporate formalities guidance
- Annual compliance support
πΌ Tax Structure Planning
I help you choose the right tax structure:
- C-Corp vs. S-Corp analysis
- S-Corp election timing and strategy
- Georgia vs. other state comparison
- Tax planning guidance (CPA referrals available)
What My Georgia Clients Say
"I needed to incorporate my medical practice as a Professional Corporation. He coordinated with the Georgia Medical Board, drafted compliant bylaws, and got my PC approved in under a week. Working with a real attorney who knows Georgia corporate law was invaluable."
- Dr. Chen, Atlanta (Professional Corporation)
"As a tech startup, we needed S-Corp election for tax savings but wanted flexibility for future funding. He structured our corporation perfectly, drafted a shareholder agreement with all the right provisions, and filed our S-Corp election on time. Professional service from start to finish."
- Mike R., Savannah (S-Corporation)
"We wanted Benefit Corporation status for our sustainable products company. He helped us articulate our public benefit purpose, chose the right third-party standard, and drafted bylaws that protect our mission long-term. Couldn't be happier."
- Sarah & Tom, Athens (Benefit Corporation)
Get Started Today
Reserve attorney time to plan your corporation launch, S-corp election, or benefit/PC filing:
Prefer email? I reply within one business day (MonβFri, 9amβ6pm EST).
- Email: owner@terms.law
Frequently Asked Questions
Choose Corporation if: Raising VC funding, planning IPO, want S-Corp tax savings, need stock options for employees, professional practice (PC).
Choose LLC if: Small business, real estate investing, maximum flexibility, minimal formalities, not raising VC.
I can help you decide based on your specific situation.
S-Corp is a tax election, not a different entity type. You form a C-Corporation first, then elect S-Corp tax treatment (Form 2553). S-Corp gives you pass-through taxation and self-employment tax savings.
Georgia Secretary of State processes online filings in 7-10 business days. With my service:
- Standard Package: 7-10 business days total
- Professional Package: 5-7 business days total
- Premium Package: 3-5 business days total
- Expedited service available (2-3 business days) for $300 extra
You need a Georgia registered agent address (which I can provide). Your principal office, directors, and shareholders can be located anywhere.
My shareholder agreements (Professional/Premium packages) are drafted personally by me and include:
- Buy-sell provisions (death, disability, termination)
- Transfer restrictions and right of first refusal
- Valuation methods for share purchases
- Drag-along/tag-along rights
- Deadlock resolution procedures
- Board representation and voting rights
Yes! My packages include:
- Annual registration deadline reminders ($50 due Jan-April)
- Tax deadline calendar (federal and Georgia)
- Optional annual registration filing service ($99/year)
- Premium package includes quarterly compliance check-ins with me