UPDATE:
On Friday, March 1, 2024, in National Small Bus. United v. Yellen, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama ruled via memorandum opinion that the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), enacted in 2021, is unconstitutional because Congress lacks the authority to require companies to disclose personal stakeholder information to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), the criminal enforcement arm of the US Department of the Treasury. The court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and request for relief and entered a final declaratory judgment that the CTA is unconstitutional because it exceeds the limits imposed by the US Constitution on Congress’s power, permanently enjoining the defendants and any other agency or employee acting on behalf of the United States from enforcing the CTA against the plaintiffs.
Takeaway: At this time, the CTA cannot be enforced against the particular plaintiffs in this particular case, but the decision (which will likely be appealed) could ultimately have far-reaching consequences. Business owners and their advisors should monitor the changing regulatory landscape as this case—and any others—travel through the appellate courts.
update provided by WealthCounsel
Starting on January 1, 2024, under a new law called the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), owners of certain business entities must file a report with the federal government including details regarding the ownership of their entity. The CTA was enacted to help combat money laundering, financing of terrorism, tax fraud, and other illegal acts. If you have an entity (corporation, limited liability company, family limited partnership, etc.) as part of your existing estate plan, this is important information you will need to know to ensure that you comply with the new law.
What is the Corporate Transparency Act?
The CTA is a law that requires business entities it identifies as reporting companies to disclose certain information about the company and its owners to the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). Under the CTA, a reporting company is defined as a corporation, limited liability company (LLC), or other similar entity (i) created by filing a document with the secretary of state or a similar office under the laws of a state or Indian tribe or (ii) formed under the laws of a foreign country and registered to do business in the United States.[1] The following information about the reporting company must be included in the report[2]:
- company’s legal name and any trade names or doing business as (d/b/a) name
- street address of the principal place of business
- jurisdiction where the business was formed
- tax identification number
Additionally, the reporting company must provide the following information to FinCEN about its beneficial owners, defined as persons who hold significant equity (25 percent or more ownership interest) in the reporting company or who exercise substantial control over the reporting company[3]:
- full legal name
- date of birth
- current address
- unique identification number from an acceptable identification document
For reporting companies created on or after January 1, 2024, the same information must be provided about the company’s applicant, who is the person that files the creation documents for the reporting entity.
Note: Although a trust is not considered to be a reporting company under the CTA, if your trust owns an interest in a reporting company, such as an LLC, certain information about your trust may also have to be disclosed under the CTA because it may be deemed to be a beneficial owner.
Does the CTA impact you?
Many business regulations apply only to large businesses, but the CTA specifically targets smaller entities. If you own a small business, you may be subject to this act unless your business falls under one of the few stated exemptions, which primarily apply to industries that are already heavily regulated and have their own reporting requirements. Your business may also be exempt from the reporting requirements if it employs more than 20 full-time employees, filed a return showing more than $5 million in gross receipts or sales, and has a physical office located within the United States.[4]
Complying with the requirements of the CTA is of the utmost importance if you own a business entity or have one as part of your estate plan. We routinely create entities that might qualify as reporting companies as part of our clients’ estate plans. These include LLCs and family limited partnerships.
Limited Liability Companies
An LLC is a business structure that can own many types of accounts and property. These entities can be used to provide asset protection and probate avoidance.
Asset Protection
Because an LLC is a separate legal entity from its members, the LLC’s creditors can typically recover only business debts from the LLC’s money and property, not the member’s personal accounts or property. Also, if the proper formalities are in place, the member’s personal creditors may not be able to reach the LLC’s accounts and property to satisfy the member’s personal debts.
Note: In Florida, a single-member LLC does not enjoy the same protection from the member’s personal creditors. The rationale of this law is that your creditors should be able to recover your personal debts through your LLC interests to satisfy their claims because there are no other members that will be negatively impacted by the seizure of money and property owned by the LLC.
Probate Avoidance
Anything that is owned by the LLC—retitled into the name of the LLC during your lifetime, bought by the LLC, or transferred by operation of law at your death—will not go through the public, costly, and time-consuming probate process. The probate process only transfers accounts and property that you owned at your death. By using an LLC to own accounts and property, the LLC—not you—owns them. However, if you own the membership interest in your own name, the transfer of the membership interest at your death may still need to go through the probate process.
What do you have to do to comply with the CTA?
In order to comply with the act, you should gather the required information for all reporting companies you own and all other beneficial owners. For entities created before January 1, 2024, submit the initial reports for each reporting company by January 1, 2025. For entities created on or after January 1, 2024 and before January 1, 2025, submit the initial reports within 90 days of the entity’s creation. Entities created on or after January 1, 2025, will have 30 days to submit the reports.
Having a business entity as part of your estate plan can be an excellent tool depending on your unique situation. If you currently have one of these entities or are considering forming one, please reach out to us to discuss next steps to ensure that you fully comply with the requirements of the CTA. Give us a call to schedule an appointment.
[1] 31 U.S.C. § 5336(a)(11).
[2] 31 C.F.R. § 1010.380(b)(1)(i).
[3] 31 U.S.C. § 5336(b)(2)(A).
[4] Id. § 5336(a)(11)(B)(xxi).