Company Applicant vs. Beneficial Owner

The Corporate Transparency Act’s Beneficial Ownership Information Reporting Rule went into effect in January 2024, leaving many business owners wondering:

  1. Are they required to submit a Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) Report?
  2. What’s the difference between beneficial owners and company applicants, and what information does a reporting company have to share about them?

Although certain entities are exempt, most small Corporations, Limited Liability Companies (LLCs), Limited Partnerships (LPs), Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs), Limited Liability Limited Partnerships (LLLPs), and business trusts are required to report their beneficial ownership information to FinCEN, the bureau that receives BOI reports.

Key factors for determining if your company must report BOI:

“Reporting company” is what FinCEN calls any company required to file a BOI report. In addition to providing various details about itself as an entity, it must also share information about its beneficial owners and possibly its company applicants.

Let CorpNet Handle Your BOI Filing

The Corporate Transparency Act and Beneficial Ownership Reporting rule are uncharted territory for businesses everywhere. But with CorpNet’s help in preparing and filing your BOI report, you’ll navigate the process with ease.

Who Is a Company Applicant?

A company applicant is an individual(s) who prepared or filed the business’s formation documents to legally create the entity.

A reporting company must identify one “direct filer” company applicant — the person who physically or electronically filed the entity registration documents. If another individual was responsible for directing or controlling the filing action, the reporting company should also identify that person in its BOI report.

Several things to keep in mind about company applicants: