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Do it yourself Filings with Illinois Registered Agent's Guidance

Do it yourself filings – we assist our clients with reviewing their forms for accuracy and acceptance when submitting to the Illinois Secretary of State. Our guidance ensures your ability to do it yourself and get your company up and running quickly.

This topic will address the following questions:

  • Why was my filing rejected?
  • How do I get a good standing certificate?
  • What are certified copies?
  • How to determine if my company name is available for use in Illinois?

Do it yourself filings: Ancillary Requirements & Filing Tips

Background:

Do-it-yourself filings are Illinois Registered Agents’ goal to save our clients money and successfully file documents for their company. Our representation services are primarily for entrepreneurs who want to understand what is involved with the legal aspect of their business – the incorporation/formation requirements, annual reporting requirements, and compliance with the state filings that are necessary to maintain a presence in the State of Illinois. I provide my clients with a corporate Paralegal’s perspective of what is essential for these filings and the guidance and confidence to be able to file with the State on their own.

Illinois Registered Agent provides you with the tools to do it yourself by providing the ability to form your own company, change your registered agent, or qualify your business in Illinois. Our Research section contains reference materials for many filing situations. If they do not answer your questions relating to the form contents, or the logistics of these filings, we are happy to help our clients navigate the forms.

Do it yourself filings: Helpful Hints for Do-it-Yourselfer's:

For do it yourself filings, you must first know whether or not you are a domestic or foreign entity. In many cases, this will determine which form you will file. Are you a foreign corporation or LLC or a domestic corporation or LLC, and what is the difference? Once you have established this, you will be more confident in choosing the correct forms to complete. If you have any questions, reach out to us.

Domestic Entity:

A U.S. company doing business in the state in which it is incorporated is considered a domestic entity.

Foreign Entity:

A company that is conducting business in one state when incorporated or chartered in another is considered a foreign entity.

Be Thorough – Answer Every Question:

To do it yourself filings, always answer EVERY question on the forms – unless it indicates that the item is optional. The State will reject if anything required is missing.

Name Availability:

Always check with the State of Illinois to be sure the name you have chosen is available for use.

Provide the Proper Supporting documentation with Your Filing:

Be aware of the State required Ancillary Documents, certified copies, and good standings that may be required to accompany your do it yourself filings.

Certified Copies:

When the form requests certified copies of the organization documents from your domestic state, the state expects you to deliver new copies of your organizational or incorporation documents (Articles of Organization or Articles of Incorporation) with all amendments that have been filed with your domestic state. These documents are required to be dated within the past 90 days. These official copies contain a cover page from the Secretary of State with the State seal and Secretary’s signature attesting to the authenticity of your incorporation documents therefore certifying that the attached copies are a complete record of what has been filed up to the current date with that Secretary of State’s office. When ordering these types of copies, ask for “certified copies with all amendments.”

For Illinois-certified copies and copy requests for corporations, please call 217-782-6875.

For Illinois-certified copies and copy requests for LLCs, LPs, and LLPs, please call 217-524-8008.

For a complete list of all Secretary of State websites and document retrieval, follow this link to our sister site: Secretary of State Links (il-registered-agent.com)

Certificate of Good Standing:

A good Standing or a Certificate of Existence is a certified statement from the Secretary of State indicating the company has met all tax and compliance requirements by that state and is active and in good standing in its state of incorporation and/or qualification. These are typically called a good standing certificate or a status certificate.

A good Standing certificate as supporting documentation is now required for LLC’S

Starting on January 1, 2020, in addition to the good standing certificate for the entity qualifying to do business, all members or managers that are a corporation, LLC, or other entity who are not currently registered with the Secretary of State as a foreign or domestic entity, must submit a good standing certificate for each member or manager domestic State. This includes annual reports, qualifications, formations, amendments, etc.

Filing Protocol:
  • Certain filings need additional filings to proceed or follow the actual filing, such as with a reinstatement. To reinstate a company that has been administratively dissolved for failure to file an annual report, the annual report must be submitted in tandem with the reinstatement documents. Other examples follow:
  • When changing agents, you must present both the old and the new agent information on the forms.
  • You may not change your agent on an annual report. If you are filing the annual report and want to change agents at the same time, you must complete a statement of change of registered agent and file it in tandem with the annual report, leave the listing for the old agent on the Annual Report, and listing the old and new agent on the change of agent form. Payment for the Annual report, franchise taxes, and payment for the agent change should be included with your filing.
  • You may not change your agent if your annual report is late or the company is not in good standing. You must file the annual report first; the agent change will be accepted after the annual report has been accepted.
If your company name is not available for use in Illinois:

You may need to adopt an assumed name which would require an additional filing submitted with your application for authority/admission or the articles of Incorporation/organization.

Corporate annual reports:

Where the issued and outstanding shares do not match what is on the state record you may need to file the Cumulative Report in Changes in Issued Shares or Paid-in Capital along with the annual report.

Company Names:

The State of Illinois only looks at the name of the company to determine if it is distinct from any company name already on file. They do not consider punctuation, the designation (Inc., LLC, NFP endings), or, special characters. If the company name is not significantly different from the name on file, you will not be able to use that company name. It is always best to check with the State of Illinois for verification that the name you wish to use is available for use in Illinois.