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You’re building something bigger. Maybe you want to raise venture capital. Maybe you’re planning for an IPO someday. Maybe you just want the structure that 67% of Fortune 500 companies use. A corporation is a separate legal entity — it can own property, sign contracts, sue and be sued, all independently from you. It’s more complex than an LLC, but it’s built for scale.

Why people incorporate

Unlimited growth potential. Issue stock to investors, employees, and advisors. Multiple classes of stock with different rights. Go public if you want. Investors expect it. VCs and institutional investors want C-Corps. Their lawyers know how Delaware corporations work. Their deal structures assume stock, not membership interests. Perpetual existence. The corporation lives on even if founders leave, sell their shares, or pass away. Centuries of case law. Especially in Delaware, there’s a predictable legal framework. Courts have ruled on almost every scenario you can imagine.

The double taxation reality

Corporations pay tax at the entity level (21% federal rate). When shareholders take dividends, they pay tax again. But here’s the thing: if you’re reinvesting profits into growth rather than distributing them, double taxation barely matters. Most startups don’t pay dividends for years. By the time they do, the structure has already paid for itself in investor access and growth.
If you want pass-through taxation, you can elect S-Corp status after forming. But S-Corps have limits: 100 shareholders max, one class of stock, US owners only. Most VC-backed companies can’t use it.

What Pluvel handles

TaskWhat we do
Name availabilityCheck if your name is available
Articles of IncorporationFile with the Secretary of State
Registered agentProvide a registered agent (included)
EIN applicationApply for your federal tax ID
BylawsGenerate standard corporate bylaws
Initial resolutionsBoard resolutions for first directors
Stock certificatesTemplates for issuing shares

Why Delaware

About 67% of Fortune 500 companies are incorporated in Delaware. Here’s why: Court of Chancery. Specialized business court with judges (not juries) who understand corporate law. Disputes get resolved by experts. Flexible corporate law. Delaware General Corporation Law is business-friendly and frequently updated. You can do things in Delaware you can’t do elsewhere. Established precedent. Decades of case law means fewer surprises. Lawyers know what to expect. Privacy. Directors and officers don’t appear in public filings.
If you’re raising venture capital, incorporate in Delaware. Investors expect it, and their lawyers are comfortable with it. Saves everyone time and legal fees.

Formation requirements

1

Company name

Must include “Corporation,” “Incorporated,” “Company,” or abbreviations (Corp., Inc., Co.). We check availability.
2

Authorized shares

How many shares can your corporation issue? Common startup setup: 10,000,000 shares of common stock. You don’t have to issue them all — this is just your ceiling.
3

Par value

The minimum price per share for accounting purposes. Delaware standard: $0.0001 per share. This minimizes franchise tax.
4

Incorporator

The person who signs the Articles of Incorporation. Pluvel can act as incorporator.
5

Initial directors

Who will serve on the board? Can be one person for a small company.

After incorporation

Once your corporation is approved:
  1. Hold organizational meeting — Adopt bylaws, elect officers, authorize stock
  2. Issue founder shares — Document who owns what percentage
  3. 83(b) election — If shares vest over time, file within 30 days to avoid a tax nightmare
  4. Open bank account — Use your Articles and EIN letter
  5. Set up equity tracking — You’ll need this as you issue more shares

Corporate roles

RoleWhat they do
ShareholdersOwn the company. Vote on major decisions.
Board of DirectorsOversee management. Make strategic decisions.
Officers (CEO, CFO, etc.)Run day-to-day operations. Appointed by the board.
Registered AgentReceives legal documents on behalf of the corporation.
You must hold at least one board meeting per year and document it with minutes. Annual shareholder meetings are also required in most states. Skip these formalities and you risk losing liability protection.

State-specific considerations

Most popular for startups. Franchise tax is based on authorized shares or assumed par value — always calculate both methods and use whichever is cheaper. Minimum 175/year,cappedat175/year, capped at 200,000.
$800 minimum franchise tax per year. Required if you’re “doing business” in California, even if incorporated in Delaware. If your customers, employees, or office are in California, you’re probably doing business there.
No state corporate income tax. No franchise tax. Popular for businesses that want tax advantages but don’t need Delaware’s legal framework for investors.
No state income tax. Low fees. Good for privacy. Growing in popularity for small corporations not seeking venture capital.

Corporation vs. LLC

FeatureCorporationLLC
Stock issuanceLimited (membership interests)
Investor expectationsPreferredSometimes acceptable
Going publicMust convert first
Ongoing formalitiesMoreLess
Tax flexibilityLess (without S election)More
Self-employment taxWages onlyAll profits

Common vs. preferred stock

TypeWho gets itFeatures
Common stockFounders, employeesVoting rights, last in liquidation
Preferred stockInvestorsLiquidation preference, anti-dilution, special rights
When you raise venture capital, investors typically get preferred stock with protections common shareholders don’t have. That’s normal — don’t be surprised by it.

Form your corporation

Step-by-step guide to incorporating with Pluvel.