Georgia corporation formation — C-corps and S-corps built for growth.
When your business needs to raise outside investment, issue multiple classes of stock, or access specific tax benefits, a corporation may be the right structure. We form Georgia corporations with complete governance documentation from day one.
We serve Hall County, GA, Jackson County, GA, Gwinnett County, GA, Banks County, GA, and all of Northeast Georgia with C-corporation and S-corporation formation, including complete governance documentation.
Core Service
Articles of Incorporation & State Filing
Forming a Georgia corporation begins with filing Articles of Incorporation with the Georgia Secretary of State under the Georgia Business Corporation Code. The articles establish the corporation's name, authorized shares, registered agent, and initial directors. We prepare and file all required documents, obtain the certificate of incorporation, and ensure your corporation is organized in compliance with Georgia law — including any initial publication requirements that apply in your county.
Core Service
Corporate Bylaws & Governance Documents
Corporate bylaws are the internal governing document of a corporation — they establish the board of directors' authority, the shareholders' rights, the procedures for holding meetings, the quorum and voting requirements, and the process for electing and removing officers. We draft comprehensive bylaws tailored to your ownership structure and governance needs, along with organizational minutes, officer consents, initial stock issuance documentation, and shareholders' agreements where applicable.
Core Service
S-Corp Elections & Tax Structure
An S-corporation election allows a corporation to pass its income and losses directly to shareholders, avoiding the double taxation that applies to C-corporations. To qualify, the corporation must meet specific IRS requirements — including limits on the number and type of shareholders — and file Form 2553 within the required timeframe. We advise on whether S-corp status is appropriate for your business, coordinate the election with your accountant, and ensure all organizational documents are structured consistently with S-corp requirements.
C-Corp vs. S-Corp
Choosing the right corporate structure for your Georgia business
The choice between a C-corporation and an S-corporation has significant tax, structural, and fundraising implications. Here is how they compare for the situations we encounter most often.
Entity Comparison
C-Corporation: For Investment & Growth
A C-corporation is the standard choice for businesses that plan to raise venture capital, bring in institutional investors, or eventually go public. C-corps can issue multiple classes of stock — including preferred shares with special rights favored by investors — and have no restrictions on the number or type of shareholders. The trade-off is double taxation: the corporation pays tax on its income, and shareholders pay tax again on dividends. For growth-stage businesses, this structure's flexibility often outweighs the tax cost.
Entity Comparison
S-Corporation: For Pass-Through Tax Benefits
An S-corporation avoids double taxation by passing income and losses directly to shareholders, who report them on their personal returns. For business owners who take a salary from the company, an S-corp structure can also reduce self-employment tax by allowing a portion of income to be taken as a distribution rather than wages. The restrictions on S-corp eligibility — no more than 100 shareholders, only one class of stock, and only U.S. citizen or resident individual shareholders — make this structure most appropriate for closely held businesses without outside investors.
Entity Comparison
When an LLC May Still Be Better
For many small and growing businesses in Northeast Georgia, an LLC taxed as an S-corporation provides many of the same tax advantages as an S-corp without the formal governance requirements of a corporation. This hybrid approach — forming an LLC but electing S-corp tax treatment — is increasingly popular. We evaluate your specific situation and provide a recommendation on the structure that best serves your business goals, liability protection needs, and tax situation before you commit to any formation path.
The Georgia business formation guide: LLCs, corporations & contracts
Our plain-language guide covers every entity type, formation step, and contract you need to build a legally sound Georgia business.
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Service Area
Serving Hall County, Gwinnett County & Northeast Georgia
We serve Hall County, GA, Jackson County, GA, Gwinnett County, GA, Banks County, GA, and all of Northeast Georgia — providing accessible, high-quality legal representation close to home.
Hall County
Gainesville
Flowery Branch
Oakwood
Jackson County
Braselton
Jefferson
Commerce
Hoschton
Gwinnett County
Peachtree Corners
Lawrenceville
Duluth
Sugar Hill
Buford
Banks County
Homer
Maysville
Baldwin
Alto
FAQ
Common questions about Georgia corporate formation
Answers to the questions we hear most from business owners and founders in Gainesville, Lawrenceville, Jefferson, and across Northeast Georgia.
Can a corporation be owned by a single person in Georgia?
Yes. Georgia allows corporations to have a single shareholder, and that shareholder can also serve as the sole director and officer. A single-person corporation must still observe all corporate formalities — maintaining bylaws, holding required meetings (or taking action by written consent), keeping corporate records, and maintaining separation between personal and corporate finances. Failing to follow these formalities can expose the sole shareholder to personal liability for corporate debts.
How is a Georgia corporation taxed?
By default, a Georgia corporation is taxed as a C-corporation — the corporation pays federal income tax at the current corporate rate (21%), and shareholders pay personal income tax on any dividends distributed. If the corporation meets the eligibility requirements and makes a timely S-corp election, income instead passes through to shareholders' personal returns without corporate-level tax. We coordinate with your tax advisor to ensure your entity and tax structure are aligned from the start.
What corporate records am I required to maintain in Georgia?
Under the Georgia Business Corporation Code, corporations must maintain records including: articles of incorporation and all amendments; bylaws; minutes of all shareholder and director meetings; a list of shareholders; all written consents from directors or shareholders taken in lieu of meetings; and financial statements for the last three years. These records must be kept at the corporation's principal office or registered agent's address and must be made available to shareholders upon request.
Should I form my corporation in Georgia or Delaware?
Delaware is the preferred state of incorporation for venture-backed startups and companies planning to go public, because Delaware's corporate law is the most developed in the country and most institutional investors require Delaware incorporation. However, for most small and medium-sized Georgia businesses that are not raising institutional capital, forming in Georgia is simpler and less expensive — you avoid Delaware filing fees and the requirement to also register as a foreign corporation in Georgia where you actually do business. We advise based on your specific growth trajectory and investor expectations.
Ready to form your Georgia corporation?
Serving Hall County, Jackson County, Gwinnett County, Banks County, and all of Northeast Georgia — including Gainesville, Oakwood, Braselton, Jefferson, Lawrenceville, Duluth, Sugar Hill, Buford, Homer, and Maysville.