A foreign corporation in Alabama is any business formed elsewhere but operating within Alabama's borders. The Alabama Business and Nonprofit Entities Code governs these situations, with the Secretary of State overseeing the process.
Failing to foreign register in Alabama can lead to serious consequences. Your business could face penalties or lose access to Alabama courts, meaning you can't enforce contracts or defend yourself in legal disputes.
Establishing a solid registration process across all your operating states significantly reduces these risks.
According to the Alabama Secretary of State, you need to register if you transact business in Alabama. This typically includes activities such as:
Before filing your foreign registration, you’ll need a Name Reservation Certificate from the Secretary of State.
If your exact name is already taken, you'll need to use a different name for Alabama operations. Names that include the words architect, engineer, insurance, bank, or trust require a letter of approval or license from the governing agency.
Name reservations last for 120 days and can be renewed.
You’ll file a different foreign registration document, depending on your entity type. The Alabama Secretary of State posts all these documents to the same page on its site. So just scroll until you find your entity type. All documents must be in English, with certified translations if originals are in another language.
All entities pay $150 to foreign register in Alabama.
Alabama requires every foreign corporation to have a registered agent with a physical Alabama address. They are responsible for receiving legal documents, including lawsuit notices, and accepting official communications from the Secretary of State. Alabama registered agents must:
According to Alabama Code § 10A-1-5.31, failing to maintain a registered agent can cost you your authority to do business in Alabama.
Getting registered is just the beginning—maintaining compliance is an ongoing process. Alabama requires ongoing filings to stay in good standing:
The Business Privilege Tax is the equivalent of an Alabama franchise tax. It ranges from $100 to $15,000 based on your Alabama-sourced income and net worth. Missing the filing results in penalties of $50 or 10% of tax due (whichever is greater).
For organizations managing multiple entities across numerous states, maintaining compliance can be time-consuming and complex. Discern offers specialized entity management solutions that efficiently handle multi-state compliance and filings simultaneously and affordably, helping you maintain good standing across all jurisdictions while minimizing costs and administrative burden.
We’ll get you started in less than 15 minutes.