What converting back to LLC in New Jersey involves.
New Jersey conversion path
New Jersey does not authorize direct Corp-to-LLC statutory conversion. The path is statutory merger required — Articles of Merger filed with the Division of Revenue.
Tax impact (this matters)
Corp-to-LLC conversion is generally treated by the IRS as a deemed liquidation of the Corp followed by contribution to the LLC. Built-in gain in Corp assets can trigger tax at both the entity and shareholder level (C-Corp) or just shareholder level (S-Corp). The tax cost can be significant — get a tax opinion BEFORE filing.
When the conversion makes sense
Small Corps that have outgrown the formalities (annual board meetings, stockholder minutes, formal officer roles); S-Corps that want to escape reasonable-comp audits; closely held Corps that want pass-through flexibility with less corporate overhead.
Shareholders become members
Each share is converted into a defined number of LLC membership interests per the Plan of Conversion (statutory route) or merger plan. Cap table simplification often happens at the same time as the conversion.
EIN treatment
Statutory conversion typically preserves the same EIN (entity is legally continuous). Statutory merger usually requires a new EIN. Confirm with the IRS in writing before the first post-conversion payroll run.
New LLC documents
Operating Agreement (replacing Bylaws), member roster (replacing stockholder roster), no more board of directors or officers. Substantially simpler ongoing governance for closely held businesses.
A clean handoff, in 7 steps.
Get tax counsel FIRST
Unlike LLC-to-Corp (which is usually tax-free under Section 351), Corp-to-LLC typically triggers a deemed liquidation that can recognize gain. For C-Corps with appreciated assets the tax can be substantial. Talk to a CPA or tax attorney BEFORE filing.
Confirm the legal path
New Jersey does not authorize direct Corp-to-LLC statutory conversion. The path is statutory merger required — Articles of Merger filed with the Division of Revenue.
Get shareholder approval
Corporate Bylaws and state corporate statute govern the vote. Typically requires majority or supermajority of shares outstanding. Dissenting shareholders may have appraisal rights — they can demand cash for their shares at fair value instead of converting.
Draft the Plan of Conversion or Merger Plan
Defines the share-to-membership-interest exchange ratio, effective date, and post-conversion governance.
File the Articles of Merger with New Jersey SOS
State fee passes through. Articles of Merger plus the new LLC's Articles of Organization get filed together.
Adopt new LLC documents
Operating Agreement drafted, member roster recorded, board of directors and officer roles dissolved. Bylaws no longer apply.
Notify IRS and update banking
Tax classification change reported via Form 8832 (entity classification election) where needed. Bank account titling updated. Material contracts reviewed for change-of-control language.
Know your cost before you file.
Pricing for this service and any state fees are laid out in one place on our pricing page, passed through at cost with no markup. See exactly what your filing costs before you commit.
Common questions.
How do I convert my Corporation to an LLC in New Jersey?
New Jersey does not authorize direct Corp-to-LLC statutory conversion. The path is statutory merger required — Articles of Merger filed with the Division of Revenue. The conversion is a single SOS filing (statutory route) or two filings (merger route). Tax counsel BEFORE filing is essential because the deemed-liquidation tax can be substantial.
Will converting Corp to LLC in New Jersey trigger tax?
Usually yes for C-Corps with appreciated assets. The IRS generally treats Corp-to-LLC conversion as a deemed liquidation: the Corp is treated as if it distributed all assets to shareholders at fair market value, triggering gain recognition at the Corp level (C-Corp) or shareholder level (S-Corp). The tax cost can be significant. Get a tax opinion BEFORE filing.
Why would I convert from Corp to LLC?
Common reasons: simpler ongoing governance (no annual board meetings, no stockholder minutes, no formal officer roles), pass-through flexibility, escape from S-Corp reasonable-comp scrutiny, or alignment with closely held family business structure. Less common than LLC-to-Corp (the VC-track conversion).
Does New Jersey allow direct Corp-to-LLC statutory conversion?
No. New Jersey requires statutory merger required — Articles of Merger filed with the Division of Revenue as the workaround.
Does the LLC keep the same EIN as the Corp?
Statutory conversion typically preserves the EIN (entity is legally continuous). Statutory merger usually requires a new EIN. Confirm with the IRS in writing before the first post-conversion payroll run.
Do shareholders automatically become members?
Each share is converted into a defined number of LLC membership interests per the Plan of Conversion. Cap table mechanics get re-set: no more authorized vs issued shares, just membership interests defined in the Operating Agreement.
What happens to outstanding employee stock options after conversion?
Stock options become problematic in an LLC structure (LLCs do not issue stock). Common patterns: convert options to profits interests (LLC-equivalent), accelerate vesting and exercise before the conversion, or restructure as cash bonuses. Get HR/equity counsel involved early.
Can I convert from C-Corp to LLC with S-Corp election?
Yes — and this is a common pattern. Convert C-Corp to LLC, then file Form 2553 to elect S-Corp tax status on the LLC. The result is a single-entity pass-through structure that keeps most of the C-Corp's tax-saving features without the C-Corp double-taxation problem.
How long does the conversion take in New Jersey?
New Jersey SOS filing typically processes in 1-4 weeks. Full conversion including new Operating Agreement, banking update, and contract reassignment runs 6-12 weeks end to end.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here — we keep the rest tracked.