Hawaii business merger: Articles of Merger explained.
A statutory merger in Hawaii combines two or more entities into one surviving entity. The non-surviving entities cease to exist. This guide explains the structure, the Plan of Merger, the state filing, and the things founders most often miss after the merger closes.
Talk to merger specialist →Types of Hawaii merger
Two entities combine into one. The surviving entity absorbs assets, liabilities, and obligations.
LLC + Corporation, LLC + LP, etc. Hawaii allows cross-entity mergers under statute.
Common acquisition structure. Acquirer forms a subsidiary that merges with the target.
Surviving entity domiciled outside Hawaii. Requires coordinated filings in both jurisdictions.
Hawaii merger filing process
- 1Draft Plan of Merger. Identifies parties, surviving entity, conversion of interests, effective date.
- 2Obtain approvals. Member, shareholder, board approvals per governing documents.
- 3File Articles of Merger with the Hawaii DCCA Business Registration and any other state where a party is domiciled or qualified.
- 4Tax and creditor notifications. Hawaii Department of Revenue, IRS, creditors per applicable law.
- 5Post-merger compliance. Update licenses, contracts, registrations, payroll, bank accounts.
Frequently asked questions
What is a Hawaii merger?
How much does it cost to file Articles of Merger in Hawaii?
Can a Hawaii LLC merge with a Corporation?
Can I merge a Hawaii entity with an out-of-state entity?
What happens to the non-surviving entity in a Hawaii merger?
Do I need shareholder approval for a Hawaii merger?
Does File.Business handle merger filings?
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Five minutes per filing. State fee passed through at cost. Audit trail and deadline tracking included.
Disclosure. File.Business is a private business filing and compliance service. We are not a government agency and are not affiliated with the Hawaii DCCA Business Registration or any Secretary of State office. You may file directly with the Hawaii DCCA Business Registration. Information on this page is for general guidance only and is not legal, tax, or accounting advice. Fees and deadlines verified against the Hawaii DCCA Business Registration as of June 2026 and may change. For entity-specific guidance, consult a licensed Hawaii attorney or CPA.