What incorporating in Indiana actually involves.
Articles of Incorporation
The founding Indiana Corp document. Includes corporate name, registered agent, authorized shares, par value, incorporator. Filed with Indiana SOS.
Authorized share structure
Default 1,000 common shares fits most small Corps. Indiana does not require par value, simpler for cap table tracking. Multi-class equity (preferred shares for VCs) added in Bylaws.
Registered Agent in Indiana
Every Indiana Corp requires a Registered Agent with a physical Indiana address. Included free in the Compliance Bundle.
EIN + S-Corp election
Your Indiana Corp needs a federal EIN from the IRS. We file the SS-4 after SOS acceptance, typically 1-2 business days. S-Corp election (Form 2553) prepared on request to split owner income between W-2 and dividends.
Bylaws and board minutes
Bylaws define how the Corp runs: board structure, officer roles, shareholder voting, meeting cadence. Initial board minutes set up officers and authorize banking. Both included in the Compliance Bundle.
Year-one Indiana compliance
Annual Business Entity Report due Anniversary (biennial) (biennial). Annual shareholder meeting + board minutes. Indiana does not assess an annual franchise tax on Corporations. Compliance Bundle handles year one.
A clean handoff, in 7 steps.
Pick your Corp name
We check Indiana SOS name availability live. Must include Inc., Corporation, or Corp. and not conflict with existing Indiana registrations.
Designate Registered Agent
Every Indiana Corp needs an RA with a physical Indiana address. We provide one (included in Compliance Bundle) or use your own.
Set authorized shares
Default 1,000 common shares fits most small Corps. We help size correctly: too few limits future grants, too many can increase state fees in certain jurisdictions.
Prepare Articles of Incorporation
Corp name, RA, share structure, par value, incorporator. Officer names disclosed at filing. We draft and review with you.
File with Indiana SOS
Submitted electronically with $90 state fee. Service fee: $0 (free) per our free formation model. State-stamped Articles return to your BOS vault.
EIN + Bylaws + S-Corp election
After SOS acceptance: IRS EIN (1-2 days), Bylaws drafted, initial board minutes, S-Corp election (Form 2553) if requested.
Year-one compliance setup
Indiana Business Entity Report added to calendar (due Anniversary (biennial)). RA active. Annual shareholder meeting templates ready.
Formation is free. Everything else is optional.
We do not charge a service fee to form your LLC or Corporation. State filing fees still apply and pass through at cost. Add the Compliance Bundle to handle the year-one filings everyone needs.
- LLC or Corporation formation (any state)
- EIN application with the IRS
- Articles of Organization or Incorporation drafted and filed
- Free BOS dashboard for ongoing visibility
- Filing receipts to your document vault
- Everything in Free Formation (no add-on fee)
- Registered Agent service in your state (1 entity)
- Annual Report AutoFile, filed every year on time
- Certificate of Good Standing (1 included per year)
- 1 Amendment included per year (address, member, name)
- Operating Agreement (LLC) or Bylaws (Corp)
- Deadline monitoring across all your filings
Common questions.
How much does it cost to form a corporation in Indiana?
Two numbers make up the total: the Indiana state filing fee for your Articles of Incorporation, which the state sets and we pass through at cost with no markup, and our formation service, which is free. So you pay what Indiana charges plus any options you choose, such as expedited handling or a registered agent. Current amounts are on the pricing page, and it is worth budgeting for ongoing items too, like the Indiana annual report and any franchise tax.
How long does Indiana take to approve a corporation?
It depends on Indiana's current queue and whether you pay to expedite. Some states clear online filings the same day, others take one to three weeks by standard processing, and peak seasons like January stretch that out. We file the moment your details are verified and give you Indiana's realistic window up front, so you are not left guessing. If a funding or contract deadline is driving the timing, expedited service is usually worth it.
Should I be a C-corp or an S-corp in Indiana?
These are tax elections on the same Indiana corporation, not different entities. A C-corp pays its own tax and is what venture investors expect; an S-corp election passes income to your personal return and can lower self-employment tax once profit is steady, but it limits you to 100 US-resident shareholders and a single class of stock. Raising venture capital points to a C-corp; a closely held, profitable company should run the S-corp math. We can file either.
How many authorized shares should I set in Indiana?
Authorized shares are the ceiling your Indiana corporation can issue, and you do not issue them all at once. A common startup starting point is 10,000,000 shares, which leaves room for founders, an option pool, and investors without amending later. Keep issued shares well below the authorized number, and note that some states base a franchise tax or filing fee on share count, so a huge number is not always free.
What is par value, and does Indiana require it?
Par value is a nominal floor price per share, often set very low, that has little to do with a share's real worth. Most modern corporations use a tiny par value or no-par stock, and Indiana's rules decide which is allowed and how it interacts with any share-based fees. It matters mainly for accounting and, in a few states, for how franchise tax is figured, which is why founders set it as low as the state permits.
Do I need bylaws for my Indiana corporation?
In practice, yes. Bylaws are the internal rulebook for how your Indiana corporation runs: how directors and officers are chosen, how meetings and votes work, and how shares transfer. Indiana may not file them, but banks, investors, and your own board expect them, and courts look to them in a dispute. We include a bylaws template so the corporation is properly organized from day one, not just registered.
Do I need a board of directors right away?
Yes. A corporation is governed by a board, and Indiana law expects at least one director named and an organizational meeting held soon after formation to adopt bylaws, appoint officers, and authorize stock. For a solo founder that board can start as just you and expand as investors or independent members join. We walk you through the first-meeting resolutions so none of the foundational governance is skipped.
What ongoing compliance does a Indiana corporation have?
Forming is the start, not the finish. A Indiana corporation generally files a periodic annual report, keeps a registered agent on record, holds annual meetings with minutes, and pays any state franchise tax. Miss these and the state can pull your good standing or dissolve the entity. A compliance calendar keeps every date in view, and our subscription can handle the filings for you.
Can a non-US founder form a Indiana corporation?
Yes. You do not need to be a US citizen or resident to own or form a Indiana corporation. The one extra step is the EIN, which we obtain from the IRS for you when you have no Social Security Number, and that unlocks US banking and payment processing. A C-corp is often the right structure for non-US founders raising money, though the tax picture differs, so plan early; our EIN guide is the place to start.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here: we keep the rest tracked.