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Missouri Corporation Formation

Missouri Corporation Formation

Incorporate in Missouri with confidence — professional filings, built-in privacy, and proactive compliance reminders. Starting at $99 + state fees.

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What Is a Missouri Corporation?

A Missouri corporation is a formal business entity that provides its owners (shareholders) with limited liability protection, a defined management structure, and a separate legal identity from the people who run it — making it a common choice for businesses that plan to raise capital, issue stock, or operate at scale.


Business owner reviewing Connecticut corporation formation paperwork in an office

Why Choose a Missouri Corporation?

  • Clear ownership structure. Corporations offer a familiar share-and-stock structure that can make it easier to add owners, bring in investors, or transfer ownership.

  • Potential credibility boost. Using "Inc." or "Corporation" can signal stability and professionalism to banks, vendors, and larger customers.

  • Defined governance framework. Missouri corporations follow formal governance rules — board of directors, officers, meetings, and minutes — which can help with internal controls and compliance.

  • Flexible capital options. Corporations can authorize multiple classes of stock, making it easier to design different ownership and voting arrangements when raising capital.

  • Continuity of the business. A corporation continues to exist regardless of changes in ownership or management, which can make long-term planning and succession smoother.

Business professionals discussing Connecticut corporation benefits and company structure

C-Corporation vs. S-Corporation

What Is a C-Corporation?

A C-corporation is the standard corporate structure — and the default when you incorporate in Missouri. It can have an unlimited number of shareholders, making it the go-to choice for companies planning large investor bases or public stock offerings. The trade-off: a C-corp pays federal income tax at the corporate level, and shareholders are taxed again on dividends they receive.

What Is an S-Corporation?

An S-corporation is a tax election, not a separate entity type. Eligible corporations can elect S-corp status under Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code, which lets corporate income pass through directly to shareholders — avoiding the double taxation that applies to C-corps. The IRS sets strict rules on eligibility, including limits on the number and type of shareholders. Shareholders report their pro-rata share of profits and losses on their individual tax returns.

REAL-TIME COMPLIANCE INTELLIGENCE

Why Leading Companies Trust InCorp

  • Entity Management System with EntityWatch® Monitoring

    Manage all your entities from one platform. Track compliance deadlines, access service of process documents electronically, and get prompt notifications. EntityWatch® monitors Secretary of State databases for unauthorized changes that could signal identity theft or compliance issues.

  • Nationwide Coverage

    Incorporate in Missouri now and expand to other states later — same team, same platform. InCorp provides consistent, reliable service across all 50 states.

  • Strategic Compliance Support

    We proactively track filing requirements and deadlines to help keep your Missouri corporation in good standing — no spreadsheets required.

  • White-Glove Client Support

    Dedicated help for closely held corporations, S-corps, holding companies, and multi-state structures — with proactive compliance support so you stay ahead of regulatory obligations, not just react to them.

Business professional using InCorp compliance support for Missouri corporation management

Price Beat Guarantee

InCorp will beat any comparable competitor's price on any product or service — matched against providers offering comparable service and compliance coverage. Contact us for a free consultation or to request a price match.

Missouri LLC Formation FAQ

In Missouri, a corporation is created by filing a corporate Certificate of Formation (often called Articles of Incorporation) with the Secretary of State after the corporate name has been properly reserved.

Yes. Missouri requires an approved corporate name reservation before the Certificate of Formation can be filed with the Secretary of State.

Yes. Every Missouri corporation must designate and maintain a registered agent with a physical Missouri street address to receive legal documents and official state notices on the company's behalf.

Yes. Missouri corporations must file an Initial Business Privilege Tax Return and Annual Report after incorporation and then comply with ongoing Business Privilege Tax and related reporting requirements to remain in good standing.


Most Missouri corporations need at least a county business privilege license and, depending on location and activities, additional city or industry-specific licenses before operating.

Yes. Missouri corporations generally require a federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) to open business bank accounts, handle payroll, and file federal and state tax returns.

Other Helpful Resources for Missouri Business Owners

Quick links to official Missouri state resources for LLC owners

Form Your Missouri Corporation Today!

Missouri Corporation Formation: as low as $99 + state fees