Corporate Transparency Act Exemptions: Which Businesses Still Need to File BOI Reports?
Apr 06, 2026Arnold L.
Corporate Transparency Act Exemptions: Which Businesses Still Need to File BOI Reports?
The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) still matters, but the filing landscape changed in 2025. Under FinCEN’s current interim final rule, all entities created in the United States and their U.S. beneficial owners are exempt from BOI reporting. In practice, that means the companies most founders form in the United States, including LLCs and corporations, no longer file BOI reports with FinCEN. The remaining reporting companies are generally foreign entities registered to do business in a U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction, unless they qualify for a CTA exemption.
For business owners, that shift creates a simple but important question: is my company completely outside BOI reporting, or does it still need to evaluate the exemption rules?
What changed under the CTA?
FinCEN revised its regulations so that "reporting company" now means a foreign entity that has registered to do business in a U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction by filing with a secretary of state or similar office. U.S.-formed companies are no longer treated as reporting companies for BOI purposes, and they do not need to file initial reports, updates, or corrections. Reporting companies also do not need to report BOI for any U.S. persons, and U.S. persons are not required to provide BOI for a reporting company.
That change makes the CTA exemptions especially important for foreign entities that may still have a filing obligation. If your business was formed outside the United States and registered to operate here, you still need to test whether one of the exemptions applies.
Who is still a reporting company?
At a high level, a company is still in the reporting company bucket if all of the following are true:
- It was formed under the law of a foreign country.
- It registered to do business in a U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction.
- It does not qualify for one of FinCEN’s exemptions.
If your business is a domestic LLC, a domestic corporation, or another entity created in the United States, the current rule exempts it from BOI reporting. If you are working with a foreign parent company, branch, or affiliate, the exemption analysis may still matter.
The 23 CTA exemptions
FinCEN’s regulations list 23 categories of exempt entities. Some are broad, some are highly technical, and several require a strict test rather than a simple label. Here is a practical breakdown.
1. Securities reporting issuers
Public companies that already report to the SEC are exempt because their ownership information is already disclosed through federal securities reporting.
2. Governmental authorities
Federal, state, tribal, and certain interstate governmental entities are exempt.
3. Banks
Banks that fit the regulatory definitions under the relevant federal laws are exempt.
4. Credit unions
Federal and state credit unions are exempt.
5. Depository institution holding companies
Bank holding companies and savings and loan holding companies can qualify for this exemption.
6. Money services businesses
Money transmitting businesses and other registered money services businesses are exempt because they already register with FinCEN.
7. Brokers or dealers in securities
Securities brokers and dealers that meet the statutory definition and registration requirements are exempt.
8. Securities exchanges or clearing agencies
Entities that operate as securities exchanges or clearing agencies and are properly registered are exempt.
9. Other Exchange Act registered entities
Other entities registered with the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act may also qualify.
10. Investment companies and investment advisers
Registered investment companies and investment advisers are exempt, subject to the definitions in the securities laws.
11. Venture capital fund advisers
Certain venture capital fund advisers that file the required Form ADV information with the SEC are exempt.
12. Insurance companies
Insurance companies that meet the applicable statutory definition are exempt.
13. State-licensed insurance producers
A state-licensed insurance producer can be exempt if it meets the rule’s additional requirements, including a physical office in the United States.
14. Commodity Exchange Act registered entities
Entities registered under the Commodity Exchange Act are exempt.
15. Public accounting firms
Public accounting firms registered under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act are exempt.
16. Public utilities
A regulated public utility that provides telecommunications, electric power, natural gas, or water and sewer services within the United States is exempt.
17. Financial market utilities
Financial market utilities designated under the Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act are exempt.
18. Pooled investment vehicles
Pooled investment vehicles can qualify, but the rules are specific. Foreign pooled investment vehicles can also face a special reporting rule, so this category deserves careful review.
19. Tax-exempt entities
Certain tax-exempt organizations are exempt, including qualifying section 501(c) organizations, political organizations, and certain trusts.
20. Entities assisting tax-exempt entities
An entity that operates exclusively to support or govern a tax-exempt entity may qualify if it is controlled by U.S. persons and funded primarily by U.S. persons who are citizens or lawful permanent residents.
21. Large operating companies
A large operating company exemption applies only if all of FinCEN’s conditions are met, including more than 20 full-time U.S. employees, a physical office in the United States, and more than $5 million in gross receipts or sales on the relevant federal tax return.
22. Subsidiaries of certain exempt entities
A wholly owned or controlled subsidiary can be exempt if its parent is one of the listed exempt entities. This is a narrow exemption and the ownership structure needs to be exact.
23. Inactive entities
An inactive entity may be exempt if it existed on or before January 1, 2020, is not engaged in active business, has had no ownership changes in the last 12 months, has not sent or received more than $1,000 in the prior 12 months, and holds no assets.
How to tell whether an exemption applies
The exemption label is only the starting point. To determine whether your company qualifies, ask four questions:
- Was the entity formed in the United States or abroad?
- If foreign, has it registered to do business in a U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction?
- Does the entity fit one of the 23 exemption categories exactly?
- If the answer depends on revenue, headcount, licenses, ownership, or tax status, can you document it?
That last point matters. Many CTA exemptions rely on precise definitions. For example, a large operating company is not just any established business, and a subsidiary exemption is not available simply because the parent seems “big enough.” FinCEN expects the facts to match the rule.
What foreign companies should do
If your company is foreign and registered to do business in the United States, do not assume you are exempt by default. Review the exemption categories carefully, then determine whether the company must file a BOI report.
Under FinCEN’s current interim final rule:
- Foreign entities registered before March 26, 2025, were required to file by April 25, 2025.
- Foreign entities that register on or after March 26, 2025, generally have 30 calendar days from notice of effective registration to file an initial report.
- Reporting companies do not need to report U.S. persons as beneficial owners.
If your foreign company is exempt, keep records showing why. If it is not exempt, make sure the filing is complete and accurate before submitting it.
Why this matters for founders
For U.S. founders, the biggest takeaway is simple: forming a domestic LLC or corporation no longer triggers BOI reporting to FinCEN under the current rule. That does not eliminate every compliance obligation, though. You still need to stay on top of state filings, registered agent requirements, annual reports, tax registrations, and any industry-specific licenses.
For foreign-owned businesses, the CTA still requires a careful exemption analysis. A structure that looks straightforward on paper can quickly become technical once ownership, control, tax status, and registration rules are layered together.
How Zenind can help
Zenind helps entrepreneurs form and maintain U.S. business entities with a clear, organized compliance workflow. If you are launching a new LLC or corporation, keeping formation records, state filings, and ongoing compliance tasks in one place can save time and reduce mistakes. That is especially useful when you are balancing entity setup, registered agent needs, annual obligations, and other filing deadlines.
Final takeaway
The CTA exemption rules are still relevant, but the current filing obligation is much narrower than it was at the beginning of 2024. Domestic U.S. companies are exempt from BOI reporting to FinCEN, while foreign companies registered to do business in the United States still need to evaluate whether they qualify for an exemption.
If you are unsure how your entity should be classified, confirm the facts against FinCEN’s current guidance and consult a qualified legal or compliance professional.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and is not legal, tax, or accounting advice.
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