How Foreign Companies Can Complete FinCEN BOI Reports

Mar 23, 2026Arnold L.

How Foreign Companies Can Complete FinCEN BOI Reports

Beneficial Ownership Information, or BOI, reporting has changed significantly. As of March 26, 2025, U.S.-formed entities and U.S. persons are exempt from the FinCEN BOI reporting requirement. The current filing obligation now applies primarily to certain foreign entities that register to do business in a U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction and do not qualify for another exemption.

That makes BOI compliance narrower than it was when the Corporate Transparency Act rules first took effect, but it is still important for foreign companies that want to operate in the United States. If your company is formed under foreign law and registered in the U.S., you should confirm whether you are a reporting company, gather the required ownership information, and file through FinCEN’s system on time.

For the current rule and official updates, review FinCEN’s BOI reporting page.

What a BOI Report Is

A BOI report is a filing made with FinCEN that identifies a reporting company and the individuals who ultimately own or control it. The purpose of the report is to give the government a clearer view of the real people behind certain entities.

For foreign reporting companies, the reporting process generally focuses on two things:

  • information about the company itself; and
  • information about the beneficial owners who must be disclosed under FinCEN’s rules.

If your company is exempt, you do not file a BOI report. If you are not sure whether an exemption applies, verify the current rule before you file.

Who Still Needs to File

Under the current FinCEN rule, a foreign company may need to file a BOI report if all of the following are true:

  • it is formed under the law of a foreign country;
  • it has registered to do business in a U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction by filing with the relevant office; and
  • it does not qualify for an exemption.

FinCEN’s March 2025 update also changed who must be reported in this context. Foreign reporting companies do not report U.S. persons as beneficial owners, and U.S. persons are not required to provide BOI for those entities.

If your company was already registered in the United States before the March 26, 2025 interim final rule, FinCEN set a filing deadline of April 25, 2025. If your company registered on or after March 26, 2025, it generally has 30 calendar days after receiving notice that the registration is effective.

Information You Need Before Filing

A complete BOI report depends on accurate and consistent records. Before you file, collect the company details and the personal information required by FinCEN.

Company Information

You will usually need:

  • the full legal name of the reporting company;
  • the foreign jurisdiction where the entity was formed;
  • the U.S. jurisdiction where the entity registered to do business;
  • the principal U.S. business address;
  • the company’s tax identification number, if one has been issued; and
  • any trade names, DBAs, or other business names used in the United States.

Be careful with the principal business address. This should be a physical location tied to real operations, not a P.O. box and not the registered agent address.

Beneficial Owner Information

For each reportable beneficial owner, you will generally need:

  • full legal name;
  • date of birth;
  • residential address; and
  • identifying document details, plus an image of the document.

FinCEN accepts certain government-issued identification documents, such as passports and driver’s licenses, provided they are current and valid. Expired IDs should not be used.

How to Complete the Filing

The filing process is manageable if you prepare in the right order.

1. Confirm that your company is actually a reporting company

Start with the legal status of the entity. Many companies that used to expect BOI filing obligations are now exempt because they were formed in the United States. For foreign companies, confirm the registration date, the jurisdiction, and whether a separate exemption applies.

2. Identify the beneficial owners

Focus on the individuals who meet FinCEN’s ownership or control standard. In practice, this usually means looking beyond title alone and reviewing who owns the entity, who controls decisions, and whether ownership is direct or indirect.

3. Gather and verify personal information

Ask each reportable person to provide the exact information needed for the filing. This is one of the easiest places to make a mistake, especially when names on passports, driver’s licenses, and internal company records do not match exactly.

4. Review the company details carefully

Small errors in entity name, jurisdiction, tax ID, or business address can create filing problems. Compare the BOI data against formation and registration documents before submitting anything.

5. File through FinCEN’s E-Filing system

FinCEN accepts BOI reports through its electronic filing system. The submission should be completed only after the company information, owner information, and identification details have been checked for accuracy.

6. Keep records and monitor changes

BOI compliance is not a one-time data entry exercise. If the company changes its ownership, control structure, registration status, or other reportable information, the report may need to be updated.

Common BOI Filing Mistakes

A careful review before filing can prevent avoidable errors. The most common issues include:

  • using an outdated filing deadline;
  • assuming the company is still required to file when it is now exempt;
  • confusing a registered agent address with the principal business address;
  • listing the wrong individuals as beneficial owners;
  • using expired identification documents;
  • missing trade names or DBAs;
  • failing to verify that the legal name matches formation records exactly; and
  • treating BOI as an annual filing when it is not.

Those mistakes can delay compliance or lead to an inaccurate submission. The safest approach is to compare your BOI data with official entity records before the report is sent.

How Zenind Can Help

Zenind helps entrepreneurs and foreign founders form and maintain U.S. entities with a strong focus on accuracy, organization, and compliance support. That matters because BOI reporting often depends on clean company records, clear ownership information, and a reliable understanding of where and how the entity was formed or registered.

For foreign companies entering the U.S. market, Zenind can help you stay organized from the start. A well-maintained formation file makes it easier to determine whether a BOI filing is required, who should be identified, and which business details should be used in the report.

Final Takeaway

BOI compliance is much narrower now than it was when FinCEN first implemented the Corporate Transparency Act reporting rules. As of March 26, 2025, U.S. companies and U.S. persons are exempt, while certain foreign companies registered to do business in the United States may still need to file.

If you are a foreign reporting company, the key steps are straightforward: confirm your status, collect accurate company and owner information, file through FinCEN’s system, and keep your records updated. A careful review before submission will reduce the risk of errors and help you stay compliant with the current rule.

For the latest official guidance, always verify requirements directly with FinCEN before filing.

Disclaimer: The content presented in this article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness of the information provided, Zenind and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions. Readers should consult with appropriate legal or professional advisors before making any decisions or taking any actions based on the information contained in this article. Any reliance on the information provided herein is at the reader's own risk.

This article is available in English (United States) .

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