
Foreign Companies Still Face BOI Reporting Rules: A 2026 Guide to FinCEN’s Updated Requirements | CORPIUS
Foreign Companies
Still Face BOI Reporting Rules: A 2026 Guide to FinCEN's Updated Requirements | CORPIUS
While U.S. domestic
companies are fully exempt from FinCEN BOI reporting under the March
2025 Interim Final Rule, foreign entities registered to do business in
the United States remain subject to FinCEN BOI filing requirements in 2026.
Foreign companies that meet the current FinCEN BOI definition of a reporting
company — and do not qualify for a Corporate
Transparency Act exemption — must file beneficial ownership
information reports with FinCEN. The FinCEN BOI obligations for foreign
companies are narrower than the original CTA framework: foreign
reporting companies are not required to report U.S. persons as beneficial
owners, and U.S. persons are personally exempt from FinCEN BOI reporting with
respect to foreign reporting companies.
Key Takeaways:
FinCEN BOI Obligations for Foreign Companies in 2026
·
Foreign companies registered to
do business in any U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction remain subject to FinCEN
BOI reporting requirements
·
FinCEN BOI foreign reporting
company definition: entities formed under foreign law that have registered in a
U.S. state/tribal jurisdiction by filing with a secretary of state or similar
office
·
Foreign FinCEN BOI reporting
companies registered before March 26, 2025 had an initial filing deadline of
April 25, 2025
·
Foreign companies registering
in the U.S. on or after March 26, 2025: 30 calendar days from effective
registration to file initial FinCEN BOI report
·
Foreign FinCEN BOI filers must
report: non-U.S. beneficial owners and company applicants — NOT U.S. persons
·
U.S. persons who own stakes in
foreign reporting companies are personally exempt from FinCEN BOI reporting
obligations
·
20+ CTA
exemption categories apply to foreign
entities — review fincen.gov carefully
Who Is a Foreign
FinCEN BOI Reporting Company in 2026
The current FinCEN BOI
definition of "reporting company" covers entities satisfying two
conditions: (1) formed under the law of a foreign country, AND (2) registered
to do business in any U.S. state or tribal jurisdiction by filing a document
with a secretary of state or similar office. The critical FinCEN BOI trigger is
the registration filing. A foreign company with only U.S.-formed subsidiaries
or operating through contractual arrangements — without filing a formal foreign
entity registration document — likely falls outside the current FinCEN BOI
reporting company definition.
A foreign company that has
filed a Certificate of Authority, Foreign Corporation Registration, or
equivalent document with any U.S. state almost certainly meets the FinCEN BOI
reporting company definition and should evaluate whether a filing is required
or an exemption applies.
What Foreign FinCEN
BOI Reporting Companies Must File
Foreign entities that do not
qualify for a CTA exemption must file a FinCEN BOI report
identifying:
Company applicants:
Individuals who filed (or directed the filing of) the document that registered
the company to do business in the U.S.
Non-U.S. beneficial owners:
Individuals who exercise substantial control or hold/control 25%+ of ownership
interests — limited to non-U.S. persons only. U.S. citizens and U.S. residents
are explicitly excluded from the FinCEN BOI beneficial owner reporting
requirement for foreign entities.
Required fields for each
person: legal name, date of birth, current address, and an identifying document
number with a document image.
CTA Exemptions for
Foreign FinCEN BOI Reporting Companies
The Corporate
Transparency Act contains more than 20 FinCEN BOI exemption
categories. These apply to foreign entities as well as domestic entities.
Key exemptions most likely applicable to foreign
companies include: SEC-registered securities issuers; banks and
credit unions; insurance companies; PCAOB-registered accounting firms; large
operating companies with more than 20 U.S. full-time employees, more than $5
million in U.S. gross receipts, and a physical U.S. office; subsidiaries of
exempt entities. Foreign companies unsure about FinCEN BOI exemption
eligibility should review the complete list at fincen.gov and consult qualified
legal counsel before concluding they are exempt.
Practical Steps for
Foreign Companies on FinCEN BOI Compliance in 2026
·
Confirm whether your company
has filed any foreign entity registration document with a U.S. secretary of
state or similar office
·
Review all 23+ CTA FinCEN BOI
exemption categories against your company's characteristics; document the basis
for any claimed exemption
·
Verify whether a required
initial FinCEN BOI filing has been made (deadline was April 25, 2025 for
pre-March 26 companies)
·
Identify all non-U.S.
beneficial owners and gather required FinCEN BOI identification documents
·
Monitor fincen.gov for the
final rule replacing the current Interim Final Rule
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