Business Structure Changes
Entity Conversion Attorney in Florida
Change your business entity type within Florida - LLC to corporation, partnership to LLC, S-Corp to C-Corp, and more. Statutory conversions preserve your EIN, contracts, and legal history.
An entity conversion is the legal process of changing your business entity type within Florida - for example, converting an LLC to a C-Corporation, a general partnership to an LLC, or a corporation to an LLC. It is not the same as moving your entity to another state (that is a domestication), and it is not the same as a tax-free restructuring under IRC Section 368(a)(1)(F) (that is an F reorganization). A conversion changes the type of entity - within the same state - to better match your current needs.
Florida provides a statutory conversion mechanism under the Florida Revised LLC Act (Section 605.1045) and the Florida Business Corporation Act (Section 607.1115). A statutory conversion is a single continuous legal event - the entity that existed before the conversion is the same entity after it. Your EIN stays the same. All existing contracts, bank accounts, and legal relationships remain valid without reassignment. Your formation date is preserved. There is no dissolution, no new entity, and no gap in legal existence.
Businesses convert for many reasons: to raise capital from investors who require a C-Corporation, to gain liability protection by moving out of a partnership structure, to optimize the tax treatment of the business, or to prepare the entity for a sale or acquisition. FL Patel Law handles the full conversion process - from reviewing your current structure and coordinating with your CPA on tax implications, through filing with the Florida Division of Corporations and drafting new governing documents. We also work closely with our startup lawyer and business formation practices when post-conversion structuring is needed.
Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation to discuss your entity conversion with an experienced Florida attorney.
Common Conversion Types
Entity Conversions We Handle in Florida
The most common entity conversion we handle. An LLC formed for simplicity now needs a corporate structure to raise capital. Institutional investors - venture capital firms, angel networks, and equity crowdfunding platforms - almost universally require a C-Corporation. LLCs cannot issue preferred stock, which is the preferred equity instrument in most venture rounds, and the pass-through tax structure of an LLC creates complications for tax-exempt investors.
Under a statutory conversion, the LLC members receive shares in the new corporation proportional to their membership interests. The entity keeps its EIN, all existing contracts, and bank accounts. No assets are transferred - the entity itself continues as a new type.
Tax treatment: this conversion is generally structured to be tax-free under IRC Section 721 or the check-the-box rules if handled correctly. Coordinate with your CPA. FL Patel Law's startup legal services closely complement this conversion - see our startup lawyer page for post-conversion equity structuring.
Why It Matters
Statutory Conversion vs. Dissolution and Reformation
Statutory Conversion
- ◆Same EIN throughout - no new EIN required
- ◆All contracts stay in effect without reassignment
- ◆Bank accounts remain open and valid
- ◆Formation date preserved
- ◆One continuous legal entity - no gap in existence
- ◆Single filing with FL Division of Corporations
- ◆Cleaner, faster, and lower cost overall
Dissolution + Reformation
- ◆New EIN required - all filings must be updated
- ◆All contracts must be reassigned to the new entity
- ◆New bank accounts must be opened
- ◆Formation date resets to the new entity formation date
- ◆Two separate transactions - dissolution and formation
- ◆Asset transfer may trigger tax consequences
- ◆More complex, slower, and more expensive
Florida's statutory conversion mechanism is available for most common conversion scenarios. When it applies, it is almost always the better path.
S-Corp Is a Tax Election, Not an Entity Type
The Process
How Entity Conversion Works in Florida
Structure Review
We review your current entity structure, operating agreement or bylaws, existing contracts, and any transfer restrictions. Understanding what you have before converting it is essential - some contracts have change-of-control provisions that require advance notice or consent.
Tax Analysis (with Your CPA)
Conversions can trigger taxable events depending on entity types and direction. We coordinate with your CPA or tax advisor to analyze the tax treatment before any documents are filed. Converting in the wrong direction without tax analysis can be costly.
Plan of Conversion
We draft the Plan of Conversion - the core document that governs the transaction. It maps current ownership to the new entity structure (e.g., LLC membership interests to corporate shares), sets the effective date, and satisfies the statutory requirements of Florida Sections 605.1045 or 607.1115.
Owner Approvals
The Plan of Conversion must be approved by the members (LLC) or shareholders (corporation) at the threshold required by your operating agreement or bylaws - typically a majority or supermajority vote. We prepare the written consent or meeting resolutions that document this approval.
Certificate of Conversion Filing
We file the Certificate of Conversion plus the new formation documents (Articles of Incorporation or Articles of Organization) with the Florida Division of Corporations (Sunbiz.org). The filing fee varies by target entity type: $70 for a corporation, $125 for an LLC, plus $25 for registered agent designation.
New Governing Documents
The conversion does not automatically create governing documents for the new entity. We draft the bylaws and initial resolutions (for a corporation) or a new operating agreement (for an LLC) that properly govern the converted entity going forward.
Contract and Account Updates
Because statutory conversion preserves the entity as a continuous legal person, existing contracts, bank accounts, and licenses remain valid. We advise on which counterparties or institutions require notice of the entity type change, and help draft any required notification letters.
IRS Elections and EIN Updates
Depending on the conversion, you may need to file IRS elections (e.g., Form 2553 for S-Corp status, or Form 8832 to change entity classification) or notify the IRS of the new entity type. The EIN stays the same, but the IRS records are updated to reflect the new classification.
Note on timing: The conversion is effective on the date the Certificate of Conversion is filed and accepted by the Florida Division of Corporations, unless a future effective date is specified in the filing. We coordinate the timing to align with your tax year, investor agreements, or any other date-sensitive requirements.
Getting Started
What You Will Need for Your Conversion
Current operating agreement or bylaws (to determine approval thresholds)
List of current owners with ownership percentages and interest types
Key contracts - especially those with change-of-control or consent provisions
Current EIN and IRS entity classification (check-the-box election history)
Most recent tax returns (relevant for built-in gains analysis)
Florida Division of Corporations record for the entity (verify it's in good standing)
List of active business licenses or professional registrations that reference entity type
CPA or tax advisor contact (we coordinate directly if you'd like)
You do not need all of this before your initial consultation. We collect what we need as we go - the list above helps you understand the scope of information involved.
Tax Implications of Entity Conversion
Florida Filing Fees
State Filing Costs for Entity Conversions
State filing fees are paid to the Florida Division of Corporations. Attorney fees are separate and quoted on a flat-fee basis before we begin.
Ready to Convert Your Business Entity?
Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation. We will review your current structure, walk through the conversion options, and give you a clear plan with transparent pricing and no surprises.
FAQ
Entity Conversions: Frequently Asked Questions
GET STARTED
Ready to Change Your Business Structure?
Schedule a consultation with an experienced Florida entity conversion attorney.
