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Startup Counsel

Start-Up Lawyer in Tampa, Florida

From C-Corp formation to founder agreements, cap tables, and investor documents. We guide Florida startups from day one so you can focus on building your product.

13 Services
Full Startup Package
$150/yr
FL Annual Report
4 Cities
Tampa, Jax, Orlando, Miami
C-Corp
Formation & Counsel

A startup lawyer does far more than file paperwork. The legal foundation you build in the first weeks of your company determines how well it holds up when co-founder disagreements arise, when investors conduct due diligence, and when it is time to bring on your first employees. Get it right from day one and your company is built to scale. Get it wrong and you spend thousands fixing problems that should never have existed.

At FL Patel Law, we help Florida founders establish C-Corporations with the full suite of formation documents, equity structures, and IP protections that investors expect. We work with pre-revenue startups, seed-stage companies, and founders preparing for their first institutional round. Whether you are incorporating in Florida or Delaware, we guide you through every document, and we explain how each one fits into your broader corporate structure. Our startup services complement our business formation practice and connect closely with our trademark and corporate law services.

Our startup practice covers 13 core services, from formation strategy and cap table preparation through ESOP setup and investor-ready documentation. We serve founders across Tampa Bay, Jacksonville, Orlando, and Miami - and we work on transparent pricing so you know what you are paying before we begin.

Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation to talk through your startup with an experienced Florida attorney.

Incorporation Strategy

Florida C-Corp vs. Delaware C-Corp: Which Is Right for Your Startup?

Recommended

Florida C-Corp

  • $150/year annual report - lowest maintenance cost
  • No personal income tax for founders
  • 5.5% corporate income tax (only on income above $50,000)
  • No franchise tax
  • Operations and entity in one state - simpler compliance
  • Lower overall startup costs
VC-Preferred

Delaware C-Corp

  • $400/year minimum franchise tax (can be much higher)
  • Must foreign qualify in Florida if operating here (additional fees)
  • Two states to maintain - double the filings and fees
  • Franchise tax calculations are complex and often surprising
  • Familiar to VC investors and institutional capital
  • Well-established corporate case law (Court of Chancery)

We recommend starting with a Florida C-Corporation to reduce expenses and complexity. If your investors or growth plans specifically require Delaware, we handle that too.

When Delaware Makes Sense

Some venture capital firms and institutional investors specifically require Delaware incorporation. If you are actively raising a Series A or later round from VCs who require Delaware, we can form your Delaware C-Corp and handle the Florida foreign qualification. For most early-stage startups, Florida is the smarter starting point.

What We Cover

Our Startup Legal Services

Thirteen services that work together as a complete legal foundation. Click any item to learn what it involves and why it matters for your startup.

Before filing a single document, we develop your formation strategy. This means analyzing your co-founder structure, capital plans, investor expectations, and long-term goals to determine the right entity (Florida or Delaware C-Corp), the optimal authorized share count, par value, and initial equity split. A thoughtful formation strategy prevents expensive corrections later.

A cap table tracks exactly who owns what in your company - founder shares, investor equity, option pool allocations, and advisor grants - organized by share type, price, and percentage. Every investor and acquirer will review your cap table during due diligence. We build it correctly from day one so it remains clean, accurate, and investor-ready as your company grows.

The Articles of Incorporation is the foundational corporate document filed with the state. It establishes your company's legal existence and defines critical terms including the number of authorized shares and par value. The authorized share structure you establish here affects every equity issuance you will ever make - it must be set up correctly from the start.

A founders agreement defines the relationship between co-founders before disputes arise. It covers equity splits, vesting schedules (including cliff and acceleration provisions), roles and responsibilities, decision-making authority, IP assignment obligations, and what happens if a founder leaves. Most co-founder disputes happen because this document was never drafted or was drafted poorly.

By-laws are the internal governance rules of your corporation. They define how the board of directors is structured, how meetings are called and conducted, what constitutes a quorum, how votes are taken, officer roles and authorities, and how the by-laws themselves can be amended. Investors review your by-laws during due diligence to assess your governance structure.

Issuing shares is not simply handing out certificates. It requires board approval, properly executed stock purchase agreements, and - critically - 83(b) elections filed with the IRS within 30 days of any restricted stock grant. Missing the 83(b) window is a common and costly mistake. We handle the full share issuance process with the right documentation and ensure every deadline is met.

When you bring on investors, they sign a subscription agreement documenting their investment, the shares or instruments they are receiving, and their representations and warranties to the company. This is the core investor document that protects both parties and creates a clear record of every investment transaction.

An ESOP allows you to grant stock options to employees and advisors as incentive compensation. Setting it up correctly requires determining the right option pool size (typically 10-20% of fully diluted shares), obtaining a 409A valuation to establish the exercise price, and structuring vesting schedules that attract and retain top talent. We draft the ESOP plan and all supporting option grant documents.

Advisors provide strategic guidance, introductions, and domain expertise in exchange for advisory shares. An advisor agreement defines the scope of their engagement, the advisory equity grant and vesting schedule, confidentiality obligations, and IP assignment terms. Every advisor relationship should be documented - even informal ones.

Every employee should sign a written agreement covering at-will employment terms, compensation, IP assignment (any work created for the company belongs to the company), confidentiality obligations, and non-solicitation provisions. Without a signed employee agreement, you risk IP ownership disputes and difficulty protecting your business relationships.

Consultants and independent contractors must be clearly distinguished from employees - misclassification creates tax and legal liability. Your consultant agreement should define the scope of work, independent contractor status, IP ownership (work made for hire provisions are critical), payment terms, and confidentiality obligations. Any IP a consultant creates for you must be expressly assigned to the company.

The CIAA (also called a PIIA - Proprietary Information and Inventions Agreement) ensures that all intellectual property created by founders, employees, and contractors in connection with the company belongs to the company - not to the individual who created it. Investors require this document as a baseline due diligence item. Without it, your IP ownership is at risk.

Beyond assignment agreements, startups need a broader IP strategy. We advise on federal trademark registration for your brand and product names, trade secret protections and internal policies, patent considerations for novel technology or processes, and how to maintain IP ownership as your team and product evolve. A sound IP strategy from day one protects your most valuable assets.

Why Online Templates Are Risky for Startups

While many of these documents can be found online, they are complex legal instruments with strong corporate and tax implications. Unless founders have intimate knowledge of how these documents work together - how your articles affect your cap table, how your ESOP interacts with your founders agreement, how your by-laws affect investor rights - working with startup counsel is strongly recommended. A mistake in one document can create problems across your entire corporate structure.

Our Process

How We Work With Startups

1

Discovery Call

We learn about your business - your product, co-founders, market, timeline, and funding plans. Understanding where you are and where you are going shapes every decision that follows.

2

Formation Strategy

We recommend Florida or Delaware C-Corp based on your specific situation, determine the right share structure, authorized share count, par value, and plan your initial equity allocation before any paperwork is filed.

3

Entity Formation and Documents

We file your Articles of Incorporation, draft your By-Laws and Founders Agreement, issue initial shares with proper documentation, and build your initial cap table. Your entity is now legally formed and properly governed.

4

Team and IP Protection

We prepare your Employee Agreements, Consultant Agreements, Confidential Invention and Assignment Agreements, Advisor Agreements, IP guidance, and ESOP setup. Every person who touches your company signs the right agreement.

5

Investor-Ready

We prepare your Subscription Agreements and investor documents, verify your cap table is clean and accurate, and ensure your corporate records are complete. You are ready for due diligence and your first funding round.

Due Diligence

What Makes a Startup Investor-Ready

Investors review these items during due diligence. Before your first funding round, every item on this list should be in order.

Clean cap table with all shares properly issued and documented

Founders agreement with vesting schedules in place

All IP assigned to the company (not individual founders)

Employee and consultant agreements with IP assignment clauses

ESOP established with board-approved option pool

By-laws and corporate governance documents current

83(b) elections filed within 30 days of share grants

Articles of incorporation with proper authorized share structure

Ready to Build Your Startup on a Solid Legal Foundation?

Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation with an experienced Florida startup attorney. Flat-fee pricing, all 13 services, no surprises.

Service Areas

Startup Legal Services Across Florida

We serve startups across Florida - whether you are pre-revenue or preparing for your first funding round. Our clients are located in:

Tampa Bay Area

Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater - our home base and primary market.

Jacksonville

Florida's largest city by area, growing startup ecosystem on the First Coast.

Orlando

Central Florida tech corridor, SaaS, and tourism-adjacent startups.

Miami

South Florida startups, Latin American founders, and fintech companies.

FL Patel Law provides the legal foundation your startup needs, wherever you are building in Florida. We work remotely and efficiently - most engagements are handled without an in-person meeting, so geography is not a barrier.

FAQ

Start-Up Lawyer: Frequently Asked Questions

For most early-stage Florida startups, a Florida C-Corporation is the smarter starting point. Florida has no personal income tax, a 5.5% corporate income tax only on income above $50,000, and an annual report fee of just $150 per year. If you form a Delaware C-Corp and your operations are in Florida, you will still need to foreign qualify in Florida - meaning you pay Delaware franchise tax (minimum $400 per year, often much higher) AND Florida filing fees. That is two states to maintain with double the compliance burden. If your investors or growth plans specifically require Delaware - for example, you are raising a Series A from VCs who require it - we handle Delaware formation and Florida foreign qualification. But for most founders, Florida is the right first step.

A properly formed startup requires more than just articles of incorporation. The complete package includes: Start-Up Formation Strategy, Cap-Table Preparation, Articles of Incorporation, Founders Agreements, By-Laws, Issuance of Initial Shares, Subscription Agreement for Investors, Employee Stock Option Plan (ESOP), Advisor Agreement, Employee Agreement, Consultant Agreements, Confidential Invention and Assignment Agreement, and Intellectual Property Guidance. Each of these documents serves a specific legal and corporate purpose, and they must work together as a cohesive structure. Missing any one of them can create gaps that become expensive problems when you raise capital or bring on a co-founder or key employee.

A cap table (capitalization table) is a spreadsheet that tracks exactly who owns what in your company - founders, investors, option holders, and advisors - along with each person's ownership percentage and the type of shares or options they hold. Every investor, acquirer, or strategic partner will ask to see your cap table during due diligence. A clean, accurate, and well-maintained cap table signals that your startup is well-governed and investor-ready. A messy or inaccurate cap table raises red flags that can derail a funding round or acquisition. We prepare your initial cap table at formation and structure share issuances and option grants properly from day one so it stays clean as you grow.

Online templates for startup documents are widely available - but using them without understanding how they interact is risky. These are not isolated forms. Your articles of incorporation affect your authorized share structure, which affects your cap table. Your founders agreement interacts with your ESOP and vesting schedules. Your by-laws affect investor rights and board control. A mistake in one document creates downstream problems across your entire corporate structure, and those problems tend to surface at the worst possible moment - during a funding round, an acquisition, or a co-founder dispute. Unless you have deep familiarity with how corporate documents, equity structures, and tax elections work together, working with startup counsel is strongly recommended.

Florida state filing fees for a corporation are $70 for the Articles of Incorporation, plus a $150 annual report fee each year after that. That is the lowest ongoing maintenance cost of any major incorporation state. Attorney fees for a full startup package - covering all 13 services from formation strategy through investor-ready documents - vary based on the complexity of your structure, number of co-founders, and whether you need ESOP setup and investor documents. FL Patel Law offers flat-fee pricing so you know exactly what the full package costs before we begin. Schedule a consultation to discuss your specific situation and get a quote.

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Corporate Law

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GET STARTED

Ready to Launch Your Startup?

Schedule a consultation with an experienced Florida startup attorney. Serving Tampa Bay, Jacksonville, Orlando, and Miami.

(727) 279-5037 · contact@flpatellaw.com