Business and Corporate Law in North Dakota: Entity Formation and Regulation
North Dakota's business and corporate law framework governs the formation, operation, governance, and dissolution of commercial entities operating within the state. The North Dakota Century Code (N.D.C.C.) Title 10 is the primary statutory authority, establishing distinct legal structures for corporations, limited liability companies, partnerships, and cooperatives. Entity selection, compliance obligations, and regulatory oversight by the North Dakota Secretary of State determine the legal standing and operational scope of businesses registered in the state. For a broader orientation to the legal environment in which these rules operate, see the North Dakota Legal Services Authority.
Definition and scope
Business and corporate law in North Dakota encompasses the body of statutes, administrative rules, and case precedent that defines how commercial entities are created, structured, managed, and terminated under state law. The primary statutory framework is codified in N.D.C.C. Title 10, which is subdivided into chapters addressing each major entity type.
The North Dakota Secretary of State holds primary administrative authority over entity registration, annual reporting, and good-standing certification. The North Dakota Attorney General exercises enforcement jurisdiction over consumer protection violations by commercial entities under N.D.C.C. Chapter 51-15, including deceptive trade practices.
Scope and coverage: This page addresses North Dakota state-law obligations applicable to entities formed or registered to do business in North Dakota. Federal corporate law — including Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) registration requirements, federal tax classifications under the Internal Revenue Code, and interstate commerce regulations — falls outside the scope of this page. Entities operating on federally recognized tribal lands in North Dakota may be subject to tribal business codes that function independently from state authority; that jurisdictional layer is addressed under North Dakota Tribal Courts and Federal Jurisdiction. Agricultural cooperative structures receive additional treatment under North Dakota Agricultural Law.
How it works
Entity formation in North Dakota follows a discrete sequential process governed by N.D.C.C. Title 10 and administered through the Secretary of State's office.
- Entity type selection — The organizer selects a legal structure (corporation, LLC, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, nonprofit corporation, or cooperative) based on ownership model, liability exposure, and governance preferences.
- Name reservation or registration — A proposed entity name must be distinguishable from existing registrations in the Secretary of State's database. Name reservations are available for a 12-month period under N.D.C.C. § 10-19.1-12.
- Filing of formation documents — Articles of incorporation are filed for corporations (N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-19.1); Articles of Organization are filed for LLCs (N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-32.1). The Secretary of State charges a $100 base filing fee for standard business corporation formation as of the most recent published fee schedule.
- Registered agent designation — Every North Dakota entity must maintain a registered agent with a physical street address in the state, as required under N.D.C.C. § 10-01.1-13.
- Governing document adoption — Corporations adopt bylaws; LLCs adopt an operating agreement. Neither document requires filing with the state but both establish internal governance.
- Annual reporting — North Dakota requires annual reports for corporations and LLCs filed with the Secretary of State. Failure to file results in administrative dissolution under the procedures specified in N.D.C.C. § 10-19.1-147.
- Ongoing compliance — Entities must maintain registered agent continuity, update officer/member records, and comply with any industry-specific licensing obligations administered by agencies such as the North Dakota Department of Financial Institutions or the North Dakota Insurance Department.
The regulatory context for the North Dakota legal system provides additional detail on how state agencies coordinate oversight across business sectors.
Common scenarios
Corporation vs. LLC — structural comparison
The two dominant entity types present distinct governance and liability profiles:
| Feature | Business Corporation (N.D.C.C. Ch. 10-19.1) | LLC (N.D.C.C. Ch. 10-32.1) |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership instrument | Stock shares | Membership interests |
| Governance document | Articles + Bylaws | Articles + Operating Agreement |
| Management structure | Board of directors + officers | Member-managed or manager-managed |
| Pass-through taxation (default) | No (C-corp default) | Yes |
| Formal meeting requirements | Yes (statutory) | Flexible by agreement |
Foreign entity registration
A business incorporated outside North Dakota that conducts business within the state must register as a foreign entity under N.D.C.C. § 10-19.1-178. "Transacting business" is defined by a statutory list of activities that do and do not constitute sufficient nexus to trigger registration obligations.
Closely held corporations
N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-19.1 contains specific provisions for closely held corporations — those with 35 or fewer shareholders — permitting flexibility in governance structures that deviate from standard corporate formalities, including elimination of the board of directors by unanimous shareholder agreement.
Nonprofit corporations
Nonprofit entities incorporate under N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-33, with separate governance requirements and dissolution procedures. Federal tax-exempt status under IRS § 501(c) is a parallel federal process distinct from state nonprofit incorporation.
Decision boundaries
Certain fact patterns trigger specific legal thresholds under North Dakota law that determine which statutory chapter, which agency, and which compliance obligations apply:
- Entity type determines statute — An LLC formed under Chapter 10-32.1 cannot invoke the closely held corporation provisions of Chapter 10-19.1; the two regimes are mutually exclusive.
- Foreign vs. domestic registration — A North Dakota-formed entity and a foreign entity registered in North Dakota carry identical operational rights but distinct formation records, and the foreign entity's internal governance remains subject to its state of incorporation.
- Administrative dissolution triggers — Missing 2 consecutive annual report cycles results in administrative dissolution; reinstatement requires filing all delinquent reports and paying associated fees under N.D.C.C. § 10-19.1-148.
- Securities law overlay — The moment an entity offers ownership interests to investors, North Dakota Securities Act requirements under N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-04 and the North Dakota Securities Department's jurisdiction are activated, independent of entity type.
- Employment thresholds — Once a North Dakota entity employs workers, obligations under the North Dakota Department of Labor and Human Rights, unemployment insurance (North Dakota Job Service), and workers' compensation (North Dakota Workforce Safety & Insurance) attach. These obligations fall outside corporate formation law and are addressed under North Dakota Employment and Labor Law.
- Contract disputes — Disagreements over operating agreements, shareholder agreements, or business contracts are governed by North Dakota contract principles addressed under North Dakota Contract Law Principles.
References
- North Dakota Century Code Title 10 — Corporations, Associations, and Partnerships (North Dakota Legislative Assembly)
- North Dakota Secretary of State — Business Services
- N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-19.1 — North Dakota Business Corporation Act
- N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-32.1 — North Dakota Limited Liability Company Act
- N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-33 — North Dakota Nonprofit Corporation Act
- N.D.C.C. Chapter 10-04 — North Dakota Securities Act
- North Dakota Securities Department
- North Dakota Attorney General — Consumer Protection
- North Dakota Workforce Safety & Insurance