By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Corporate Formation Intake Forms: What Business Attorneys Need to Capture Before Filing

A client walks in and says they want to start a business. That sentence contains almost no actionable information. They might need a single-member LLC filed in their home state with a standard operating agreement, or they might need a multi-class equity structure in Delaware with an S-corp election, a separate management company, and IP assignment agreements for three co-founders. The distance between those two engagements is enormous, and your intake form is what closes the gap between "I want to start a business" and a filing you can actually prepare.

Most business formation intakes collect a name, an address, and maybe the entity type the client thinks they want. That is not enough. A thorough corporate formation intake form captures the full picture — the business purpose, the ownership structure, the tax strategy, and the post-formation steps that the client does not know they need yet. Here is what that form should include.

Entity type selection: the foundational decision

Every formation engagement starts with entity selection, and most clients arrive with an opinion based on something they read online or heard from a friend. Your intake needs to capture both what the client wants and the information you need to advise them on what they actually need:

Jurisdiction of formation: where to file and why

Jurisdiction selection is the second decision, and it is one clients rarely understand. Many have heard that Delaware is "the best state for business" without knowing why or whether it applies to them. Your intake should capture the information needed to make this decision properly:

Business purpose and planned activities

Articles of organization and incorporation require a statement of business purpose. Most attorneys use "any lawful business" as the default, which is fine for the filing but does not help you advise the client. Your intake should capture the actual business plan in enough detail to identify regulatory issues, licensing requirements, and industry-specific formation considerations:

Owners: members, shareholders, and partners

Ownership is where formation intakes get complicated, because every additional owner multiplies the number of decisions that need to be made. For each owner, capture:

Management structure

How the business will be managed is a question most clients have not considered, but it directly shapes the governance documents you draft:

Registered agent and principal office

Every entity needs a registered agent in its state of formation and in every state where it is foreign-qualified. Your intake should capture:

Tax elections and planning

Tax treatment is inseparable from entity selection, and your intake form is where you capture the information needed to make the right election. The tax implications often overlap with issues handled in tax law engagements, particularly for clients converting existing business structures:

Operating agreement and bylaws: the governance framework

The operating agreement (for LLCs) or bylaws (for corporations) is the governing document that controls how the business operates. Your intake should capture the client's positions on the key provisions, even if the client does not yet know what these provisions are:

Post-formation setup: EIN, banking, licenses, and compliance

Formation is not complete when the state returns the stamped articles. Your intake should capture what the client needs beyond the filing itself, because these post-formation steps are where most business owners stall:

For many clients, entity formation is the first step toward a transaction — a partnership buy-in, an asset purchase, or a commercial lease. Once the entity exists, a commercial transactions intake form captures the deal-specific details that a formation intake does not cover, from purchase price allocation to due diligence scope.

Existing business considerations

Not every formation is a new venture. Many clients come in with an existing business that needs to be restructured. Estate planning attorneys see this regularly when clients need entity restructuring as part of succession planning. Your intake should capture:

Intellectual property and branding

The entity's name and brand identity need to be clear before you file, not after:

Building the engagement from a complete intake

A corporate formation intake that captures entity type, jurisdiction, ownership, management, tax elections, governance provisions, and post-formation needs does more than organize information for the filing. It defines the scope of the engagement. A client who walks in saying "I need an LLC" might actually need an LLC with an S-Corp election, a multi-member operating agreement with buy-sell provisions, an IP assignment agreement, a trademark search, and EIN application — and each of those is a billable deliverable that should be scoped and quoted at intake, not discovered mid-engagement.

The intake form is also the client's first signal that you handle formations with the rigor they deserve. When a prospective client fills out a form that asks about vesting schedules, capital contribution types, and Form 2553 deadlines, they understand they are working with an attorney who has handled enough formations to know what questions matter.

If you are building out documentation across a full legal practice, the Legal Bundle includes corporate formation alongside 37 other legal practice areas, each with practice-specific intake fields.

Corporate formation intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Entity type, jurisdiction, ownership structure, management, tax elections, operating agreement provisions, post-formation setup, and IP considerations. Built for business attorneys.

View Corporate Formation Forms