Following a cascade of developments, the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) is back, but with some potential changes on the horizon. Most reporting companies that have not yet filed all required reports under the CTA should prepare to file their initial, updated, or corrected reports by March 21, 2025.
In our recent alert on the CTA, we noted that the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on December 26 reinstated a nationwide injunction prohibiting the government from enforcing the CTA. That injunction was stayed by the US Supreme Court on January 23, but a district court order in another case, Smith v. US Department of the Treasury, kept the CTA offline.
Court Orders the CTA Back into Effect
By an order dated February 17, however, the final district court order in the Smith case that was preventing the CTA’s enforcement was lifted by the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas. As a result, beneficial ownership information (BOI) reporting requirements under the CTA are now back in effect.
FinCEN’s Response
In response, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued a notice stating that the new deadline for most reporting companies to file an initial, updated, or corrected BOI report is now March 21, 2025. Reporting companies that were previously given a reporting deadline later than March 21 (such as those qualifying for certain disaster relief extensions or those that were formed in late December 2024) have until that later deadline to file their initial BOI reports.
FinCEN’s notice further states that the government, recognizing that reporting companies may need additional time to comply with their BOI reporting obligations, will provide an update before March 21 of any further modifications to this deadline. FinCEN also observes that it will initiate a process this year to revise the BOI reporting rule to reduce burdens for “lower-risk entities,” including many US small businesses, although the notice does not go into detail on what companies might fall within that category or what changes may be contemplated.
Potential Future Court Action?
While it is possible that a court may find the CTA to be unconstitutional or otherwise stay its enforcement once again, there are no guarantees that this will occur (if at all) before the new March 21 deadline.
Potential Legislative Action?
There also remains the possibility of legislative action. On February 10, the US House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill, H.R. 736 (the Protect Small Businesses from Excessive Paperwork Act of 2025), to extend the filing deadline to January 1, 2026, for reporting companies formed before January 1, 2024. That bill is now under consideration in the US Senate, although, as of the publication of this alert, there is no indication of whether or when there may be further action on the bill in the Senate.
What Now?
In light of these developments, reporting companies should resume their CTA compliance efforts to file the requisite BOI reports by March 21 (or, as applicable, a later reporting deadline for those reporting companies that were previously given a reporting deadline later than March 21).