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HomeCorporations CodeCh. 22§ 2204 Corporation Delinquency Notice

§ 2204 Corporation Delinquency Notice

Corporations Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 2204 Corporation Delinquency Notice

This law tells the Secretary of State to warn a corporation if it forgets to file a required statement, and if the corporation still doesn’t file after 60 days, the Secretary sends the name to the tax board, which can then fine the corporation—unless the corporation has dissolved, merged, or has a good reason.

Key Takeaways

  • •The Secretary of State must send a notice if a corporation fails to file the required statement.
  • •If the corporation still doesn’t file within 60 days, the name is sent to the Franchise Tax Board, which can assess a penalty.
  • •The penalty does not apply if the corporation has dissolved, merged, converted, or has a valid reason approved by the Secretary.

Example

A small tech company forgets to file its annual statement. The Secretary of State sends a notice. The company still doesn’t file after 60 days. The Secretary tells the Franchise Tax Board, which then adds a penalty to the company’s tax bill.

The company got a warning, missed the deadline, and got a penalty because it didn’t have a good reason or wasn’t dissolved. If the company had a valid excuse, it could have asked the Secretary to waive the penalty.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 2204 Corporation Delinquency Notice

(a) Upon the failure of a corporation to file the statement required by Section 1502, the Secretary of State shall provide a notice of that delinquency to the corporation. The notice shall also contain information concerning the application of this section, advise the corporation of the penalty imposed by Section 19141 of the Revenue and Taxation Code for failure to timely file the required statement after notice of the delinquency has been provided by the Secretary of State, and shall advise the corporation of its right to request relief from the Secretary of State because of reasonable cause or unusual circumstances that justify the failure to file. If, within 60 days of providing notice of the delinquency, a statement pursuant to Section 1502 has not been filed by the corporation, the Secretary of State shall certify the name of the corporation to the Franchise Tax Board. (b) Upon certification pursuant to subdivision (a), the Franchise Tax Board shall assess against the corporation the penalty provided in Section 19141 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. (c) The penalty herein provided shall not apply to a corporation that on or prior to the date of certification pursuant to subdivision (a) has dissolved, has converted to another type of business entity, or has been merged into another corporation or other business entity. (d) The penalty herein provided shall not apply and the Secretary of State need not provide a notice of the delinquency to a corporation if the corporate powers, rights, and privileges have been suspended by the Franchise Tax Board pursuant to Section 23301, 23301.5, or 23775 of the Revenue and Taxation Code on or prior to, and remain suspended on, the last day of the filing period pursuant to Section 1502. The Secretary of State need not provide notice of the filing requirement pursuant to Section 1502 to a corporation if the corporate powers, rights, and privileges have been so suspended by the Franchise Tax Board on or prior to, and remain suspended on, the day the Secretary of State prepares the notice for sending. (e) If, after certification pursuant to subdivision (a), the Secretary of State finds (1) the required statement was filed before the expiration of the 60-day period after providing notice of the delinquency, or (2) the failure to provide notice of delinquency was due to an error of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of State shall promptly decertify the name of the corporation to the Franchise Tax Board. The Franchise Tax Board shall then promptly abate any penalty assessed against the corporation pursuant to Section 19141 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. (f) If the Secretary of State determines that the failure of a corporation to file the statement required by Section 1502 is excusable because of reasonable cause or unusual circumstances that justify the failure, the Secretary of State may waive the penalty imposed by this section and by Section 19141 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, in which case the Secretary of State shall not certify the name of the corporation to the Franchise Tax Board, or if already certified, the Secretary of State shall promptly decertify the name of the corporation. (Amended by Stats. 2014, Ch. 834, Sec. 8. (SB 1041) Effective January 1, 2015.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

corporationfranchise tax boardstatementtaxation codepenaltysecretarycertificationinformation

Related Statutes

  • § 12670 Delinquent Corporation Certification
  • § 6810 Corporate Delinquency Notice Process
  • § 8810 Corporate Delinquency Certification Process
  • § 17713.09 Llc Statement Filing Penalties
  • § 2205.5 Administrative Dissolution Tax Suspension

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Corporations Code. Section 2204.
View Official Source