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New York . Merger

New York business merger: Articles of Merger explained.

A statutory merger in New York combines two or more entities into one surviving entity. The non-surviving entities cease to exist. This guide explains the structure, the Plan of Merger, the state filing, and the things founders most often miss after the merger closes.

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Types of New York merger

Statutory merger

Two entities combine into one. The surviving entity absorbs assets, liabilities, and obligations.

Cross-entity merger

LLC + Corporation, LLC + LP, etc. New York allows cross-entity mergers under statute.

Triangular merger

Common acquisition structure. Acquirer forms a subsidiary that merges with the target.

Cross-state merger

Surviving entity domiciled outside New York. Requires coordinated filings in both jurisdictions.

Combining entities

New York Merger: at a glance.

Combine two or more entities. State filing required plus tax and contract review before execution.

Filing details

How New York handles Merger.

Where to fileSecretary of State office, online portal, or by mail with the required fee.
TurnaroundStandard processing: 5-10 business days. Expedited service available for an additional state fee.
Required informationEntity name + ID, current officers and registered agent, principal office address.
Common pitfallsMismatched officer addresses, expired registered agent, missed prior reports causing administrative dissolution.
Frequently asked

New York Merger questions.

What is a business merger at the New York Secretary of State?

A merger legally combines two or more entities into one, with the surviving entity absorbing the others' assets, contracts, and liabilities, and it is filed with the New York SOS via articles or a certificate of merger plus a plan of merger. It is how companies combine or restructure, and we prepare and file the New York merger documents correctly.

Why would I merge two entities in New York?

Common reasons: combining two businesses under one, absorbing a subsidiary to simplify a structure, converting an LLC into a corporation via merger where a direct conversion is unavailable, or redomesticating to another state. Each has different New York paperwork, and we map the merger path to your specific goal.

What documents does a New York merger require?

Typically a written plan of merger approved by each entity's owners, plus articles or a certificate of merger filed with the New York Secretary of State, and often consents and updated governance documents. Missing an approval step invalidates it. We prepare the full New York merger package so it is legally sound, not just filed and defective.

Do all owners have to approve a merger in New York?

Usually the merger must be approved by the members or shareholders of each entity at the threshold set in their agreements or New York law, and dissenting owners may have appraisal rights. Skipping proper approval is a serious defect. We handle the New York approval mechanics so the merger holds up if it is ever challenged.

What happens to contracts and debts in a New York merger?

The surviving entity generally succeeds to the merged entities' assets, contracts, and liabilities by operation of law, which is efficient but means you inherit obligations too, and some contracts require consent to assign. We flag which of your New York agreements need attention so the merger does not accidentally breach them.

Can I merge entities from different states?

Often yes: many states, New York typically included, allow cross-state mergers, though you file in each affected state and follow both states' rules. It is more complex than a single-state merger. We coordinate the New York and other-state filings, including any foreign registration, so the combination is recognized everywhere.

What is the tax treatment of a merger?

It depends on structure: some mergers qualify as tax-free reorganizations while others are taxable events, and the details are significant. This is where a merger needs tax advice alongside the filing. We handle the New York Secretary of State mechanics and flag where your structure needs a tax professional's sign-off before you proceed.

How long does a New York merger take?

It depends on preparing the plan and approvals and on New York's processing time, plus any other states involved, and the drafting and approvals usually take longer than the filing itself. We prepare the New York documents and sequence the approvals so the merger is ready to file cleanly rather than stalling mid-process.

Can File.Business handle a New York merger?

Yes. We prepare the plan and certificate of merger, coordinate owner approvals, file with the New York Secretary of State and any other states, and update the surviving entity's records, so the combination is done right. Complex or tax-sensitive mergers we handle alongside your advisors.

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