Corporate Minutes
MINUTES OF [Meeting Type] MEETING
[Corporation Name]
A [State of Incorporation] Corporation
Date: [Meeting Date]
Time: [Meeting Time]
Location: [Meeting Location]
1. CALL TO ORDER
[Chairperson Name] called the meeting to order at [Meeting Time]. [Secretary Name] acted as Secretary of the meeting and recorded these minutes.
2. ATTENDANCE AND QUORUM
Present: [Attendees Present]
Absent: [Attendees Absent]
[Quorum Statement]
3. APPROVAL OF PRIOR MINUTES
[Prior Minutes Approved].
4. RESOLUTIONS
The following resolutions were presented and acted upon:
[Resolutions Adopted]
Vote: [Vote Record]
5. ADJOURNMENT
There being no further business to come before the meeting, the meeting was duly adjourned at [Adjournment Time].
Next meeting: [Next Meeting Date].
CERTIFICATION
The undersigned, [Secretary Name], certifies that the foregoing is a true and accurate record of the proceedings of the [Meeting Type] Meeting of [Corporation Name] held on [Meeting Date], and that the resolutions set forth above were duly adopted at such meeting.
Secretary Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Secretary Name]
Chairperson Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Chairperson Name]
Secretary
________________
Signature
Chairperson
________________
Signature
What Is a Corporate Minutes?
A Corporate Minutes in the United States records the decisions taken by a company's directors or members and authorises the resulting actions.
Corporate Minutes serve as the authoritative contemporaneous record of a corporation's governance decisions. When a board of directors authorizes the issuance of common stock, approves an acquisition, adopts an equity incentive plan under IRC § 422, or authorizes an officer to enter into a material contract, these authorizations must be documented in properly approved minutes or written consents to be legally valid and enforceable. Third parties — including banks extending credit, investors conducting due diligence, and counterparties in M&A transactions — rely on certified copies of corporate minutes as evidence that the officers signing agreements had actual authority to bind the corporation.
The failure to maintain adequate corporate minutes is a primary factor courts consider when a plaintiff seeks to pierce the corporate veil and hold individual shareholders personally liable for corporate obligations. The doctrine of veil-piercing, recognized across all US jurisdictions, treats a corporation that fails to observe corporate formalities — including keeping minutes of meetings, maintaining separate bank accounts, and avoiding commingling of funds — as an alter ego of its shareholders. In Walkovsky v Carlton (1966) 18 NY 2d 414, the New York Court of Appeals held that a shareholder may be held personally liable when the corporation has not been properly maintained as a separate legal entity. Similar holdings exist under California Corporations Code § 17702.04 and the DGCL.
Corporate Minutes differ from shareholder agreements and bylaws: the bylaws establish the governance rules (quorum requirements, notice procedures, officer titles and duties), while the minutes document that those rules were followed in specific meetings and that specific decisions were made in accordance with those rules. The corporate minute book — the binder or digital file maintaining all minutes, consents, stock ledgers, and corporate records — is a critical asset that must be preserved for the life of the corporation and produced in due diligence reviews for financing rounds, acquisitions, and IPOs.
For S corporations subject to IRC § 1361, maintaining proper corporate formalities including minutes is particularly important: the IRS may challenge S corporation status if the entity is not operated as a genuine corporation, and a successful challenge can result in retroactive re-taxation at C corporation rates. Professional corporations (PCs) and close corporations in states such as California, New York, and Texas face the same formality requirements.
When Do You Need a Corporate Minutes?
Corporate Minutes are needed at every meeting of the board of directors or shareholders where business decisions are made, and whenever action is taken by written consent in lieu of a formal meeting.
Annual shareholder meetings are required under most state corporation statutes. California Corporations Code § 600 requires at least one shareholder meeting per year. The DGCL § 211 requires an annual meeting to elect directors. Minutes of the annual meeting must record the quorum count, director election results, and any other business transacted.
Board meetings are needed whenever major corporate decisions are made. Under the MBCA and DGCL, board approval is required before the corporation can: issue stock or other securities; adopt or amend equity compensation plans (including ISO plans under IRC § 422); declare dividends; approve annual budgets; authorize borrowings and credit facilities; open or close bank accounts; approve material contracts above the threshold set in the bylaws; appoint or remove officers; approve mergers, acquisitions, or asset dispositions; authorize the company to file for IPO or make SEC filings; and take any other action that the bylaws reserve to the board.
Due diligence reviews for venture capital financing rounds (Series A through Series D), private equity acquisitions, and public offerings require complete minute books going back to incorporation. Investors and their counsel review minutes to verify that prior stock issuances, equity grants, and material contracts were properly authorized. Missing or defective minutes can delay or kill a financing round and require extensive remediation through written consent ratification.
Bank account opening and credit facility authorization requires certified board resolutions — a form of corporate minutes — presented to the financial institution. Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and virtually every other US commercial bank require board authorization documents before opening a corporate account or extending credit.
For tax purposes, IRS Form 1120 (C corporation) and Form 1120-S (S corporation) audit procedures include review of corporate minutes to verify officer compensation, retirement plan adoptions (Form 5500 filings), and major asset transactions. The IRS's Large Business and International (LB&I) division specifically examines corporate records in transfer pricing audits.
What to Include in Your Corporate Minutes
A complete set of Corporate Minutes for a board of directors or shareholder meeting must contain specific information to satisfy state law requirements and provide an adequate governance record.
Meeting identification: The minutes must state the name of the corporation, the type of meeting (regular board meeting, special board meeting, annual shareholder meeting, special shareholder meeting), the date, time, and location of the meeting, or whether it was held by telephone or video conference. Under the DGCL § 141(i) and most state statutes, board meetings may be held remotely if all participants can simultaneously hear each other.
Notice and waiver of notice: The minutes should record that proper notice of the meeting was given in accordance with the bylaws and applicable state law, or that all directors or shareholders entitled to notice executed a waiver of notice under DGCL § 229 or the applicable state statute. Defective notice can render a meeting and all actions taken at it invalid.
Quorum confirmation: The minutes must record the number of directors or shareholders present (in person or by proxy), confirm that a quorum was present (typically a majority of directors for board meetings, and holders of a majority of outstanding shares for shareholder meetings), and identify any directors or shareholders who were present but recused themselves from any vote.
Resolutions and votes: Each resolution adopted at the meeting must be set out verbatim, or by sufficient description to identify the action taken. The vote count on each resolution — including the number of votes for, against, abstaining, and not voting — must be recorded. For interested-party transactions requiring disinterested director or shareholder approval under DGCL § 144 or IRC § 4958 (for nonprofits), the minutes must document that the required approval process was followed.
Officer actions and authorizations: Where the board authorizes specific individuals to take actions on behalf of the corporation — such as signing contracts, opening bank accounts, or executing deeds — the minutes should identify the authorized individual by name and title, and define the scope of the authorization (including any dollar limits).
Adjournment and next meeting: If the meeting was adjourned without completing all business, the minutes should record the adjournment and the date, time, and place of the adjourned meeting. The minutes of the adjourned meeting should reference the original meeting date.
Approval and signatures: Under most state statutes, minutes become official corporate records when approved at the subsequent meeting of the same body or by written consent. The secretary of the corporation (or the presiding officer) typically signs the minutes as certified. For Delaware corporations, the secretary's certification on a copy of the minutes is evidence of the authenticity and due adoption of the resolutions.
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- IRC § 422US – Cornell LII
- IRC § 1361US – Cornell LII
- IRC § 4958US – Cornell LII
- DGCL § 211DE (US) official
- DGCL § 141DE (US) official
- DGCL § 229DE (US) official
- DGCL § 144DE (US) official
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Corporate Minutes (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/corporate/corporate-minutes
"Corporate Minutes (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/corporate/corporate-minutes.
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author = {{Forms Legal}},
title = {Corporate Minutes (United States)},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/business/corporate/corporate-minutes}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Model Business Corporation Act}
}Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Virtually every US state corporation law requires corporations to keep minutes of stockholder and director meetings as part of the company's permanent corporate records. The Model Business Corporation Act (MBCA), adopted in whole or in part by many states, and the Delaware General Corporation Law (DGCL), which governs the majority of large US corporations, both require corporations to maintain records of board and stockholder actions. Failing to maintain adequate minutes can have serious consequences: a court may 'pierce the corporate veil' and hold shareholders personally liable for corporate debts if proper corporate formalities — including keeping minutes — were not observed. Well-maintained minutes are also essential for due diligence in mergers, acquisitions, and financings, when buyers and investors review the corporate records to verify that key decisions (like the issuance of stock, adoption of equity plans, and approval of material contracts) were properly authorized.
Under state corporation law and most corporate bylaws, major business decisions require formal authorization by the board of directors, documented in the minutes. Actions that typically require board resolutions include: issuance of stock or other equity securities; adoption or amendment of equity compensation plans, including stock option plans; approval of significant contracts above a dollar threshold specified in the bylaws; approval of loans to the company or from the company; election or removal of officers; declaration of dividends; approval of the annual budget; approval of mergers, acquisitions, or asset sales; opening or closing bank accounts; appointment of independent auditors; authorization of officers to sign contracts on the company's behalf; and approval of major financing transactions, including lines of credit and long-term debt. In addition, any action taken by the board between meetings can be documented through a unanimous written consent in lieu of a meeting, which is a form of written corporate minutes.
A quorum is the minimum number of directors or shareholders who must be present at a meeting for the meeting to be validly held and for resolutions to be adopted. For a board of directors meeting, most state corporation laws and bylaws define a quorum as a majority of the total number of directors then in office (e.g., if a board has 5 directors, at least 3 must be present). For shareholder meetings, a quorum is typically defined as the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote. If a quorum is not present when a meeting is called to order, the meeting cannot validly transact business — any resolutions purported to be adopted without a quorum are void. In that case, the meeting must be adjourned to a later date, or the directors or shareholders must take action through a written consent in lieu of a meeting signed by the required number. The presence of a quorum and the vote count for each resolution should always be recorded in the minutes.
Corporate minutes are permanent corporate records and should be retained for the life of the corporation plus any applicable statute of limitations period after dissolution. Unlike many business records that have defined retention periods (typically 3-7 years), minutes of board and shareholder meetings document the legal authority for the corporation's major decisions and must remain accessible to verify the validity of those decisions years or decades later. In the context of a corporate sale, buyers routinely request minutes going back to the company's inception to verify that all significant corporate actions were properly authorized. From a tax perspective, the IRS may audit returns within three years of filing (or six years if substantial income was omitted), so minutes related to significant tax elections, capitalization decisions, and compensation approvals should be retained at least that long. Most corporate governance established procedures recommend permanent retention of all minutes.
Yes. Most state corporation laws permit the board of directors and shareholders to take action without holding a formal meeting by executing a written consent in lieu of a meeting. Under Delaware law (DGCL § 141(f)), the board of directors may take action without a meeting if all directors consent in writing to the action being taken. Similarly, shareholders may act without a meeting if all shareholders entitled to vote (or, in some states, shareholders holding the minimum vote required to approve the action) sign a written consent. Written consents must be filed with the corporate records and are treated as minutes of a meeting for all purposes. Written consents are especially common in closely-held companies where convening a formal meeting of all directors would be burdensome, and in time-sensitive situations where a decision must be made quickly. The written consent must describe the action taken with sufficient specificity to serve as the authoritative record.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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