---
title: "California Holding Company LLC: Structure, Costs & Tax Reality 2026 | LLC Attorney"
description: "Every LLC in a California holding structure owes the $800 minimum franchise tax, so a parent plus two subsidiaries runs $2,400 a year. Read this first."
canonical: https://llcattorney.com/states/ca/holding-company-california
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source_path: /states/ca/holding-company-california
---

Key Takeaways

-   A holding company LLC owns and controls other LLCs (subsidiaries) — each subsidiary's liabilities stay isolated from the parent and other subsidiaries
-   California's Cal. Corp. Code § 17705.03 provides exclusive-remedy charging order, but with statutory foreclosure — a charging order is the exclusive remedy against your membership interest, but California courts can foreclose and order a sale of that interest if distributions will not pay the judgment within a reasonable time — weaker than Wyoming's no-foreclosure protection
-   $70 to form the parent LLC; $800 minimum annual franchise tax per LLC, not a single tax for the whole group
-   Each subsidiary LLC requires its own formation filing ($70 each) and separate annual obligations ($800 minimum franchise tax each)
-   California offers no franchise tax advantage for holding structures — the benefit is liability separation, not tax savings, and each entity multiplies the $800 minimum
-   Each entity must maintain separate records, separate bank accounts, and separate operating agreements to preserve liability separation
-   Same-day filing available through LLC Attorney at no markup on state fees

A holding company LLC in California lets you own multiple businesses, properties, or assets through a single parent entity while isolating each one inside its own subsidiary LLC. The structure works the same way it does anywhere, but California has two facts you have to plan around: the $800 minimum franchise tax is charged on each LLC separately, so a parent plus two subsidiaries runs a $2,400 minimum per year, and the state's charging order statute (Cal. Corp. Code § 17705.03) allows foreclosure, making its personal-creditor protection weaker than Wyoming's. This guide explains when a California holding company actually makes sense, how the parent-subsidiary structure works here, and how owners often pair a Wyoming parent with California operating subsidiaries — with same-day filing available through LLC Attorney starting at $49 per entity.

$70Per-entity Articles of Organization fee (Form LLC-1)

$2,400/yrParent + 2 subsidiaries (min. franchise tax)

§ 17705.03Exclusive remedy, but foreclosure permitted

$49LLC Attorney formation starting price (per entity)

## What Is a Holding Company LLC?

A holding company LLC is a parent entity that owns membership interests in one or more subsidiary LLCs. The holding company itself typically conducts no day-to-day business operations — it exists to own, control, and protect assets held in the subsidiaries below it.

The structure creates legal separation between each bucket of assets or business activity. If a lawsuit targets one subsidiary, the liability stays contained within that entity. The parent holding company and other subsidiaries are not exposed to the judgment.

Common uses:

-   A real estate investor who owns multiple rental properties, each in a separate subsidiary LLC, with a holding company owning all the subsidiary LLCs
-   An entrepreneur with multiple business lines, each operating as its own LLC, with a holding company managing ownership and distributions across all of them
-   A family protecting generational assets across different categories (real estate, operating businesses, intellectual property) in isolated subsidiaries under one parent structure
-   A business owner with passive investors, where the holding company controls the operating LLCs and the investors hold membership interests in the holding company only

## Why California for a Holding Company?

California rarely makes sense as the asset-protection layer of a holding structure, and it is honest to say so up front. Its charging order statute permits foreclosure, so the personal-creditor shield is weaker than Wyoming's, and the $800 minimum franchise tax is charged per entity, so every subsidiary you add costs at least $800 a year. The reason California still ends up in many structures is simpler: if you own California real estate, run California operations, or have employees in the state, those subsidiaries generally must be registered and taxed in California regardless of where the parent sits. A common pattern is to place the holding parent in a stronger state and qualify the operating subsidiaries into California, paying the franchise tax where the business actually happens while keeping the protective layer elsewhere.

The two factors that matter most for holding company state selection are charging order protection and annual cost structure.

**Charging order protection in California:** California's charging order rule lives in Cal. Corp. Code § 17705.03 and is labeled the exclusive remedy a judgment creditor may use to reach a member's transferable interest. That label is narrower than it sounds. The same statute expressly lets a court foreclose the charging-order lien and order a sale of the transferable interest once the creditor shows that distributions alone will not satisfy the judgment within a reasonable time. A purchaser at that foreclosure sale takes only the economic interest and does not become a member, but the member can still lose the value of the interest. This is a meaningful step down from Wyoming, where foreclosure is off the table entirely. For a California holding company, the charging order is a speed bump rather than the brick wall that no-foreclosure states provide, which is one reason owners often form the holding layer in Wyoming and qualify it into California to operate.

**California tax structure for multi-entity holdings:** California is one of the most expensive states in which to stack LLCs, and the reason is the franchise tax. The $800 annual minimum is assessed on each LLC individually, not on the group, so a holding company plus two operating subsidiaries carries a $2,400 minimum every year (the AB 85 first-year waiver expired December 31, 2023, so entities formed after January 1, 2024 owe it from year one). On top of the minimum, any entity whose California gross income tops $250,000 owes a separate gross-receipts LLC fee scaling from $900 to $11,790. Income still passes through to the members for federal and California personal income tax, but the franchise tax and LLC fee attach at the entity level regardless of whether the structure ever turns a profit. Anyone weighing a multi-entity California structure should price the per-entity cost before forming.

**Important note for California holding companies:** California imposes an $800 minimum franchise tax per LLC per year, regardless of revenue. A holding company structure with three subsidiaries in California means a minimum of $3,200 per year in California franchise taxes ($800 for the parent, $800 for each subsidiary). This is the most significant cost factor for California-based holding structures and should be modeled before formation. Out-of-state investors who own California properties through a holding structure may still owe California franchise tax on each California LLC in the chain.

## The California Holding Company LLC Structure — How It Works

The standard structure has two tiers:

Tier 1 — The California Parent LLC (Holding Company)

-   Formed in California
-   Conducts no direct business operations
-   Its only assets are membership interests in the subsidiary LLCs
-   All profits from subsidiaries flow to the parent through member distributions
-   The parent's operating agreement designates who controls it and how distributions work across the portfolio

Tier 2 — Subsidiary LLCs

-   Each subsidiary is a separate LLC — formed in California or in the state where it operates
-   The parent LLC is listed as the sole member (or majority member) of each subsidiary
-   Each subsidiary operates independently, opens its own bank account, signs its own contracts, and files its own tax returns
-   A lawsuit against Subsidiary A cannot reach Subsidiary B or the parent, provided the entities maintain proper separation

Entity separation is the structure's entire value. If you commingle funds between the parent and subsidiaries, sign contracts in the wrong entity's name, or fail to maintain separate records for each LLC, a court can pierce the liability shield between them. California's courts apply the alter ego doctrine, a two-part test asking (1) whether there is such a unity of interest and ownership that the entities and their owner are no longer truly separate, judged by factors like commingled funds, ignored formalities, and inadequate capitalization, and (2) whether treating the entities as separate would produce an inequitable result, which does not require proof of actual fraud.

## California Holding Company — Costs and Annual Obligations

Total minimum annual cost for a parent plus 2 subsidiaries in California: $2,400 per year for a parent plus two subsidiaries at the $800 minimum each (entities formed after Jan 1, 2024 pay this from year one, since the AB 85 first-year waiver expired Dec 31, 2023), plus a $20 Statement of Information per entity and any gross-receipts LLC fee, before registered agent fees

Running a multi-entity structure in California is costly by design. Each LLC costs $70 to form and then carries an $800 minimum annual franchise tax that is assessed per entity, not per group. A parent plus two subsidiaries therefore costs $210 to set up and a $2,400 minimum per year in franchise tax (the AB 85 first-year waiver expired December 31, 2023, so entities formed after January 1, 2024 owe it from year one), plus a $20 Statement of Information per entity every two years. If any LLC clears $250,000 in California gross income, add the gross-receipts LLC fee of $900 to $11,790 for that entity. None of this includes registered agent service. The takeaway is that every subsidiary you add to a California structure adds at least $800 a year, so the structure should be justified by the liability separation it buys, not by any tax benefit.

## How to Form a California Holding Company LLC

### If You Do It Yourself

**Step 1 — Map your structure before filing anything.**

Before opening any formation form, draw out your structure on paper. List every asset or business you want to hold in the structure. Decide which assets or businesses belong in separate subsidiaries and which, if any, can share a subsidiary. Decide whether the holding company will be member-managed or manager-managed. The structure you commit to at formation defines the liability boundaries going forward — once formed, moving assets between entities requires documented transfers and may trigger tax events.

**Step 2 — Form the parent holding company LLC.**

File the Articles of Organization with the California Secretary of State. This is the same formation process as a standard California LLC. The Articles of Organization does not need to say "holding company" — that designation comes from how you use the entity, not from the filing. Pay the $70 filing fee online at bizfileonline.sos.ca.gov. Standard processing is same business day for online filings during normal volume. Designate a agent for service of process at this step — a physical California address is required.

**Step 3 — Draft the parent LLC operating agreement with subsidiary ownership provisions.**

This is the most important document in your holding structure. The parent LLC's operating agreement must name you (or your partners) as members of the parent, define ownership percentages and voting rights, authorize the parent to hold and manage membership interests in subsidiary LLCs, define how distributions flow up from subsidiaries to the parent and out to members, and address member exit (buyout provisions). A template operating agreement almost certainly does not include the subsidiary ownership authorization language, which can surface as a problem during banking, refinancing, or litigation.

**Step 4 — Form each subsidiary LLC.**

File a separate Articles of Organization for each subsidiary. In the "members" section of each subsidiary's filing, list the parent holding company LLC as the sole member — the parent LLC's name, not your personal name, appears as the member. Each subsidiary formation costs $70. If a subsidiary will operate in a different state than California, you may need to register it as a foreign LLC in the operating state, which has its own fees and registered agent requirement.

**Step 5 — Draft a separate operating agreement for each subsidiary.**

Every subsidiary needs its own operating agreement identifying the parent LLC as the sole member. This document defines the subsidiary's purpose, operating authority, and how it relates to the parent. Without it, a court may question the legitimacy of the subsidiary structure.

**Step 6 — Open separate bank accounts for each entity.**

The parent LLC needs its own bank account; each subsidiary needs its own separate account. Banks require the approved Articles of Organization, the EIN, and the operating agreement for each entity. Never transfer money between entity accounts without a documented intercompany loan agreement or a formal distribution record — undocumented transfers look like commingling and can be used to pierce the liability shield between entities.

**Step 7 — Obtain a separate EIN for each entity.**

The parent LLC needs an EIN, and each subsidiary LLC needs its own EIN. Apply at irs.gov/ein. Free. Each application takes about 15 minutes. Do not skip this for any entity — using the parent's EIN for a subsidiary's bank account destroys the entity separation the structure is designed to create.

**Step 8 — Transfer or assign existing assets to the appropriate subsidiary.**

If you are restructuring existing assets or businesses into a holding structure, you must document the transfers. Real property requires a deed transfer (which may trigger transfer taxes and should be reviewed by an attorney before filing). Existing contracts and licenses may need to be assigned or reissued in the subsidiary's name. California's rules on asset transfers between related entities: California does not impose a statewide real estate transfer tax, but counties and many cities charge a documentary transfer tax on deeds, and transferring real property into an LLC can trigger a property tax reassessment under Proposition 13 unless a change-in-ownership exclusion applies. Do not assume you can move assets freely — some transfers have tax consequences, and some require creditor notification if the transferring entity has liabilities.

**Step 9 — Set up annual compliance for every entity.**

Every entity in your California structure carries its own franchise tax and filing obligations:

California requirements per entity:

-   Franchise tax: $800 minimum per LLC (FTB Form 3522), due April 15 for calendar-year entities from year two — the FTB suspends an LLC that falls behind, freezing its ability to do business or defend lawsuits
-   California requires each LLC to file a Statement of Information (Form LLC-12, $20) within 90 days of formation and every two years thereafter in its formation-month filing window, plus a Form 568 return; this is separate from the $800 franchise tax, which is paid to the FTB rather than the Secretary of State.

For a parent plus two subsidiaries, that is $2,400 per year for a parent plus two subsidiaries at the $800 minimum each (entities formed after Jan 1, 2024 pay this from year one, since the AB 85 first-year waiver expired Dec 31, 2023), plus a $20 Statement of Information per entity and any gross-receipts LLC fee, before registered agent fees in California obligations — before registered agent fees. Set calendar reminders for every entity separately. A missed filing on a subsidiary can result in administrative dissolution of that entity, which disrupts operations and creates a gap in the liability protection chain. If any subsidiary operates in other states, those states have their own annual obligations on top of California's.

**Step 10 — Maintain rigorous records for each entity going forward.**

Practical requirements: each entity holds its own annual member meeting (or signs a written consent in lieu of meeting), maintains its own books and financial records, issues its own invoices and receives its own payments, and has its own business address (which can be the same registered agent address for all entities in a holding structure). These formalities are what keep the liability shield between entities intact.

If you would rather not build and manage this structure yourself, the service handles parent and subsidiary LLC formation in California starting at $49 per entity. All entities can be managed through one account, with a single annual compliance dashboard.

Ready to Launch Your Business in California?Follow our fast, easy process to get started right now.[Start My Business](https://app.llcattorney.com/formation?intake_type=formation)

### If LLC Attorney Does It for You

1.  Submit your holding structure plan at llcattorney.com — number of entities, asset types, management structure, and registered agent preference. LLC Attorney reviews your structure and flags any formation-sequence issues before filing begins.
2.  LLC Attorney forms the parent LLC, drafts the parent operating agreement with subsidiary ownership provisions, forms each subsidiary LLC, drafts each subsidiary operating agreement naming the parent as member, obtains EINs for all entities, and handles same-day filing if needed.
3.  Receive all formation documents, operating agreements, and EIN confirmations through your LLC Attorney client portal. Annual compliance reminders for every entity in your structure are included so you never miss a deadline.

## Using a California Holding Company for Real Estate

The most common use case for a California holding company is a real estate portfolio structure. A single investor owns multiple rental properties, each isolated in its own subsidiary LLC, with the holding company owning all the subsidiaries.

**Why isolate each property in its own subsidiary:** a slip-and-fall lawsuit on Property A targets Subsidiary A LLC. The plaintiff can only pursue the assets inside Subsidiary A — typically just that property and its cash reserves. The holding company, Subsidiary B, and Subsidiary C are not exposed. Without the isolation structure, a judgment against "you as property owner" could reach all properties you personally own.

**What California's charging order protection adds:** if a personal creditor sues you for a debt unrelated to the properties, that creditor cannot seize your subsidiary LLCs. Under California's charging order statute (Cal. Corp. Code § 17705.03), the creditor's remedy is limited to a charging order against your interest in the holding company. They cannot force a sale of the LLCs or the properties inside them.

**Deed transfer costs:** moving existing properties into subsidiary LLCs requires a deed transfer. Transferring California real estate into a subsidiary LLC requires recording a new deed with the county and can trigger a Proposition 13 reassessment of the property's taxable value unless the transfer qualifies for a change-in-ownership exclusion (for example, proportional-ownership transfers under Rev. & Tax. Code § 62); documentary transfer taxes are also assessed at the county and sometimes city level. Transfer taxes, title insurance considerations, and mortgage due-on-sale clauses require attorney review before any deed transfer.

**Mortgage and financing note:** many lenders will not finance a property held in an LLC, or will require personal guarantees even when the property is in an LLC. Structure your holding company formation before financing if possible — financing after the fact sometimes requires lender consent to transfer to an LLC.

## Using a California Holding Company for Intellectual Property

An IP holding structure separates intellectual property ownership from the operating business that uses it. The holding company owns the trademarks, patents, or copyrights. The operating subsidiary licenses those assets from the holding company.

Why this matters:

-   If the operating business is sued or fails, the IP stays protected in the holding company
-   The licensing fee paid from the operating subsidiary to the holding company is a tax-deductible expense for the subsidiary and income to the holding company
-   IP assets can be sold, licensed to third parties, or transferred to new operating businesses without disturbing the operating entity

**What needs to be documented:** a written IP licensing agreement between the parent and operating LLC specifying what IP is covered, the royalty rate or fixed fee, the territory, and the duration. Without this agreement, the IRS may treat royalty payments as undocumented transfers and disallow the deduction, and a court may disregard the separation. Transferring existing trademarks and patents requires a recorded assignment with the USPTO for federally registered IP — a legal process that benefits from attorney review.

## When Should You Consult an Attorney for Your California Holding Company?

On-demand attorney consultations for a flat rate per 30-minute session — no retainer required. Holding company formation benefits from attorney guidance more than most entity types because of the multi-entity structure and asset transfer complexity. Common scenarios:

-   **Structure design:** how many subsidiaries, whether assets should be isolated individually or grouped, and whether a Series LLC would be more cost-effective than separate subsidiaries.
-   **Real estate deed transfers:** moving existing property into a subsidiary LLC can trigger transfer taxes, due-on-sale mortgage clauses, and title insurance issues. Get attorney review before the deed is filed.
-   **IP assignment:** transferring existing trademarks or patents requires recorded assignments with the USPTO. Doing this incorrectly can cloud the IP ownership chain.
-   **Asset transfer tax implications:** some transfers between related entities have tax consequences. An attorney can map the tax-efficient transfer sequence before you file.
-   **Multi-state operations:** if subsidiaries will operate in multiple states, foreign registration requirements and disclosure rules vary significantly.
-   **California-specific nuances:** California's reassessment rules and the foreclosure exposure in its charging order statute make the cost of a mistake high — an attorney can confirm whether a transfer keeps your Proposition 13 basis and whether the holding parent belongs in California at all.

### Is California a State Where Legal or Tax Advice Matters More for Holding Companies?

California is the clearest case where a self-service holding structure can quietly cost a client money. Three California-specific issues need attorney judgment: the $800 franchise tax is charged on every entity, so the number and location of subsidiaries directly drives annual cost; the charging order statute (Cal. Corp. Code § 17705.03) permits foreclosure, so the protection is weaker than clients expect and the parent often belongs out of state; and transferring real property into a subsidiary can trigger a Proposition 13 reassessment that permanently raises property tax unless a change-in-ownership exclusion applies. A template formation that places the parent in California and moves real estate without a basis check can produce a more expensive, less protective structure than the owner intended.

## When a California Holding Company Structure Needs an Attorney to Design

The filings are the cheap part of a holding company. The design — what sits where, and how assets move in — is where the money is made or lost, and most of it is hard to reverse once done:

-   **Transferring mortgaged real estate into a subsidiary.** Moving a financed property can trigger the lender's due-on-sale clause. This needs to be handled deliberately, not as an afterthought to the filing.
-   **Moving appreciated assets.** Transferring property or equity that has gained value can have tax-basis and capital-gains consequences. The order and method of the transfer matter.
-   **How many subsidiaries, and what each one isolates.** A flat structure with everything in one entity protects almost nothing. Deciding what to separate — by property, by line of business, by risk — is the core design question.
-   **Intercompany loans, leases, and parent-vs-subsidiary state choice.** Multi-state operations and intercompany agreements have to be documented correctly, or the structure reads as one commingled business.

In California specifically, the trap is moving appreciated real estate into a subsidiary without checking the Proposition 13 change-in-ownership rules first; a transfer that fails to qualify for an exclusion can reassess the property to current market value and permanently raise the annual property tax, which an attorney should review before any deed is recorded.

LLC Attorney's flat-fee attorney consultations (no retainer) are built for exactly this: designing the structure and sequencing the asset transfers before you move anything, when the decisions are still reversible.

## Starting Your California Holding Company with LLC Attorney

California's holding company structure carries the highest recurring cost of almost any state because the $800 franchise tax repeats per entity — and the decision that actually matters is which entities truly need to sit in California versus which can be held by an out-of-state parent, because each California entity adds at least $800 a year and a foreclosure-exposed charging order. Getting the parent operating agreement, subsidiary operating agreements, entity sequence, and asset transfer documentation right at formation is the foundation. Errors in the formation documents are expensive to unwind.

The service handles California holding company LLC formation starting at $49 per entity. All entities can be managed through one account. On-demand attorney consultations in 30-minute increments cover holding structure design, subsidiary operating agreement drafting, real estate transfer mechanics, and IP assignment. No retainer. See our [full pricing](/pricing) for all service tiers.

Ready to Launch Your Business in California?Follow our fast, easy process to get started right now.[Start My Business](https://app.llcattorney.com/formation?intake_type=formation)

## Frequently Asked Questions

How many subsidiary LLCs can my California holding company own?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

California imposes no limit on the number of subsidiary LLCs a parent holding company can own. A California holding company can own two subsidiary LLCs or twenty — the structure scales without any additional formation restrictions beyond the standard $70 formation fee and $800 minimum franchise tax per LLC per entity.

Do I need a separate bank account for each LLC in my holding structure?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes. This is not optional. Each entity in your holding structure must maintain its own bank account and its own financial records. Using a single bank account for the parent and subsidiaries is commingling, and commingling is the most common reason courts pierce the liability shield between related entities. Every bank, contract, and invoice involving a subsidiary must be processed through that subsidiary's dedicated account.

Does my holding company protect me if a subsidiary is sued?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes, provided each entity is genuinely operated as separate. Your California holding company and each subsidiary LLC are distinct legal entities, so a judgment against one subsidiary does not automatically reach the parent or a sibling subsidiary. But California's alter ego doctrine lets a court collapse that separation if there is a unity of interest, meaning commingled bank accounts, shared records, undercapitalized entities, or formalities ignored across the group, and if respecting the separation would yield an inequitable result. California does not require proof of fraud to pierce, only that an injustice would otherwise result, which makes disciplined separation especially important here. Keep distinct bank accounts, books, and capital for each entity, document inter-company transactions, and keep the parent out of the subsidiaries' day-to-day operations.

What is the difference between a holding company and a parent company?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Functionally, the terms are used interchangeably. A holding company is a parent company — an entity that owns controlling interests in one or more subsidiaries. The term “holding company” typically implies that the parent conducts no operations of its own; a “parent company” sometimes operates directly in addition to owning subsidiaries. For LLC structures, the distinction rarely matters legally.

Can I add a subsidiary to my holding structure after it is formed?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes. You can form new subsidiaries and add them to your holding structure at any time by filing a new Articles of Organization, naming the parent LLC as the sole member, and amending the parent's operating agreement to include the new subsidiary. There is no limit on the number of subsidiaries, and adding subsidiaries does not require modifying any existing subsidiary's documents.

What taxes does a California holding company pay?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Each LLC in a California holding structure pays its own $800 minimum annual franchise tax to the Franchise Tax Board, so the cost scales with the number of entities rather than being a single group tax. A parent plus two subsidiaries owes a $2,400 minimum per year; the AB 85 first-year waiver expired December 31, 2023, so entities formed after January 1, 2024 owe the $800 from year one. Any entity with California gross income above $250,000 owes an additional LLC fee of $900 to $11,790. Income passes through to the members, who are taxed at California personal rates on their distributive share. Unlike no-income-tax states, California gives a holding structure no tax advantage — the value is liability separation, and the franchise tax is a real recurring cost to budget for each entity you add.

Does my California holding company protect me from my personal creditors?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

California treats the charging order as the exclusive remedy against an LLC membership interest under Cal. Corp. Code § 17705.03, but the protection is weaker than Wyoming's because the same statute permits foreclosure. If a creditor shows that distributions under the charging order will not pay the judgment within a reasonable time, a California court can foreclose the lien and order the membership interest sold. The buyer takes only the economic rights and cannot become a managing member, but you can still be forced to give up the interest's value. That foreclosure path is why California offers less personal-creditor protection than no-foreclosure states, and why many owners locate the holding parent in Wyoming while running operations through California subsidiaries.

Can a holding company own property in another state?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

The holding company itself does not hold property — it holds membership interests in subsidiary LLCs. Each subsidiary LLC that holds property in another state will typically need to be registered as a foreign LLC in that state. Foreign registration fees and registered agent requirements vary by state. The service can handle foreign qualification for subsidiaries in any state from a single account.

## Learn More About California

-   [California LLC Formation](/states/ca/llc-formation-california)
-   [California Registered Agent](/states/ca/registered-agent-california)
-   [California Corporation Formation](/states/ca/corporation-formation-california)
-   [California Virtual Office](/states/ca/virtual-office-california)