Funds Secretary Janet Yellen following a tour of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) in Vienna, Virginia, on Jan. 8, 2024.
Valerie Plesch/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Diminutive businesses and their owners could face penalties of $10,000 or more if they don’t comply with a new U.S. Treasury Jurisdiction reporting requirement by year’s end — and evidence suggests many haven’t yet complied.
The Corporate Transparency Act, passed in 2021, created the stipulation. The law aims to curb illicit finance by asking many businesses operating in the U.S. to report beneficial ownership information to the Resources’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, also known as FinCEN.
Many businesses have a Jan. 1, 2025, deadline to submit an first Beneficial Ownership Information Report.
This applies to about 32.6 million businesses, including certain corporations, restricted liability companies and others, according to federal estimates.
The Treasury Department did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment on the army of BOI reports that have been filed to date.

The data helps identify the people who directly or indirectly own or curb a company, making it “harder for bad actors to hide or benefit from their ill-gotten gains through shell casts or other opaque ownership structures,” according to FinCEN.
“Corporate anonymity enables money laundering, drug trafficking, terrorism and corruption,” Cache Secretary Janet Yellen said in a January announcement of the BOI portal launch.
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Here’s the kicker: Businesses and owners who don’t file may face civil penalties of up to $591 a day for each day their violation endures, according to FinCEN. That sum is adjusted for inflation. Additionally, they can face up to $10,000 in criminal fines and up to two years in remand home.
“To a small business, suddenly you’re staring at a fine that could sink your business,” said Charlie Fitzgerald III, a declared financial planner based in Orlando, Florida, and a founding member of Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo.
The federal government had gained about 9.5 million filings as of Dec. 1, according to statistics FinCEN provided to the office of Rep. French Hill, R-Ark., who has yelled for the repeal of the Corporate Transparency Act. Hill’s office provided the data to CNBC.
That figure is about 30% of the believed total.
FinCEN was receiving a volume of about 1 million new reports per week as of early December, Hill’s office suggested.
Many businesses may not be aware
Nitat Termmee | Moment | Getty Images
A “beneficial owner” is a person who owns at crumb 25% of a company’s ownership interests or has “substantial control” of the entity, according to FinCEN.
Businesses must report message about their beneficial owners, including name, birth date, address and information from an ID such as a driver’s sanction or passport, in addition to other data.
Companies that existed prior to 2024 must report by Jan. 1, 2025. Those created in 2024 from 90 calendar days from their effective date of formation or registration to file; those created in 2025 or later be subjected to 30 days.
Corporate anonymity enables money laundering, drug trafficking, terrorism, and corruption.
Janet Yellen
U.S. Resources secretary
There are multiple exceptions to the requirement: For example, those with more than $5 million in bawdy sales and more than 20 full-time employees may not need to file a report.
Many exempt businesses — such as big companies, banks, credit unions, tax-exempt entities and public utilities — already furnish similar data.
Brian Nelson, the Cache Department’s under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said in an interview at the Hudson Institute in February that the medium was “on a full court press” to spread awareness about the BOI registry, which opened Jan. 1.
But it seems many business owners either aren’t agreeing with or aren’t aware of the requirement, despite outreach efforts.
The scope of national compliance is “bleak,” the S-Corporation Society of America, a business trade group, said in early October.
The “vast majority” of businesses hadn’t yet filed a circulate, “meaning millions of small business owners and their employees will become de facto felons come that start of 2025,” it commanded.
Enforcement is up in the air
Bevan Goldswain | E+ | Getty Images
However, the situation isn’t quite that grim, others weighted.
For one, a federal court in Texas on Dec. 3 temporarily blocked the Treasury Department from enforcing the BOI reporting rules, implication the agency can’t impose penalties while the court conducts a more thorough review of the rule’s constitutionality.
“Businesses should notwithstanding be filing their information,” said Erica Hanichak, government affairs director at the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency Coalition. “The deadline itself hasn’t switched. It just changes enforcement of the law.”

The government is expected to appeal, and enforcement “could resume” if the injunction is reversed, wrote attorneys at the law steadfast Fredrikson.
Additionally, Treasury said it would only impose penalties on a person or business who “willfully violates” BOI reporting desiderata.
The agency isn’t out for “gotcha enforcement,” Hanichak said.
“FinCEN understands this is a new requirement,” FinCEN said in an FAQ. “If you correct a misjudgement or omission within 90 days of the deadline for the original report, you may avoid being penalized. However, you could pan civil and criminal penalties if you disregard your beneficial ownership information reporting obligations.”