Contractors spared as Treasury scraps ownership reporting rule
Certain contractors are no longer required to report their owners' personal information to the Treasury Department
Image: Accounting Today
The Treasury Department on Wednesday scrapped a requirement for certain small businesses to report their owners’ personal information to the government, following a series of back-and-forth legal events.
Why it matters: Every U.S. business with fewer than 20 employees or less than $5 million in annual revenue, of which there are over 30 million, including many contractors, would have been impacted.
What’s happening: The rule was part of a law — the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) — which took effect in 2024 to crack down on criminal activity conducted through shell companies.
- The law required businesses to submit basic information on all owners with more than a 25 percent stake to the Treasury Department by January 1, 2025.
- Zoom in: After taking a legal rollercoaster ride — it was blocked from being enforced in December and then reinstated in February — the Treasury Department on Wednesday officially exempted all companies.
What they’re saying: “[The]… expectation of receiving over 32 million such reports annually attests to the CTA’s excessive reach and the impracticality of its enforcement,” ACCA CEO Barton James wrote in 2024.
- “The law’s effectiveness is further doubtful as it relies on self-reporting by the very individuals it seeks to regulate,” he added.
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