Verifying whether a corporation exists in the Philippines is usually the first practical step before signing a contract, filing a case, extending credit, onboarding a supplier, buying shares, leasing property, or dealing with a business that claims to be duly organized. In Philippine practice, “existence” can mean several different things. A corporation may exist as a juridical person because it was validly incorporated, yet it may no longer be in good standing, may have had its corporate term affected by law, may have been revoked or suspended for regulatory noncompliance, or may merely be using a business name that is different from its registered corporate name. A proper verification exercise therefore goes beyond asking whether a company name appears somewhere online. It requires checking identity, registration, status, authority, and sometimes sector-specific licensing.
This article explains, in Philippine legal context, how to verify whether a corporation exists, what documents matter, what government offices are relevant, how to distinguish a corporation from other business forms, what red flags to watch for, and how to use the result in transactions and disputes.
I. What “existence” means in Philippine corporate law
Under Philippine law, a corporation is an artificial being created by operation of law, with a personality separate and distinct from its stockholders or members. In practical terms, that separate juridical personality begins when incorporation is validly effected. For ordinary private corporations, the key regulator is the Securities and Exchange Commission, commonly referred to as the SEC.
When people ask whether a corporation “exists,” they may mean any of the following:
- Whether the entity was ever validly incorporated.
- Whether the corporation is still active in SEC records.
- Whether its registration has been revoked, suspended, dissolved, or otherwise rendered inactive.
- Whether the business people are dealing with is in fact the same entity reflected in its documents.
- Whether the corporation has authority to transact the particular business it is conducting.
- Whether the people signing on its behalf are actually authorized.
A correct legal verification usually addresses all six.
II. The basic rule: start with the SEC, not with a trade name, website, or social media page
In the Philippines, the primary proof that a domestic corporation exists is its registration with the SEC. For a foreign corporation doing business in the Philippines, the relevant question is whether it has secured the appropriate license to do business in the country and whether that license remains effective.
A website, Facebook page, BIR certificate, mayor’s permit, invoice, or DTI registration is not by itself proof that a corporation exists as a corporation. Those items may show that a business is operating, but not necessarily that it is a corporation. Many businesses in the Philippines are sole proprietorships, partnerships, cooperatives, associations, or unregistered enterprises. A DTI business name registration, for example, supports a sole proprietorship’s trade name; it is not a certificate of incorporation.
So the first legal question is not “Does the business exist?” but “What kind of entity is it?” If the claimed entity is a corporation, the SEC is the starting point.
III. The most important identifiers to verify
A corporation’s identity should not be verified by name alone. Corporate names can resemble one another, and businesses often use brand names or “doing business as” names that do not match the exact registered name. The safer practice is to confirm as many of the following as possible:
- Exact registered corporate name
- SEC registration number
- Tax Identification Number
- Principal office address
- Date of incorporation or registration
- Type of corporation, such as stock or nonstock
- For foreign corporations, license details
- Names of directors, trustees, officers, or authorized signatories
- Trade names or brands actually used in the market
A mismatch between the business name on marketing materials and the corporate name on SEC records is not automatically improper, but it must be explained and documented.
IV. How to verify a domestic corporation
1. Ask for the Certificate of Incorporation
The most direct document to request from the corporation itself is its Certificate of Incorporation issued by the SEC. This is the core document showing that the corporation was created or registered. Review it carefully.
Check for:
- Exact corporate name
- SEC registration number
- Date of incorporation
- Whether the document appears complete and consistent
- Whether the copy appears certified or official, where necessary
A mere photocopy may be useful for preliminary review, but for important transactions it is better to obtain a certified true copy or independently confirm the record with the SEC.
2. Ask for its latest SEC documents
A corporation that truly exists and is operating normally should usually be able to produce its basic SEC filings and corporate records. Depending on the transaction, these may include:
- Articles of Incorporation
- By-Laws
- General Information Sheet or GIS
- Audited Financial Statements or AFS
- Certificate of Incorporation
- Latest board resolution authorizing the transaction
- Secretary’s Certificate identifying authorized officers
Why these matter: a corporation may have been validly formed years ago, but later become delinquent, noncompliant, dissolved, or unauthorized for the act being undertaken. Recent filings help determine whether the entity is still functioning in a legally recognizable way.
3. Confirm the corporation in SEC records
The strongest independent step is to verify the entity directly through SEC records. In practice, this may be done through the SEC’s available verification channels or by requesting records or certifications. The precise mechanics may change over time, but the legal objective remains the same: confirm that the corporation appears in SEC records and determine its present status.
What to confirm from SEC records:
- That the name exists in the SEC database
- That the registration number matches the claimed entity
- Whether the status is active, revoked, dissolved, suspended, expired, or otherwise qualified
- Whether the corporation has filed recent reportorial requirements
- Whether there are recorded changes in corporate name, principal office, directors, or corporate term
4. Check whether the corporation’s name changed
Philippine corporations can amend their corporate names subject to SEC approval. A corporation may tell you it is “ABC Holdings,” while older contracts or permits show “XYZ Holdings, Inc.” That does not necessarily mean fraud; it may simply reflect an approved amendment.
Where name changes are involved, ask for:
- SEC-approved Amended Articles of Incorporation
- SEC approval of the change of corporate name
- Prior and current names, with dates
- Explanation of when the new name started being used
This is especially important in due diligence, debt recovery, and litigation.
V. How to verify a foreign corporation in the Philippines
A foreign corporation may exist under the law of another country but may not necessarily be licensed to do business in the Philippines. Those are different questions.
To verify a foreign corporation for Philippine purposes, ask:
- Does it exist under the law of its home jurisdiction?
- Is it licensed or otherwise authorized to do business in the Philippines if its activities require that?
- Is the local branch, representative office, regional headquarters, or other Philippine presence properly registered?
For Philippine-side verification, look for:
- SEC license to do business in the Philippines
- Proof of appointment of resident agent, where required
- Registration details of branch office, representative office, or similar structure
- Local permits and tax registrations, if it operates locally
A foreign entity may be real, but not lawfully doing business in the Philippines. That distinction matters in enforcement, taxation, and contract risk.
VI. Distinguishing a corporation from other Philippine business forms
A frequent practical error is assuming that every established business is a corporation. In the Philippines, that is false. The following distinctions matter:
1. Sole proprietorship
Registered primarily through DTI as to business name. It is not a separate juridical person from the owner. If the “company” turns out to be a sole proprietorship, your contract must identify the human owner, not treat the business as a separate corporation.
2. Partnership
Exists under the Civil Code, may be registered with the SEC, but is not a corporation. Partners may have direct liability depending on the type of partnership and circumstances.
3. Cooperative
Generally governed by a different legal framework and regulator. A cooperative is not a corporation merely because it appears organized and formal.
4. Association, foundation, or nonstock corporation
These may indeed be corporations, but their purposes, governance, and powers differ from stock corporations.
5. Government-owned or controlled corporation
These have their own statutory or charter context and may require a different level of verification.
The lesson is simple: first determine the legal nature of the entity, then verify under the correct regime.
VII. Documents that help prove corporate identity and status
A serious Philippine due diligence file commonly includes the following:
Core incorporation documents
- Certificate of Incorporation
- Articles of Incorporation
- By-Laws
Ongoing compliance documents
- Latest GIS
- Latest AFS
- SEC confirmations or certifications, where needed
Authority documents
- Board Resolution
- Secretary’s Certificate
- Incumbency certification, if available
- Special Power of Attorney, if an agent is signing
Tax and local operation documents
- BIR Certificate of Registration
- Official receipts or invoices bearing TIN
- Mayor’s Permit or business permit
- Barangay clearance, where applicable
Sector or activity-specific licenses
- Licenses from agencies regulating banking, insurance, securities, lending, recruitment, education, health care, utilities, transport, and other regulated businesses
These additional documents do not replace SEC verification. They supplement it.
VIII. “Good standing” is not exactly the same as “existence”
A corporation may exist, but not be in good standing. This distinction is often overlooked.
A corporation may still appear in records but have one or more of the following problems:
- Failure to submit reportorial requirements
- Revocation or suspension of registration
- Delinquency
- Nonpayment of fees or penalties
- Failure to comply with beneficial ownership or other disclosure rules
- Dissolution proceedings
- Revoked secondary license for regulated activities
From a transactional perspective, this matters because the entity may have limited practical capacity, credibility, or authority even if it once existed validly.
So when verifying a corporation, the better question is:
- Was it validly incorporated?
- Is it still active?
- Is it compliant enough for this transaction?
- Is it authorized for this specific act?
IX. Corporate term and why it matters
At one time, corporate terms were often fixed and had to be checked carefully against expiration. Philippine law later changed the default rule for many corporations, but legacy issues may still appear in older records, amended articles, or entities formed under prior rules. Because of that, do not rely on old assumptions.
Review:
- Original Articles of Incorporation
- Amendments affecting term
- SEC records reflecting current status
If the corporate term, dissolution, expiration, or revival is relevant to your issue, this should be checked directly from official records rather than inferred from age alone.
X. Verify authority, not just existence
A valid corporation may exist, but the person dealing with you may still have no authority to bind it. In practice, many disputes do not arise from nonexistence of the entity, but from lack of authority of the supposed representative.
Always verify:
- Who signed the contract
- Their position in the corporation
- Whether the by-laws or board resolutions authorize them
- Whether there is a secretary’s certificate attesting to authority
- Whether the transaction requires board or stockholder approval
Examples:
- A sales manager may not have authority to sell corporate real property.
- A branch employee may not be authorized to execute financing documents.
- A supposed “owner” may actually be only a shareholder, not the corporation itself.
Under Philippine practice, a Secretary’s Certificate is one of the most commonly used documents to prove authority. For important transactions, it should be reviewed alongside the Board Resolution it references.
XI. Using the General Information Sheet
The GIS is a very useful practical document. It can help verify that the corporation is not merely a name on paper. It usually identifies current or recent directors, officers, principal office, and other corporate information.
The GIS helps answer:
- Are the current officers the same people negotiating with you?
- Is the stated principal office the same as the one in the contract?
- Are there recent changes in the board?
- Does the signatory’s position appear plausible?
The GIS is not the sole determinant of authority, but it is one of the best cross-checking tools in Philippine corporate due diligence.
XII. Verifying the principal office and actual business presence
A corporation can exist on paper yet be difficult to locate, inactive, or misrepresenting its operating address. Verify the principal office through documents and, where appropriate, through practical checks.
Compare:
- SEC records
- BIR registration
- Mayor’s permit
- Contracts and invoices
- Website contact page
- Demand letter address
- Actual office visit, if necessary
Red flags include:
- The corporation refuses to provide a fixed address.
- The address belongs to another business entirely.
- Documents show multiple inconsistent addresses without explanation.
- The corporation claims a principal office in one city, but all paperwork uses another.
This is relevant for service of notices, venue, enforcement, and risk assessment.
XIII. Sector-specific verification: existence is not enough in regulated industries
In the Philippines, many businesses require more than SEC registration. A corporation may exist but still lack the legal authority to conduct the business it is actually offering.
Examples:
- Lending and financing
- Banking and quasi-banking
- Insurance
- Securities dealing or brokerage
- Recruitment and placement
- Condominium or real estate activities
- Education
- Health care facilities
- Public utilities and transportation
- Food, drugs, cosmetics, and related regulated products
A corporation that lacks the appropriate regulatory authority may expose counterparties to significant legal and commercial risk. Verification must therefore be tailored to the industry.
XIV. Business permits and tax registration: helpful, but secondary
Many people assume that a BIR registration or mayor’s permit proves corporate existence. It does not, at least not conclusively.
These documents are still useful because they can show:
- The entity is recognized by tax or local authorities
- The TIN and address match the claimed corporation
- The line of business appears consistent
- The business is operating in a specific locality
But a BIR registration does not transform a sole proprietorship into a corporation. And a mayor’s permit does not substitute for SEC incorporation.
Treat them as supporting documents, not primary proof.
XV. When verifying for litigation or collection
If the purpose of verification is to sue, enforce a debt, levy property, or send a final demand, the diligence should be stricter.
At minimum, confirm:
- Exact corporate name
- SEC registration number
- Current principal office
- Whether the corporation still exists or has been dissolved
- Correct officers or authorized representatives
- Whether assets are under the corporation’s actual name
- Whether the obligor is the corporation itself or a related affiliate
This is important because many collection failures come from suing the wrong entity, naming the trade name instead of the corporation, or confusing affiliated corporations with one another.
Example: “ABC Builders” on a signboard may actually be a trade name of a sole proprietorship, while the contracting party in the paperwork is “ABC Prime Construction Corporation,” and the invoices are issued by another affiliate. These distinctions can decide the case.
XVI. When verifying for contracts and procurement
Before entering a contract with a Philippine corporation, prudent practice includes obtaining:
- Certificate of Incorporation
- Articles and By-Laws
- Latest GIS
- Board Resolution approving the deal, if needed
- Secretary’s Certificate identifying authorized signatory
- Proof of tax and local registrations
- IDs and specimen signatures of signatories, where appropriate
For high-value transactions, also verify:
- Litigation exposure
- Status of title if real property is involved
- Encumbrances
- Related-party structure
- Creditworthiness
- Secondary licenses
Existence alone does not tell you whether the company can actually perform.
XVII. What if the corporation is dissolved, revoked, or inactive?
If your verification suggests that the corporation has been dissolved, had its registration revoked, or is inactive, the legal consequences depend on the facts.
Possible issues include:
- Whether it can still sue or be sued for winding-up purposes
- Whether obligations were incurred before or after dissolution
- Whether officers or stockholders may face personal exposure under specific doctrines
- Whether a different affiliate actually assumed the contract
- Whether the entity continued operating without proper status
This area is highly fact-specific. The key point is that “no longer active” does not always mean “all claims disappear,” and “once validly formed” does not mean “presently safe to transact with.”
XVIII. De facto corporations and corporation by estoppel
Philippine law has long recognized doctrines dealing with defective incorporation and representation. In some situations, even if there were irregularities in formation, persons who acted as a corporation or dealt with an entity as though it were a corporation may face consequences under doctrines such as de facto corporation and corporation by estoppel.
These doctrines usually matter in disputes, not in routine due diligence. They do not justify casual verification. A prudent party should still verify formal existence directly.
Practical point: even if a business later argues that it was defectively incorporated, parties who represented themselves as a corporation may not always escape liability simply by denying corporate existence after the fact.
XIX. Common red flags that the claimed corporation may not be what it says it is
Watch for these signs:
- It cannot provide its SEC registration number.
- It gives only a brand name, not a registered corporate name.
- Its invoices, bank account name, and contract name do not match.
- It presents only a DTI certificate when claiming to be a corporation.
- The signatory cannot produce a board resolution or secretary’s certificate.
- It refuses to provide basic SEC documents.
- Its address is vague, shifting, or inconsistent across documents.
- It claims a foreign affiliation but cannot show Philippine license details.
- It says it is “registered” but cannot identify with which agency.
- The supposed corporate seal or certificate looks altered or incomplete.
- The business email domain or receipts identify a different legal entity.
- The entity’s name includes “Inc.” or “Corp.” in marketing materials, but no proof of SEC incorporation is shown.
None of these alone proves fraud, but together they warrant caution.
XX. A practical verification checklist
For ordinary commercial due diligence in the Philippines, this is a sound sequence:
- Get the exact legal name and SEC registration number.
- Request the Certificate of Incorporation.
- Request the Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws.
- Request the latest GIS and AFS.
- Confirm the entity in SEC records.
- Check whether the corporate name has changed.
- Verify principal office and contact details.
- Confirm BIR registration and local permits.
- Verify the authority of the signatory through board resolution and secretary’s certificate.
- Check for industry-specific licenses where applicable.
- Make sure the bank account name matches the legal contracting entity.
- Review whether the contracting entity is the same one issuing invoices and receiving payments.
For major transactions, expand the checklist to litigation, asset ownership, liens, group structure, and beneficial ownership review.
XXI. Special issues with affiliates, parent companies, and group brands
Many businesses in the Philippines operate in groups. The brand the public sees may not be the same entity that owns the assets, employs the staff, signs the lease, or invoices customers. One conglomerate brand may involve several corporations.
Never assume that:
- Parent and subsidiary are the same legal person
- Sister companies can be used interchangeably
- A group brand automatically identifies the contracting entity
- A person authorized for one affiliate can bind another
Always determine the exact corporation involved.
XXII. Can a corporation exist even if it is not currently operating?
Yes. A corporation may still exist as a legal entity even if it has little or no present business activity. Conversely, a business may be visibly operating while using the wrong entity, a suspended entity, or a non-corporate structure. Legal existence and actual operations are related but not identical.
That is why documentary verification and practical verification must be done together.
XXIII. Evidentiary value in court and formal transactions
For court cases, notarized transactions, bank compliance, procurement, and formal legal opinions, the best evidence of existence is usually official or certified documentation, not screenshots or informal representations.
Preferred evidence includes:
- Certified true copies from the SEC
- Certified corporate secretary’s documents
- Official tax registration documents
- Authenticated foreign corporate records where a foreign corporation is involved
For litigation, evidentiary admissibility and authenticity should be considered early, especially if the issue is expected to be contested.
XXIV. A note on online results and informal databases
Online information can be useful for preliminary screening, but it should not be treated as final proof in high-stakes matters. Searchable databases, websites, or downloadable profiles may be incomplete, outdated, or limited in the status details they reveal.
For significant legal or financial reliance, request the underlying official documents or certifications.
XXV. What a lawyer usually concludes after verification
A careful Philippine legal conclusion is rarely just “the corporation exists.” It is usually framed more precisely, for example:
- The corporation appears to have been duly incorporated under Philippine law based on its Certificate of Incorporation and related SEC records.
- The corporation appears active in available records, subject to confirmation of current reportorial compliance.
- The entity negotiating the contract is not the same as the entity shown in the invoices.
- The corporation exists, but the signatory’s authority has not been sufficiently proven.
- The foreign corporation exists abroad, but Philippine authority to do business has not been adequately shown.
- The entity is not a corporation but a sole proprietorship using a business name.
That level of precision avoids costly mistakes.
XXVI. Bottom line
To verify whether a corporation exists in the Philippines, the legal center of gravity is the SEC. The best starting proof is the Certificate of Incorporation, reinforced by the Articles of Incorporation, By-Laws, GIS, and current SEC status confirmation. But responsible verification does not stop there. It must also determine whether the corporation is active, whether it is the same entity actually dealing with you, whether it has authority for the transaction, whether the signatory is authorized, and whether the business has any required sector-specific licenses.
In Philippine practice, the safest rule is this: verify the legal entity, verify its current status, verify the authority of the person acting for it, and verify that the business activity matches the registrations and licenses presented. That is how you move from mere appearance to legal certainty.