Amending Articles of Incorporation Versus General Information Sheet for Address Change Same LGU

I. Introduction

A Philippine corporation’s registered office address is not a mere clerical detail. It is the official address for regulatory notices, service of communications, corporate records, and dealings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. For this reason, a change in corporate address must be reflected properly in the corporation’s records and, where required, in filings with the SEC.

A recurring practical issue arises when a corporation changes its office address but remains within the same city or municipality. The question is whether the corporation must amend its Articles of Incorporation, or whether the change may simply be reflected in the corporation’s General Information Sheet.

The answer depends primarily on how the registered office address is stated in the Articles of Incorporation.

If the Articles state only the city or municipality of the principal office, and the corporation moves to another address within the same city or municipality, an amendment to the Articles is generally not necessary. The change is commonly reflected through the General Information Sheet and the corporation’s internal records.

If, however, the Articles state the full specific address of the principal office, a move away from that exact address may require an amendment to the Articles, even if the new address is in the same local government unit.

This distinction is important because an amendment of the Articles is a formal corporate act requiring board and stockholder or member approval, SEC filing, and SEC approval. By contrast, updating the General Information Sheet is an annual or event-linked reporting mechanism that informs the SEC of current corporate information but does not, by itself, amend the corporation’s charter.

II. The Registered Office in Philippine Corporation Law

The Articles of Incorporation of a Philippine corporation must state, among other matters, the place where the principal office of the corporation is to be located. Under modern Philippine corporate practice, the principal office is commonly identified by the city or municipality where it is located, rather than by a complete street address.

This approach recognizes that corporations may change their exact office location within the same locality without intending to alter the corporate domicile stated in the Articles. The city or municipality is therefore the legally significant location for many charter purposes, while the exact address is commonly updated through SEC reportorial filings.

The corporation’s principal office address has practical legal consequences. It affects where notices may be sent, where corporate books may be kept or inspected, where regulatory communications may be directed, and how the corporation identifies itself in official filings. The address must therefore remain accurate in SEC records, even when no charter amendment is required.

III. The Articles of Incorporation as the Corporate Charter

The Articles of Incorporation are the corporation’s foundational document. They create the corporation’s juridical personality and define essential matters such as its name, purpose, term if applicable, principal office, incorporators, capital structure, and other charter provisions.

Because the Articles are constitutive in nature, any change to a matter stated in them generally requires a formal amendment. The corporation cannot amend its Articles merely by stating updated information in another filing. A General Information Sheet, secretary’s certificate, board resolution, or letter to the SEC may provide notice or evidence of corporate action, but it does not amend the Articles unless the proper amendment process is followed and approved or accepted by the SEC, as applicable.

Thus, when the specific office address appears in the Articles as part of the principal office clause, changing that address may amount to changing a charter provision. In that situation, the correct route is usually an amendment of the Articles.

IV. The General Information Sheet as a Reportorial Filing

The General Information Sheet, or GIS, is a recurring SEC reportorial filing that reflects current information about the corporation. It typically includes the corporation’s registered office address, contact details, directors or trustees, officers, stockholders or members, capital structure, beneficial ownership information where required, and other corporate data.

The GIS is informational and reportorial. It updates the SEC’s current database, but it does not have the same legal nature as the Articles of Incorporation. Filing a GIS with a new address informs the SEC of the corporation’s current address. It does not necessarily amend the Articles.

This distinction is central. A GIS may be sufficient to update the SEC’s records where the change does not alter the charter provision on principal office. But a GIS is not a substitute for an Articles amendment where the Articles themselves must be changed.

V. Address Change Within the Same LGU: The Core Rule

For a corporation moving its office address within the same local government unit, the governing question is:

Does the change alter the principal office provision stated in the Articles of Incorporation?

If the Articles state only the city or municipality, such as “The principal office of the corporation shall be located in Makati City, Philippines,” and the corporation moves from one Makati address to another Makati address, the principal office clause remains true. The corporation is still located in Makati City. No amendment to the Articles is ordinarily required.

If the Articles state a full address, such as “The principal office of the corporation shall be located at Unit 1201, ABC Building, Ayala Avenue, Makati City,” and the corporation moves to another building in Makati City, the principal office clause is no longer accurate. The corporation is no longer located at the exact address stated in the Articles. In that case, an amendment may be necessary to align the Articles with the corporation’s actual address.

VI. Why the Same LGU Matters

The phrase “same LGU” usually refers to the same city or municipality. In Philippine corporate filings, the city or municipality is significant because it is commonly the required level of specificity for the principal office in the Articles.

A transfer from one city to another generally changes the place of the principal office. For example, a transfer from Quezon City to Pasig City, or from Makati City to Taguig City, ordinarily requires an amendment of the Articles because the principal office location stated in the Articles has changed.

By contrast, a transfer from one street, floor, unit, or barangay to another within the same city or municipality may not require an amendment if the Articles identify only the city or municipality. In that case, the change affects the corporation’s mailing or specific office address, not the charter-level location of the principal office.

The same-LGU concept therefore matters because it helps determine whether the principal office provision remains accurate.

VII. When a GIS Update Is Usually Sufficient

A GIS update is usually sufficient when all of the following are present:

  1. The corporation is moving to a new address within the same city or municipality;
  2. The Articles of Incorporation state the principal office only by city or municipality, not by full street address;
  3. The new address remains consistent with the principal office clause in the Articles;
  4. The corporation’s SEC records, tax records, business permit records, bank records, and other official records are updated as needed; and
  5. The corporation has proper internal authorization or documentation for the transfer of office.

In this situation, the GIS functions as the proper reporting document to reflect the corporation’s current address. The corporation should ensure that the new full address appears accurately in the GIS and other relevant SEC forms or online records.

VIII. When an Amendment of the Articles May Be Required

An amendment of the Articles may be required in any of the following situations:

  1. The Articles state a full specific principal office address, and the corporation moves away from that address;
  2. The corporation transfers its principal office to another city or municipality;
  3. The address change affects a charter provision beyond mere contact information;
  4. The SEC requires amendment based on the way the principal office clause was drafted;
  5. The corporation wishes to clean up old Articles by replacing a specific street address with a city-or-municipality-only principal office clause; or
  6. The corporation is undertaking other amendments and chooses to include the address correction for consistency.

The need for amendment is strongest when the Articles contain a specific address. The corporation should not assume that a GIS update alone can override the specific address stated in its charter.

IX. The Risk of Relying Only on the GIS When the Articles State a Specific Address

If the Articles state a specific address but the corporation merely files a GIS showing a new address, there may be inconsistency between the corporate charter and the reportorial filing.

This inconsistency may create practical and legal problems, including:

  1. SEC records showing conflicting address information;
  2. Questions during future amendments, increases in capital, applications for certificates, or other SEC transactions;
  3. Issues in due diligence for financing, investment, acquisition, or sale;
  4. Problems with service of notices or regulatory communications;
  5. Confusion in banking, licensing, tax, and local government transactions;
  6. Possible findings of incomplete or inaccurate corporate records; and
  7. Delays when obtaining SEC documents or approvals.

The GIS may show the corporation’s current address, but it does not erase the wording of the Articles. If the Articles remain inaccurate, the safer legal approach is to amend them.

X. Corporate Approvals for Amending the Articles

An amendment to the Articles of Incorporation generally requires approval by the board of directors or trustees and the required vote of stockholders or members. For stock corporations, the usual statutory threshold is approval by a majority of the board and the vote or written assent of stockholders representing at least two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock, unless a higher threshold is required by law or by the Articles or By-Laws. For non-stock corporations, approval generally requires the vote or written assent of at least two-thirds of the members, unless otherwise governed by applicable rules.

The corporation must document the approvals through board resolutions, stockholder or member approvals, and a secretary’s certificate. The amended Articles must then be submitted to the SEC in the required form.

An address-related amendment may appear simple, but it is still a charter amendment. The formalities should be observed.

XI. Practical Documents for an Articles Amendment

Where an Articles amendment is needed for an address change, the corporation will commonly prepare the following:

  1. Board resolution approving the amendment;
  2. Stockholders’ or members’ approval, or written assent, as applicable;
  3. Secretary’s certificate attesting to the approvals;
  4. Amended Articles of Incorporation or amendment document reflecting the revised principal office clause;
  5. Director’s certificate or treasurer’s certificate if required by the nature of the filing;
  6. SEC cover sheet or online submission forms;
  7. Proof of authority of the filer or representative;
  8. Updated GIS, if due or required; and
  9. Other SEC-required documents depending on the corporation type and the SEC’s current filing system.

The exact documentary requirements may vary depending on whether the corporation is stock, non-stock, close, one person, domestic, foreign-registered, or subject to special regulatory requirements.

XII. Suggested Drafting of the Principal Office Clause

To reduce the need for future Articles amendments, corporations commonly draft the principal office clause by stating only the city or municipality, such as:

“That the principal office of the corporation shall be located in Makati City, Philippines.”

This wording allows the corporation to move from one unit, floor, building, street, or barangay to another within Makati City without needing to amend the Articles solely because of that move.

By contrast, the following wording may cause future amendment issues:

“That the principal office of the corporation shall be located at Unit 1201, ABC Building, Ayala Avenue, Makati City, Philippines.”

This wording fixes the principal office at a specific address. If the corporation later transfers to another Makati address, the Articles may become inaccurate.

For existing corporations whose Articles still state a full address, it may be advisable, during the next Articles amendment, to revise the principal office clause so that it identifies only the city or municipality.

XIII. Internal Corporate Action Even When Articles Amendment Is Not Required

Even when no Articles amendment is required, the corporation should still document the transfer of office internally. The board of directors or trustees may approve or note the change of address, especially if the move involves a lease, property acquisition, operational restructuring, change of registered office, or change in the place where corporate records are kept.

A simple board resolution may state:

  1. The old address;
  2. The new address;
  3. The effective date of transfer;
  4. Authority of officers to update SEC, BIR, LGU, bank, and other records;
  5. Authority to execute leases, notices, and related documents; and
  6. Confirmation that the new address remains within the same city or municipality stated in the Articles.

This internal documentation is useful for audits, due diligence, bank updates, government filings, and future corporate transactions.

XIV. Updating the GIS

When the address change does not require Articles amendment, the corporation should ensure that the new address appears in the GIS. If the corporation’s annual GIS is due soon, the new address may be reflected in the annual filing. If immediate updating is necessary or required by SEC practice, the corporation may need to submit an amended GIS or other address update filing through the appropriate SEC channel.

The GIS should be consistent with other corporate information. The address should be complete, including unit or room number, floor, building name, street, barangay, city or municipality, province if applicable, postal code, and country.

The corporation should avoid using vague addresses, incomplete building details, or addresses that do not match supporting records. A precise GIS address helps ensure that notices, compliance reminders, and regulatory correspondence reach the corporation.

XV. Relationship with BIR Registration

An address change within the same LGU may also require updating records with the Bureau of Internal Revenue. The SEC address and BIR registered address should generally be consistent, although the procedures and timing are separate.

For tax purposes, the corporation may need to update its registration details, books of account location, invoices or receipts, authority to print, branch registrations, and other tax-related records. If the transfer remains within the same Revenue District Office, the process may be simpler. If the transfer results in a change of RDO, additional transfer procedures may apply.

The key point is that SEC filing compliance does not automatically update BIR records. A corporation should separately handle tax registration updates.

XVI. Relationship with Local Government Permits

Even if the move is within the same city or municipality, the corporation may need to update its business permit, mayor’s permit, barangay clearance, zoning clearance, sanitary permit, fire safety inspection certificate, occupancy permit, signage permits, and other local licenses.

A same-city move may still involve a different barangay, different building classification, different zoning status, or different local inspection requirements. Local government compliance should therefore be checked separately.

The SEC may accept a GIS address update, but the corporation may still be non-compliant locally if it operates from the new address without updating its business permit or barangay registration.

XVII. Relationship with Banks, Contracts, and Counterparties

A corporate address change should also be reflected in the corporation’s external records. Banks commonly require board resolutions, secretary’s certificates, updated GIS, updated business permits, lease contracts, and valid IDs of authorized signatories before updating account records.

Contracts may also contain notice provisions requiring written notice of a change in address. The corporation should review major contracts, loan agreements, leases, franchise agreements, distribution agreements, supplier agreements, customer contracts, and government registrations to determine whether notice must be given.

Failure to update notice addresses may result in valid notices being sent to the old address.

XVIII. Registered Office Versus Business Address Versus Branch Address

The registered office or principal office is the official office stated in the Articles and SEC records. It is not always the same as every place where the corporation conducts business.

A corporation may have:

  1. A principal office;
  2. Branch offices;
  3. Warehouses;
  4. Satellite offices;
  5. Project sites;
  6. Stores;
  7. Virtual or administrative offices;
  8. Factories or plants; and
  9. Shared service or coworking spaces.

Changing a branch address is not necessarily the same as changing the principal office. If the principal office remains the same and only a branch changes location, the Articles usually do not need amendment for that reason alone. However, the corporation may need to update BIR branch registration, LGU permits, and internal records.

The issue discussed in this article concerns the corporation’s principal office or registered office, not merely any operating location.

XIX. One Person Corporations

For a One Person Corporation, the same conceptual distinction applies. If the Articles state only the city or municipality of the principal office and the OPC moves within the same city or municipality, a GIS or appropriate SEC update is generally the practical route. If the Articles state a specific address or the move is to another city or municipality, amendment may be required.

Because an OPC has a single stockholder rather than a traditional group of stockholders, the approval mechanics differ, but the charter-versus-reportorial distinction remains the same.

XX. Non-Stock Corporations

For non-stock corporations, including associations, foundations, and similar entities, the same rule applies. If the Articles state only the city or municipality and the principal office remains in the same locality, a GIS update may be sufficient. If the Articles state a specific address or the office moves to another city or municipality, an amendment may be necessary.

Non-stock corporations should also consider whether donors, grantors, accrediting agencies, local government units, or regulatory agencies require separate notice of address changes.

XXI. Foreign Corporations Licensed to Do Business in the Philippines

A foreign corporation licensed to do business in the Philippines does not have Philippine Articles of Incorporation in the same way a domestic corporation does, but it has SEC registration documents, resident agent information, and a Philippine office address on record.

If a licensed foreign corporation changes its Philippine office address, it should update SEC records through the applicable filing mechanism. If the address is tied to its license, resident agent, branch office, or application documents, additional filings may be required. The GIS or equivalent reportorial filing may not be enough in all cases.

The corporation should distinguish between the address of its Philippine branch, the address of its resident agent, and the address of its principal office abroad.

XXII. Address Changes and Corporate Notices

The registered office address is relevant to notices from the SEC and other agencies. A corporation that fails to update its address may miss important communications, including compliance notices, penalty assessments, show-cause orders, revocation warnings, and other regulatory correspondence.

Even where an Articles amendment is unnecessary, a corporation should promptly update its address in SEC records to avoid missed notices. A technically correct Articles clause is not enough if the SEC’s current database still shows an outdated delivery address.

XXIII. Timing of the Address Update

A corporation should not wait indefinitely to reflect an address change. The best practice is to approve the transfer before or around the effective date of the move, update the GIS or SEC records promptly, and then align BIR, LGU, bank, and contractual records.

The annual GIS should not be treated as the only possible opportunity to update corporate address information when immediate accuracy is important. In practice, an amended GIS or separate address update may be appropriate depending on SEC requirements and the corporation’s circumstances.

XXIV. Due Diligence Considerations

During legal due diligence, counsel will usually compare the address stated in the Articles, the latest GIS, BIR Certificate of Registration, business permits, lease contracts, invoices, bank records, and major agreements.

Red flags include:

  1. Articles showing one address and GIS showing another;
  2. GIS showing an address not covered by a lease or occupancy document;
  3. BIR registration showing an old address;
  4. Business permit issued for a different premises;
  5. Absence of board approval for the transfer;
  6. Notices in contracts still directed to an old address;
  7. Multiple addresses used interchangeably without explanation; and
  8. Principal office located in a place different from the city or municipality stated in the Articles.

These inconsistencies can delay transactions and raise questions about corporate housekeeping.

XXV. Common Examples

Example 1: Articles State Only the City

The Articles provide: “The principal office of the corporation shall be located in Quezon City, Philippines.”

The corporation moves from Tomas Morato, Quezon City to Eastwood, Quezon City.

Because the principal office remains in Quezon City, the Articles remain accurate. The corporation generally updates the address through the GIS and related records. No Articles amendment is ordinarily required solely because of the move.

Example 2: Articles State a Full Address

The Articles provide: “The principal office of the corporation shall be located at 10th Floor, XYZ Building, Ortigas Center, Pasig City.”

The corporation moves to another building in Pasig City.

Although the corporation remains in Pasig City, the specific address in the Articles is no longer accurate. The corporation should consider amending the Articles, preferably revising the clause to state only “Pasig City, Philippines” to avoid future amendments for intra-city transfers.

Example 3: Transfer to Another City

The Articles provide: “The principal office of the corporation shall be located in Manila, Philippines.”

The corporation moves to Makati City.

The principal office clause is no longer accurate because the corporation is no longer located in Manila. An amendment of the Articles is generally required.

Example 4: Branch Office Transfer Only

The Articles provide that the principal office is in Cebu City. The principal office remains in Cebu City, but a branch in Mandaue City transfers to another address.

This is not a change in the principal office. An amendment of the Articles is generally not required on this basis alone. However, BIR, LGU, and business permit updates may be required for the branch.

XXVI. Best Practices for Corporations

A corporation changing address within the same LGU should observe the following best practices:

  1. Review the exact wording of the principal office clause in the Articles of Incorporation.
  2. Determine whether the Articles state only the city or municipality, or a full specific address.
  3. If the Articles state only the city or municipality and the move is within the same LGU, update the GIS and corporate records.
  4. If the Articles state a specific address, evaluate whether an Articles amendment is required.
  5. If amending, consider revising the clause to state only the city or municipality.
  6. Approve or note the address change through a board resolution.
  7. Update SEC records promptly.
  8. Align BIR registration, business permits, and local government records.
  9. Notify banks, landlords, suppliers, customers, regulators, and contractual counterparties as needed.
  10. Keep proof of the new address, such as lease contracts, utility bills, occupancy documents, or permits.
  11. Maintain consistency across all official documents.
  12. Keep copies of all filings, approvals, receipts, and certificates.

XXVII. Practical Checklist

For a same-LGU address change, the corporation may use the following checklist:

A. Initial Review

  • Obtain the latest Articles of Incorporation.
  • Check the principal office clause.
  • Obtain the latest GIS.
  • Identify the old and new addresses.
  • Confirm that the new address is within the same city or municipality.

B. Determine Filing Route

  • If Articles state only city or municipality: prepare GIS or address update.
  • If Articles state full address: prepare Articles amendment or seek confirmation from counsel.
  • If transfer is to another city or municipality: prepare Articles amendment.

C. Internal Corporate Records

  • Prepare board resolution.
  • Prepare secretary’s certificate if needed.
  • Authorize officers to file updates.
  • Update corporate records book.
  • Update official letterhead, invoices, website, and templates.

D. SEC Records

  • File annual or amended GIS as appropriate.
  • File amended Articles if required.
  • Pay applicable SEC fees.
  • Retain proof of submission and approval or acceptance.

E. Other Government Records

  • Update BIR registration.
  • Update books of account registration if affected.
  • Update invoices or receipts if required.
  • Update LGU business permits.
  • Update barangay clearance.
  • Update fire, sanitary, zoning, and occupancy-related permits if applicable.

F. External Parties

  • Notify banks.
  • Notify landlords.
  • Notify major customers and suppliers.
  • Notify lenders and investors.
  • Notify insurers.
  • Notify government contracting agencies if applicable.
  • Update contract notice addresses.

XXVIII. Legal Effect of the GIS Compared with Articles Amendment

The legal effect of a GIS update is notice and reporting. It tells the SEC the corporation’s current information. It supports corporate transparency and regulatory monitoring.

The legal effect of an Articles amendment is alteration of the corporate charter. It changes the corporation’s foundational document and, once properly approved and filed, becomes part of the corporation’s governing record.

A GIS can reflect a factual address change. An Articles amendment changes the legal text of the Articles. The two are related but not interchangeable.

XXIX. Consequences of Non-Compliance

Failure to properly update a corporate address may expose the corporation to practical and regulatory consequences, such as:

  1. Inaccurate SEC records;
  2. Missed notices;
  3. Penalties for late or incorrect filings;
  4. Problems renewing permits;
  5. Tax registration inconsistencies;
  6. Delays in bank or financing transactions;
  7. Due diligence exceptions;
  8. Questions from auditors;
  9. Contractual notice disputes; and
  10. Possible SEC compliance issues.

The severity depends on the corporation’s facts, the nature of the inconsistency, and whether the corporation failed to file required documents.

XXX. Conclusion

In the Philippine corporate setting, an address change within the same local government unit does not automatically require an amendment of the Articles of Incorporation. The decisive factor is the wording of the principal office clause in the Articles.

If the Articles state only the city or municipality and the corporation remains within that same city or municipality, the change is generally handled through the General Information Sheet and related record updates. If the Articles state a specific address, or if the corporation transfers to another city or municipality, an amendment of the Articles may be required.

The safest approach is to review the Articles first, determine whether the charter text remains accurate, then choose the proper filing route. A GIS update is appropriate for reporting current information, but it cannot substitute for a formal amendment where the Articles themselves must be changed.

For corporate housekeeping, corporations should keep the Articles, GIS, BIR records, local permits, bank records, contracts, and internal resolutions consistent. Address changes may appear routine, but they are legally significant because they affect notice, compliance, corporate identity, and the accuracy of public records.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.