Do Not Sabotage Your Seed Round Before It Starts.
Download the 2026 Venture-Track Delaware C-Corp Certificate of Incorporation.
The Exact Legal Architecture Demanded by Institutional Investors.
Most founders make a fatal mistake on day one: they use a cheap, automated filing service that generates a "Lifestyle" corporate charter. It authorizes only a single class of stock and completely omits the protective clauses that modern venture capitalists require.
When you go to raise your first $1M Seed round, the VC’s lawyers will review your cheap charter, halt the deal, and force you to pay a law firm $5,000 to draft an "Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation" just to fix the errors.
Do it right the first time.
The Legal Attorney Venture-Track Certificate of Incorporation is engineered specifically for startups planning to scale and raise capital. It bypasses the amateur mistakes and immediately establishes the dual-class stock structure and fiduciary waivers required by top-tier syndicates.
Why This is the Exact Charter Venture Capitalists Demand:
"Blank Check" Preferred Stock: This document authorizes 10,000,000 shares of Common Stock for your team, but crucially, it also pre-authorizes 5,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock. This allows your Board to instantly issue Series Seed shares to investors later without filing a new charter.
The Corporate Opportunity Waiver (DGCL 122): Venture capitalists invest in multiple companies in the same industry. This charter includes the mandatory statutory waiver protecting your investors from being sued for breach of fiduciary duty if they pursue outside business opportunities. Without this clause, VCs will not fund you.
Dual-Forum Selection Architecture: Protects your startup from predatory lawsuits. It legally forces all internal corporate disputes into the Delaware Chancery Court, and restricts all Securities Act claims strictly to Federal District Courts, preventing plaintiffs from dragging you into unfavorable state courts.
Director & Officer Exculpation: Integrates the latest Delaware General Corporation Law updates to legally shield your founding team from personal financial ruin if sued for standard breaches of the duty of care.
What You Get Inside the Kit:
I. The Master Certificate of Incorporation (Word Document)
A fully editable, pristine legal charter ready for immediate filing with the Delaware Division of Corporations. Just fill in your company name and Registered Agent, and it is ready to upload.
II. The Founder’s Implementation Guide
We do not just hand you a legal document; we give you the operational playbook. This guide walks you through the exact steps to file the document with Delaware, avoid massive Franchise Tax traps, and secure your EIN.
Build Your Startup on a Bulletproof Foundation.
Today's Price: $99 | Save over 30% off the $145 retail price.
(One-time payment. Instant Download. Fully Editable.)
(getButton) #text=(Buy Now) #icon=(download) #size=(1) #color=(#EB5406)
[ Alternative Payment Link]
(getButton) #text=(Alternative Link) #icon=(download) #color=(#123456)
[ Secure Checkout | Instant Access ] Trusted by 5200+ Founders
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Why Delaware? Can I just incorporate in my home state?
You can, but venture capitalists will not fund you. Delaware corporate law is the undisputed gold standard for the US tech ecosystem. Investors require Delaware C-Corps because the laws are predictable, and the Delaware Chancery Court specializes exclusively in business disputes.
2. Will this document trigger a massive Franchise Tax bill?
No. This charter is specifically engineered using a low par value ($0.00001) for its authorized shares. When you file your annual taxes using the "Assumed Par Value Capital Method," your tax bill will remain at the absolute minimum for early-stage startups.
3. I already filed a basic LLC. Can I use this?
This specific document is for forming a brand new Delaware C-Corporation. If you currently have an LLC, you would need to undergo a formal "Statutory Conversion" process first.
4. Do I need a lawyer to file this?
No. The State of Delaware allows the "Incorporator" (you) to file this document directly via their online portal. Our Implementation Guide shows you exactly how to do it.