FileForms obtains your Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificate directly from the Department of State — so you can close transactions, open accounts, satisfy lenders, and meet counterparty requirements without navigating state portals under deadline pressure.
Quick answer: A Pennsylvania Certificate of Good Standing — officially a Subsistence Certificate — is issued by the Pennsylvania Department of State and proves your entity is subsisting, has filed the documents required to maintain its registration, and is authorized to do business. You need one for banking, financing, real estate closings, foreign qualification, and M&A.
Cost: $40 (online or by mail); in-person expedited runs $100 (same day) to $1,000 (one hour). FileForms’ $149 service fee covers verifying your standing, resolving anything that would block issuance, obtaining the certificate, and managing requests across entities. Key catch: your entity must be subsisting — and Pennsylvania’s new annual report (Act 122) keeps it that way.
The Problem
Banks, lenders, investors, and counterparties often require a current Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificate before a transaction can proceed — and an entity that isn’t subsisting can stall closings, financing, and critical business decisions.
They surface at the worst possible time — right before a real estate closing, loan funding, or M&A transaction. Navigating the Department of State’s system under deadline pressure creates unnecessary risk and stress.
Under Act 122, Pennsylvania replaced its decennial report with a yearly annual report starting in 2025 — a change many owners still don’t know about. Beginning with 2027 reports, non-filers face administrative dissolution and loss of subsistence.
If your entity has been dissolved or terminated — or isn’t properly registered with a valid registered office — Pennsylvania won’t issue a Subsistence Certificate. You often won’t find out until you request it.
PE firms, law firms, and corporate service providers often need certificates for dozens of Pennsylvania entities at once. Without a centralized system, tracking standing and pulling certificates manually is unsustainable.
The FileForms Solution
One platform. All 50 states. Pennsylvania certificate procurement plus proactive compliance management — so you’re never caught off guard.
FileForms obtains your Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificate from the Department of State — and certificates from every other state — with state-specific workflows and fee schedules built in. One request, one dashboard.
Pennsylvania online certificate requests are typically delivered by email within about two hours. FileForms handles urgent closing deadlines and counterparty requests without you touching a state portal.
FileForms monitors Pennsylvania’s new Act 122 annual report deadline for your entity type — so a missed filing never quietly puts your subsistence at risk once enforcement begins.
If your entity has been dissolved or has a registered-office problem, FileForms resolves it and coordinates reinstatement — then obtains the certificate.
Manage certificate requests for dozens or hundreds of Pennsylvania entities from a single dashboard, with real-time status on every request.
CPAs, law firms, and corporate service providers can offer certificate procurement under their own brand through FileFormsPRO — with bulk workflows and wholesale pricing.
Pennsylvania Details
Positioned between New York and Washington, D.C., Pennsylvania has a large base of registered entities, so banks, lenders, and other states frequently ask for a current Pennsylvania certificate. In Pennsylvania, the document is officially titled a Subsistence Certificate, issued by the Department of State’s Bureau of Corporations and Charitable Organizations — banks and other states still call it a “certificate of good standing.” Online requests are usually emailed within about two hours.
| Issuing agency | Pennsylvania Department of State, Bureau of Corporations & Charitable Organizations |
|---|---|
| Official name in Pennsylvania | Subsistence Certificate (a.k.a. Certificate of Subsistence / Good Standing) |
| Pennsylvania state fee | $40 (online or mail) · in-person expedited $100 same-day / $300 3-hour / $1,000 1-hour |
| FileForms service fee | $149 flat |
| Typical timeline | Online requests emailed within about two hours |
| Common blocker | Entity not subsisting; new Act 122 annual report (dissolution enforcement begins with 2027 reports) |
Pennsylvania’s biggest recent change: under Act 122, the state replaced its old decennial report with a yearly annual report starting in 2025. Corporations file by June 30, LLCs by September 30, and LPs, LLPs, and other entities by December 31 — a $7 fee ($0 for nonprofits). A transition grace period means no dissolution penalties apply to 2025 or 2026 reports; full enforcement begins with 2027 reports, when non-filers can face administrative dissolution and lose subsistence. FileForms checks your status, files any past-due report, and obtains the certificate. Need to get current first? Start with Pennsylvania annual report filing.
Common Use Cases
A Subsistence Certificate is required in more situations than most business owners realize.
Banking — Required by most banks and credit unions when opening a Pennsylvania business bank account or applying for a line of credit.
Real Estate — Required at closing for Pennsylvania entities buying, selling, or financing property, especially when title companies or lenders are involved.
M&A & Financing — Requested by investors, acquirers, and lenders in due diligence before closing a transaction or funding round.
Foreign Qualification — Other states require a current Pennsylvania certificate when you register to do business there.
How It Works
FileForms makes certificate procurement fast and straightforward — whether you need one certificate or dozens.
Choose the Pennsylvania entity that needs a Subsistence Certificate. FileForms shows the fee and timeline upfront — no surprises.
Before submitting, FileForms verifies your Pennsylvania registration and annual report status and flags anything that would block issuance.
FileForms submits the request to the Department of State and tracks it in real time. No state logins, no manual forms.
Your Subsistence Certificate is delivered digitally the moment it’s issued — ready to download, share, or forward to your counterparty.
Who It’s Built For
Whether you need one Pennsylvania certificate or hundreds, FileForms gets it done without the delays.
Need a certificate for a bank account, loan, or contract? FileForms obtains it fast — without navigating the Department of State’s system under deadline pressure.
Pennsylvania closings involving entity buyers or sellers frequently require a current Subsistence Certificate. FileForms obtains them quickly to prevent last-minute delays.
Offer certificate procurement as part of your compliance services. FileFormsPRO adds bulk workflows and centralized management for all client entities.
Handle client certificate requests for closings and financings without the manual overhead. Certificates land directly in your dashboard.
Portfolio companies need certificates for transactions, financing, and diligence. FileForms manages bulk requests across entire portfolios.
Registered agents and compliance platforms use FileForms to manage certificate requests at scale — with API access and white-label through FileFormsPRO.
What Professionals Are Saying
“FileForms has proven to be a game-changer for managing federal and state compliance filings. The platform not only streamlines complex reporting processes but also creates new opportunities for accountants to expand their service offerings and generate additional revenue.”
— Tax Rep Network, Trusted Network of CPAs & Accountants
Common Questions
Everything businesses and professionals ask us about the Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificate.
A Pennsylvania Certificate of Good Standing — officially a Subsistence Certificate — is issued by the Pennsylvania Department of State, Bureau of Corporations and Charitable Organizations. It confirms your entity is subsisting (validly in existence), has filed the documents required to maintain its registration, and is authorized to do business. It’s commonly required for banking, financing, real estate closings, foreign qualification, and M&A due diligence.
The Pennsylvania Department of State charges $40 for a Subsistence Certificate, online or by mail. In-person expedited service is available for an additional $100 (same day), $300 (three hours), or $1,000 (one hour). FileForms charges a $149 flat service fee to verify your standing, resolve anything that would block issuance, obtain and deliver the certificate, and manage requests across multiple entities.
Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificates ordered online through the Department of State are typically processed and delivered by email within about two hours. FileForms verifies your standing, submits the request, and delivers the certificate to your dashboard as soon as it’s issued.
Yes. Under Act 122, Pennsylvania replaced its old decennial report with an annual report beginning in 2025. Corporations file by June 30, LLCs by September 30, and LPs, LLPs, and other entities by December 31, for a $7 fee ($0 for nonprofits). A transition grace period means no dissolution penalties apply to 2025 or 2026 reports; full enforcement begins with 2027 reports. FileForms tracks this deadline for you.
Pennsylvania won’t issue one if your entity is not subsisting — for example, if it has been dissolved, terminated, or isn’t properly registered with a valid registered office. Once annual-report enforcement begins with 2027 reports, unfiled annual reports can also lead to administrative dissolution and loss of subsistence. FileForms resolves the issue first, then obtains the certificate.
Yes. FileForms obtains Certificates of Good Standing from all 50 states with state-specific workflows built into the platform — Pennsylvania, Delaware, Florida, or anywhere else.
Yes. FileForms handles requests for portfolios of any size — from single entities to hundreds. CPAs, law firms, PE firms, and corporate service providers manage certificate requests alongside their full compliance portfolios from one dashboard.
A Pennsylvania annual report is a yearly Act 122 filing that keeps your entity’s information current and its registration active. A Subsistence Certificate is a document you request that proves your entity is currently subsisting and in good standing. Filing your annual report on time is what keeps you eligible to receive a certificate when you need one.
A Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificate does not carry a formal expiration date, but banks, lenders, investors, title companies, and other states typically require one issued within the last 30 to 90 days. FileForms can obtain a fresh certificate whenever a counterparty requires a current one.
FileForms obtains your Pennsylvania Subsistence Certificate from the Department of State — quickly, accurately, and tracked alongside your full compliance portfolio. Get started today or schedule a free demo.
More Pennsylvania compliance: Pennsylvania registered agent · Pennsylvania annual report
FileForms is a compliance technology company, not a law firm, and this page is general information, not legal advice. State fees and processing times are set by the Pennsylvania Department of State and may change.