Operating status indicates whether a business is actually conducting operations, as distinct from its registration status in government records. A business can be "active" in Secretary of State filings while having ceased operations, or be actively operating while administratively dissolved.
Registration Status vs. Operating Status
What Does Each Status Actually Tell You?
Registration status
- What It Shows: Legal standing in state records
- Source: Secretary of State
Operating status
- What It Shows: Whether business is actually active
- Source: Activity signals
These often align, but not always:
Active
- Operating: Active
- Scenario: Normal operating business
Active
- Operating: Inactive
- Scenario: Registered but dormant or defunct
Dissolved
- Operating: Active
- Scenario: Operating despite administrative dissolution
Dissolved
- Operating: Inactive
- Scenario: Properly wound down
Why They Diverge
Active registration, inactive operations:
- Owner stopped operating but didn't dissolve
- Holding company with no active operations
- Business formed but never launched
- Seasonal business during off-season
Dissolved registration, active operations:
- Failed to file annual reports (administrative dissolution)
- Owner unaware of compliance requirements
- Operating under different entity name
- Recently dissolved, still winding down
How Do You Determine Operating Status?
Positive Indicators
Signals that a business is actually operating:
Transaction activity: Payment processing, banking activity
Web presence: Active website, recent social posts
Customer reviews: Recent reviews on Google, Yelp
Physical presence: Open operating location
Employment: Active employees, hiring activity
Licensing: Current professional/business licenses
Tax filings: Recent tax returns showing revenue
Negative Indicators
Signals that a business may not be operating:
No transaction activity: No payment processing for extended period
Dead web presence: Website down, abandoned social accounts
No recent reviews: Customer activity stopped
Closed location: Physical location shuttered
No employees: No payroll activity
Expired licenses: Required licenses not renewed
Phone disconnected: Primary business contact inactive
Ambiguous Cases
Some situations require judgment:
- New businesses may lack operating history
- Seasonal businesses have natural inactive periods
- Business model changes may shift visible signals
- Privacy-conscious businesses minimize footprint
Operating Status in KYB
Verification Value
Operating status verification adds critical context:
- Registration confirms legal existence
- Operating status confirms actual business activity
- Together they paint a complete picture
Risk Implications
Registered, not operating: May indicate shell company, dormant fraud vehicle
Operating, not registered: Compliance issue, may indicate avoidance
Recently stopped operating: Heightened risk, business may be failing
New, limited signals: Needs monitoring, track as it develops
Operating status affects verification decisions:
- Strong operating signals → higher confidence
- No operating signals → may need investigation
- Conflicting signals → likely needs manual review
Data Sources for Operating Status
Direct evidence of activity:
- Bank and payment processor data (transaction volumes)
- Tax authority data (revenue, payroll)
- Utility records (active service)
Observable Signals
Indirect but valuable indicators:
- Website and social media activity
- Google Business Profile (open/closed, reviews)
- Maps and location data
- Job postings
- Press coverage
Historical Patterns
Trends over time reveal status:
- Declining transaction volumes
- Website going offline
- Reviews stopping
- Location closing
Special Cases
Holding Companies
Legitimate holding companies may show:
- Active registration
- No direct operating signals
- Subsidiary companies that are operating
- Real but indirect economic activity
This isn't necessarily problematic; context matters.
Shell Companies
Shell companies often show:
- Active registration
- Minimal or no operating signals
- Only registered agent address
- No identifiable business activity
Operating status signals help identify potential shells.
Seasonal Businesses
Seasonal patterns require adjustment:
- Tax preparation (busy January-April)
- Landscaping (seasonal by region)
- Tourism (peak seasons vary)
- Retail (holiday concentration)
Apparent inactivity during off-season is normal.
New entities have limited operating history:
- Recent formation date
- Few or no transactions yet
- Building web presence
- Establishing operations
Risk assessment should account for business age.
Monitoring Operating Status
Ongoing Verification
Operating status changes over time:
- Businesses that were active may cease operations
- Previously dormant entities may become active
- Status should be periodically reassessed
Trigger-Based Review
Events that warrant status reassessment:
- Large transaction after period of inactivity
- Change in registration status
- Address change
- New ownership signals
- Customer complaints or disputes
Continuous Monitoring
Advanced approaches monitor signals continuously:
- Transaction velocity changes
- Web presence changes
- Review activity changes
- Trigger alerts when patterns shift
Key Takeaways
- Operating status and registration status are not the same thing; a registered business might not be operating
- Multiple signals indicate operating status: transactions, web presence, location, employees
- Shell company detection relies on operating status, because registration without operation is suspicious
- Context matters. Holding companies, seasonal businesses, and new entities require nuance.
- Operating status changes over time; ongoing monitoring detects shifts
- Better operating status data improves verification by reducing false positives and negatives
Related: Operating Location | Shell Company | Entity Verification | Ground Truth