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A ULC is a creature of just three provinces — British Columbia, Alberta and Nova Scotia — and its defining trait is the opposite of a normal corporation: shareholders can be liable for its obligations. ULCs exist almost entirely inside US–Canada tax structures. Order the official provincial record for any ULC: name, number, status and registered office, in minutes.
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On the register a ULC looks like any other company — name, number, status, registered office — but the suffix changes what it means for counterparties: the shareholder (typically a US parent) does not enjoy the usual liability shield. That makes identifying the ULC's jurisdiction and its exact registered name genuinely important before papering a deal.
Because ULCs are almost always subsidiaries, a full check often pairs the ULC's record with a lookup of its parent — both are ordinary register orders here.
The official record from the ULC's province of incorporation: legal name, corporation number, incorporation date, status and registered office, with directors where the registry publishes them. Emailed in minutes, from €9.99, no subscription.
Because US tax law can treat a ULC as a flow-through entity while Canada treats it as a corporation — a mismatch that cross-border groups use deliberately. If you meet a ULC outside such a structure, that alone is worth a closer look.
Only BC, Alberta and Nova Scotia have ULC statutes, so the record lives in one of those three provincial registries. The suffix "ULC" or "Unlimited Liability Company" in the legal name identifies the form.
Confirmation that the ULC exists under its exact name, its registration number, current status and registered office — the official provincial record, delivered as structured data plus a branded PDF by email.
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