Terminal

Incorporate a company from the terminal.

No portal, no form fields, no tab-switching: install the Corply plugin, type /incorporate, and answer questions in your own terminal while the agent prepares a venture-ready Delaware C-Corp — documents generated, cofounders e-signing from their own machines, filing human-reviewed.

Do it from Claude Code

Two commands to install, one command to run. Your browser opens exactly once, for Google sign-in.

then run /incorporate

Why founders are doing this in a terminal

The terminal isn't the point — the agent is. A web portal makes you translate your company into its form fields and come back to check on it. An agent in your terminal asks, explains the standard venture choices as you answer, generates the documents, chases every signature, and keeps the state queryable afterward. The command line just happens to be where technical founders already live, and where their agent already works.

Under the hood it's the Corply MCP server — so the same flow works from any MCP-capable agent, not only Claude Code. What the agent may and may not do is bounded by law, not vibes — the legal boundaries guide maps it precisely.

FAQ

Can I really incorporate a company from the command line?
Yes. The terminal is the interface; the formation is real. Corply's agent collects the application conversationally, generates the actual legal documents, gathers binding e-signatures from every cofounder, and routes the filing to a human who reviews and submits it to Delaware.
Is there a plain CLI, without Claude Code?
The packaged experience is a Claude Code plugin. But the backend is a standard MCP server at https://corply.dev/mcp, so any MCP-capable agent or client — including other agentic CLIs — can drive the same flow.
How do cofounders sign from a terminal?
Each cofounder reviews the actual PDFs in a browser via a magic link, then confirms the signature from their own Claude Code. The signature is captured under ESIGN/UETA with a full audit bundle — identity, consent, timestamps, and document hashes.
What can't happen from the terminal?
The legally binding acts stay with humans: your signatures, the 83(b) decision, payment approval, bank KYC, and the Delaware submission itself, which is always human-reviewed. See the guide on what AI agents can legally do for the full boundary map.