Due Diligence on a Co-Founder Before You Split Equity
Handing a co-founder a large slice of equity and signing authority is one of the least reversible decisions you will make. Once vesting starts and their name is on the cap table, the bank accounts, and the operating agreement, unwinding a bad partner is expensive, slow, and sometimes impossible. Before you sign, it is worth knowing who this person actually is on paper: the companies they have started and quietly dissolved, the lawsuits and judgments they never mentioned, the liens or bankruptcies in their past, and whether they are even who they claim to be. This guide walks through exactly what lawful public-records research can surface about a prospective co-founder, what it cannot, and how to run the check the right way before equity is set.
The Short Version
Before you grant a co-founder major equity and signing authority, run lawful public-records due diligence on the person, not just a resume glance. The high-value items standard checks miss sit in the civil and business record: prior companies they founded and dissolved, defaults and dissolutions, civil lawsuits and money judgments, tax liens and UCC filings, bankruptcies, and confirmation that their identity, name, and history match what they told you. People Locator Skip Tracing performs this research using public records and permissible-purpose sources, then reports what the record shows without overstating it. Important boundary: this is general public-records research for your own business and investment decision. It is not a consumer report, we are not a consumer reporting agency, and it is not for FCRA-covered purposes such as employment, tenant, credit, or insurance decisions. It is also not investment, legal, or tax advice.
Watch: Vetting a Co-Founder
What the record reveals before you split the equity.
Watch Overview
Why the Equity Grant Is the Point of No Return
A co-founder is not a hire. It is a permanent, hard-to-reverse partnership.
Founders spend months modeling dilution and vesting schedules and almost no time on the one variable that can sink all of it: who the other person actually is. An employee who does not work out can be let go. A co-founder who holds twenty, thirty, or forty percent of the company, sits on the operating agreement, and has authority to sign contracts and move money is welded to the venture in a way no offer letter can undo. If they have a history of walking away from ventures the moment things get hard, a trail of partners who sued them, or a bankruptcy and a stack of judgments that will complicate every financing conversation you have, you want to know that before you set the cap table, not during a dispute two years in.
The uncomfortable reality is that the people best at pitching themselves as a partner are sometimes the ones with the most to hide. A confident story about “a startup that didn’t make it” can, in the record, turn out to be three dissolved entities, a default judgment from a former co-founder, and a name that does not match the one on their prior filings. None of that shows up in a coffee meeting or a warm introduction. It shows up in public records, and it is exactly the layer that a quick self-serve background lookup tends to skip. Running lawful due diligence here is not paranoia; it is the same standard of care a careful investor applies before wiring money, applied to the person you are about to make your equal.
What to Actually Check
The high-value findings live in the civil and business record, not the resume.
Prior Business Entities
Every company they registered, dissolved, or let lapse, across states. A pattern of quiet dissolutions tells a different story than one honest failure.
Civil Lawsuits and Judgments
Money judgments, breach-of-contract suits, and cases brought by former partners or investors, the disputes a co-founder is least likely to volunteer.
Liens and UCC Filings
Tax liens and Uniform Commercial Code filings that reveal secured debts and unpaid obligations following them from a prior venture.
Bankruptcies
Personal or business bankruptcy filings that can complicate future financing, banking relationships, and the perception of the founding team.
Identity and Aliases
Confirmation the person is who they say they are, with prior names, address history, and any aliases that could be masking a separate record.
Regulatory and Public Actions
Publicly documented regulatory actions or enforcement matters where a securities or business regulator has taken action worth knowing before a raise.
Notice what is on that list and what is not. The point is not to dig into a person’s private life; it is to verify the professional and financial history that directly affects the company you are both about to own. A prospective co-founder with a clean, consistent record has nothing to fear from it, and a founder who bristles at any verification at all is telling you something on its own. If you want the full menu of what a person-focused search can and cannot include, our overview of the different types of background research lays out how civil, business, and identity checks differ from one another.
Where a Cheap Lookup Falls Short
The findings that matter most are the ones self-serve tools quietly leave out.
The instinct is to type the name into a dollar-a-search website and call it due diligence. Those tools have their place for a phone number or a current address, but on the questions that decide whether you should split equity with someone, they are thin. Civil litigation, money judgments, tax liens, and UCC filings routinely sit outside what a consumer-grade product returns, because that data is scattered across county courts, state business registries, and specialized filing systems rather than one tidy database. A prior company that was formed in one state and dissolved in another may not surface at all. The result is a report that looks reassuringly clean precisely because it never looked in the places where the problems live.
That gap is the entire reason to bring in dedicated public-records research. Instead of one automated pull, our investigation team works the actual sources: state and county court indexes for suits and judgments, secretary-of-state business registries for the person’s entity history, recorder and assessor records for liens, and bankruptcy dockets, then cross-references the results against a confirmed identity so a common name does not get mixed up with a stranger’s file. If part of your concern is money the person may owe or be owed, that same discipline underpins a proper asset search; and where you need to understand a partner’s true financial footing, a lawful bank account search follows the permissible-purpose rules rather than shortcuts. The federal government keeps a useful map of official records resources at USA.gov, which underscores how many separate systems a thorough check has to touch.
How the Research Comes Together
Identity first, then the business and civil trail, then a plain-language report.
Confirm the Identity
Start by verifying the person is who they say they are: full legal name, prior names, address history, and any aliases. Everything else is only reliable once the identity is locked.
Map the Business History
Pull every entity tied to that identity across states, with formation, status, and dissolution dates, so a pattern of failed or abandoned ventures becomes visible.
Search the Civil Record
Work court indexes, judgment dockets, lien and UCC filings, and bankruptcy records for disputes, debts, and defaults the person did not disclose.
Report What the Record Shows
Deliver a clear written summary of the findings with sources, stated plainly and never overstated, so you can make your equity decision with the facts in front of you.
We tell you what the record contains and, just as importantly, what it does not. A clean result is a real finding, not a failure of the search. If a prospective co-founder also claims to run or own other businesses today, confirming that is its own step, and our guide on how to find out if someone owns a business shows what those registries reveal. For legitimate co-founder due diligence, an initial research pass typically comes back within 24 hours, with deeper civil and multi-state work following as the sources are pulled.
Red Flags Worth Pausing On
None is automatically disqualifying, but each is a reason to ask harder questions.
A Story That Doesn’t Match Filings
The timeline they describe does not line up with formation and dissolution dates on public record. Small gaps happen; a rewritten history does not.
Suits From Former Partners
A trail of litigation brought by past co-founders or investors is the single most relevant signal for how the next partnership may end.
Undisclosed Judgments or Liens
Open money judgments or tax liens they never mentioned raise questions about candor and about creditors who could follow them into the venture.
Serial Dissolutions
Several entities formed and quietly closed in quick succession can indicate a pattern of walking away rather than one honest, hard-fought failure.
Identity That Won’t Confirm
Trouble tying the person to a consistent name and history, or an alias that opens a separate record, warrants a full stop before any equity is granted.
Resistance to Any Verification
A partner comfortable with your money and your trust who refuses even basic, mutual due diligence is answering the question for you.
Self-Serve Lookup vs. Public-Records Research
Why the source you choose decides what you find.
| What You Need | Consumer Lookup Site | Public-Records Research |
|---|---|---|
| Current address or phone | Usually fine | Confirmed and cross-checked |
| Civil lawsuits and judgments | Often missing or partial | Worked at county and state court level |
| Prior entities across states | Rarely complete | Registries checked state by state |
| Liens, UCC filings, bankruptcy | Typically excluded | Pulled from the actual filing systems |
| Identity confirmed before matching | Name-only, easily confused | Identity locked first, then records tied to it |
| People Locator Skip TracingUs | Lawful, permissible-purpose public-records research that works the sources a cheap lookup skips, then reports what the record shows without overstating it. | |
The comparison is not about effort for its own sake. It is about whether the report you rely on to hand someone a permanent equity stake actually looked where the risk lives. If your due diligence extends to a business the co-founder claims to have built, the same rigor applies when you verify a business is legitimate rather than taking the pitch at face value.
Who Runs a Co-Founder Check
Anyone about to tie their name, capital, or reputation to a partner.
Solo Founders
Vetting a first co-founder
Startup Teams
Adding a late co-founder
Angel Investors
Backing a founding team
Small Partnerships
Bringing on an equal partner
Family Businesses
Formalizing an outside stake
Advisors
Guiding a client’s raise
Whatever the setting, the request is the same: confirm who the person is and what the record says about how they have handled money, partners, and prior ventures. Send us the person’s name and whatever identifiers you already have. Our investigation team works strictly for lawful, permissible purposes, ties the findings to a confirmed identity, and reports them plainly. If your due diligence needs to widen beyond one person to a fuller picture, our broader background investigation services and dedicated people search cover the ground a single lookup cannot.
Our Commitment
We do not sell certainty or a verdict on your partner. We do the lawful public-records research most self-serve tools skip: the civil suits, judgments, liens, prior entities, and identity confirmation that decide whether you know who you are about to make an equal. We report what the record shows and never overstate it. Honest, permissible-purpose skip tracing since 2004.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should due diligence on a co-founder actually cover?
Focus on the professional and financial record: prior business entities and their status, civil lawsuits and money judgments, tax liens and UCC filings, bankruptcies, regulatory actions, and confirmation of the person’s identity and any prior names or aliases. These are the items that most affect the company you are both about to own and the ones a resume or a quick lookup tends to miss.
Is this a background check or a consumer report?
Neither in the regulated sense. This is general public-records research for your own business and investment decision. People Locator Skip Tracing is not a consumer reporting agency, the research is not a consumer report, and it is not for FCRA-covered purposes such as employment, tenant, credit, or insurance decisions. It is information to help you decide about a partnership, not a screening product.
Why not just use a cheap online background site?
Those tools are fine for a phone number or a current address, but civil litigation, judgments, liens, UCC filings, and multi-state entity history often sit outside what they return, because that data is spread across county courts and state registries rather than one database. A report can look clean simply because it never searched where the problems are. Dedicated public-records research works those actual sources.
Should I do this before or after we agree on equity?
Before. The whole value of the check is that it informs the decision while you can still walk away or adjust terms. Once vesting starts and the co-founder holds a stake and signing authority, unwinding the arrangement is expensive and sometimes not possible. Verify first, then set the cap table.
What if the search comes back clean?
A clean result is a real, useful finding, not a wasted search. It means the person’s history is consistent with what they told you, which is exactly the confidence you want before granting equity. We report a clean record as clearly as we report a concerning one and never manufacture a problem that is not there.
Is running this on a prospective partner legal?
Yes, when it is lawful public-records research for a permissible purpose such as your own business or investment decision. We work public records and permissible-purpose sources only, and we do not use it for FCRA-covered decisions. If you intend to use screening for employment or a similar covered purpose, that requires a consumer reporting agency and a different process, which this is not.
What do you need from me to start?
The prospective co-founder’s full name and whatever identifiers you already have, such as approximate age, prior locations, email, phone, or the names of businesses they mention. More detail helps us confirm identity and avoid confusing your partner with a stranger who shares a common name, but we can begin with a name and location.
How long does a co-founder check take?
For a legitimate matter, an initial research pass typically comes back within 24 hours, covering identity and the readily available record. Deeper civil work, multi-state entity history, and lien or bankruptcy pulls follow as those sources are gathered. We keep you updated rather than making you wait for everything at once.
Related Guides
More ways our investigation team can help.
- Vet a Franchisor Before You Buy the Franchise
- Due Diligence on a Dealership Owner Before Buying In
- Due Diligence on a Real Estate Syndicator Before Investing
- Due Diligence on a Vendor Before a Big Contract
- Verify a Partner's Claimed Net Worth & Assets
- Due Diligence on a Borrower Before a Private Loan
- Verify a Business Seller's Claims Before You Buy
Know Who You’re Partnering With Before You Sign.
We run lawful public-records research on a prospective co-founder, the suits, judgments, liens, prior entities, and identity a quick lookup skips, and report what the record shows. Contact us to get started.
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