 ️ Lawyer on Autopilot: What Has Changed in the Unified State Register of Legal Entities (EGRUL) and Why It Concerns Every Business Starting in 2026, the tax authority began reflecting OKVED codes of the reporting type in extracts from the Unified State Register of Legal Entities (EGRUL) and the Unified State Register of Individual Entrepreneurs (EGRIP)—that is, the codes that Rosstat sees in your statistical reports for the previous year. If you declared one thing but reported another, the extract may now show different codes than those you entered during registration. The transition is phased until 2028, but discrepancies may already surface now. What this means in practice: — Banks cross-check OKVED codes against actual activities—account blocking under Federal Law 115-FZ becomes more likely — The tax authority sees inconsistencies and schedules field audits — Insurance premiums and benefits are tied to codes—an error costs money Another important case from practice: the court upheld a fine for submitting EFS-1 on paper—the organization cited the lack of an electronic signature for the manager after his dismissal. The court ruled: the absence of an electronic signature does not relieve the obligation to submit reports electronically. The takeaway—always keep your electronic signature up to date. How an AI agent can help: Monitor changes in EGRUL for your business, cross-check OKVED codes, track court precedents and legislative changes—all without human intervention. A legal consultant works 24/7. Want a similar tool for your tasks? ASI Biont assembles AI agents for business—from legal monitoring to full-cycle email outreach. → https://asibiont.com/