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For litigators and paralegals
When a matter turns on who is connected to whom, the Florida business filings hold the answer. sneyk surfaces the common officers and shared addresses across entities, with every link traced to the filing it came from, ready for the record.
No card. Upgrade for full exports and history.
sneyk surfaces common-control and shared-address relationships across public Florida business filings: which entities share officers or registered agents, how their status and history line up, each datapoint linked to its source filing. It is built for litigation research and due diligence on open corporate records.
You suspect two entities are run by the same people, or that an address ties a defendant to companies they claim no part of. The Florida filings can show it. But a connection is only useful in a matter if you can point to where it came from, and a screenshot with no provenance is not evidence.
sneyk surfaces the common officers, shared agents, and shared addresses across entities, and every one links back to the filing it came from. You get the connection and the citation in the same place.

Enter a name, entity, or address and see the Florida filings connected to it.
Common officers, shared registered agents, and shared addresses across the entities involved.
Pull the connections as a record, each link sourced to its filing, for the matter.

Two companies, one set of officers. sneyk surfaces the overlap across the filings, with the source for each, so the common-control argument rests on the record.

A defendant who denies any link to a company registered at their address. The filing says otherwise, and sneyk puts it in front of you with the citation.

Formation, status changes, dissolutions, in order, so the history of an entity is laid out the way a brief needs it.
| Finding | Source |
|---|---|
| Same officer on both entities | 2 filings, dated |
| Shared registered agent | 3 filings |
| Shared principal address | filing, 2022 |
| Entity dissolved | admin., 2024 filing |
| Every row | links to its filing |
Entities that share officers or registered agents, surfaced across the filings.
Parties and companies tied by a common address, drawn from the public record.
Formation, amendments, and dissolution in order, the timeline a matter often needs.
Export the findings as a record, each link sourced to its filing, not a bare screenshot.
No surprises after you sign up. Here is what sneyk does not do.
No card. Search a party and see the links.
Founder pricing, locked for the first 100 subscribers.
Florida Department of State business filings (sunbiz.org). Every connection links back to its source filing.
Every connection links to its source filing, so you can pull and authenticate the underlying record. sneyk is a research tool, not a substitute for the certified filing itself.
No. Officer names, business addresses, agents, and status, all public record.
Nothing. The free tier needs no card. Upgrade to Pro for full exports and entity history.
Start free, search a party, and surface the common-control links across the filings. Go Pro for full exports and entity history.
No card. Upgrade for full exports and history.
Public Florida business records, sourced from the Florida Department of State, Division of Corporations. Not a consumer report, and not for FCRA-covered eligibility decisions.