A registered agent is required for every LLC or corporation. Each state requires an agent with a physical address in the state where that business is registered.
The agent receives court, tax, and state papers during regular business hours. Choosing the wrong agent for your business can result in missing legal or state deadlines, leading to fees and loss of good standing with the state where you do business.
Using a commercial service as your registered agent protects privacy by listing that service’s address in public records instead of your home or business address. Many of these services scan and upload documents to an online account and send alerts when appropriate. MyCorporation offers nationwide registered agent service and can assist with LLC or corporation formations.
A registered agent is the official contact listed for an LLC or corporation who receives state and court documents.
Service of process is the delivery of lawsuit documents to a defendant. Some states use terms like resident or statutory agent, but the role remains the same: receiving official papers on behalf of the business.
All states require a registered agent with a physical address in the state and availability during business hours. A PO Box is not allowed, since delivery must be in person. You’ll want to keep your registered agent details up to date to avoid missed documents.
Each state sets its own requirements for registered agents.
Most states allow 2 choices for the role. You can name a registered agent that acts on behalf of your business, or you can hire a registered agent company approved to do the job. Some states also ask for agent consent on a filing or in the online form.
If you change your registered agent, the state expects an updated filing. The form name and fee for this process can change depending on the state, and the state record updates after the filing is accepted.
Operating in more than one state creates another filing step. When your company registers in a new state as a foreign entity (meaning the business is expanding beyond its original state of formation), the state requires a registered agent for that new registration.
You’ll want to pick a registered agent service with a good track record. Make sure they have an in-state street address, are available during business hours, and have a reliable way to get legal papers to you. Ask how they deliver legal documents and state notices. Before you pay, check their renewal rates, privacy protection, compliance reminders, and support for multiple states. Keep these points in mind when choosing a service.
Check that the registered agent service covers every state where your LLC or corporation is registered or plans to register. When you add a new state, the Secretary of State creates a new agent appointment record. If your business is a foreign entity, you’ll need a foreign qualification, which typically includes a certificate of authority.
Before you buy, check the order page or coverage map to see whether the service covers each state you need. A national registered agent service with an account dashboard, a list of your entities, and combined billing makes it easier to manage compliance in multiple states.
You’ll also want to ask how the registered agent service delivers legal documents and official mail to you. The best services scan your mail and upload copies to your secure portal within hours. You should get an email or text alert when new documents arrive.
Slow document delivery is risky because you will have limited time to respond to lawsuits. If your agent sends paper copies by regular mail, you could lose important additional days to handle any issues. Choose services that offer same-day delivery through online access and digital scanning.
If your business operates in more than one state or plans to expand, choose a provider that offers support in multiple states. A national registered agent service can manage all your locations with a single account and bill.
This is especially helpful for franchise owners, logistics companies, trucking businesses, and e-commerce sellers with warehouses in different states. Managing many local agents can be a hassle, but using one commercial registered agent with multi-state coverage makes things much easier.
Your registered agent needs to be available during business hours to accept important documents in person. And they need a team on site to deal with process servers who turn up with court papers at short notice. Ask them exactly where deliveries are sent and who signs for them because a signature is required to prove delivery. They should also keep a log of each delivery, including the date, time, and contact name.
It’s a good idea to ask about backup staff, coverage overlap, and how they handle accepting documents when someone is away. Get an emergency contact number for urgent situations, and before you sign up with a service, ask to see a sample intake checklist that shows how they handle requests, lawsuits, and other kinds of paperwork.
Make sure to check how long the registered agent service has been in business. A company with 10 or 20 years of experience is a good starting point. A company with that kind of track record will have seen it all and will know the ropes when it comes to state regulations, forms, and common issues.
Also, ask if they have experience with your type of business. Different types of businesses have slightly different requirements in different states, and you want a service that understands your business structure.
If you use your home or business address as your registered agent address, then it will be a matter of public record. That means anyone can find it in the state’s databases. For home-based business owners, this is particularly worrying as your personal information is now exposed to the public.
On the other hand, a reputable registered agent service will use its own business address on all your paperwork, keeping your home address private. This keeps you safe from prying eyes and gives your business a more professional image when banks, suppliers, or customers look you up.
Some registered agent services handle only mail, while others offer additional features such as annual report tracking, due date calendars, good-standing checks, and document storage.
Think about what you need beyond basic document handling. If you want reminders for annual reports and state filings, look for a full-service compliance partner. MyCorporation offers a registered agent service, LLC and corporation formation, and ongoing compliance filings to handle all of these specific areas.
Most commercial registered agent services charge annual fees of $75 to $300 per business per state. Providers that offer extra compliance tools may charge more.
Some companies include a free year of registered agent service when you buy an LLC or corporation formation package. After the first year, the service renews at the regular annual rate. Be sure to compare total costs over two or three years, not just the first year’s price.
Watch for hidden fees, such as charges for scans, mail forwarding, or changing agent addresses. Always request a full pricing breakdown to make sure you know what you’re getting charged for.
A few bad choices can block lawsuit papers and state mail from reaching you. That can end in a default judgment when you do not respond in time.
Home address use puts your address in public state records. A process server can deliver court papers at that address. Friends and relatives also create gaps when they move, travel, or miss mail, and the state record stays wrong.
Read the renewal terms before checkout, then save a copy of the price page. When you switch agents, file the state change form so notices go to the new address.
Once you list a registered agent service on state forms, it becomes your mail and lawsuit contact. When a lawsuit starts, the agent receives service of process. A process server delivers the summons and complaint, and the agent signs and records receipt.
The agent also receives state mail such as tax letters, annual report notices, and delinquency warnings. If you miss these notices, a state can charge late fees, add penalties, or dissolve the business on the record.
Many services scan and upload documents to an online account and send email alerts. The agent does not replace your lawyer or tax preparer, and it does not answer lawsuits for you. You still file reports, pay fees, and need to respond on time.
A professional registered agent service receives legal and state documents for your LLC or corporation, accepts service of process from a process server, and records receipt of documents.
When documents arrive, many services scan and upload them to an online account. They also send an email notice so you can see what came in. Some services add compliance alerts, deadline calendars, and document storage for state filings.
The agent address shows in the Secretary of State search databases, so a service address can protect a home address. When you register in another state through a foreign qualification, that state may require a certificate of authority. MyCorporation offers a registered agent service in all 50 states so you can keep the same service provider as you add states.
MyCorporation has helped customers form and maintain businesses since 1998, and we have supported over 1 million business formations. We offer LLC and corporation formation as well as registered agent services.
You pick a package that makes sense for your business, then MyCorporation prepares the state forms for your order. It submits the filing to the state and tracks the state response. You get the filed documents when the state finishes.
MyCorporation also offers registered agent services nationwide. It offers assistance with common business maintenance filings, such as annual reports. Our Learning Center includes an annual compliance checklist for owners.
Our support team can walk you through what forms you need and what steps come next to make sure you have exactly what you need. MyCorporation is a document filing service and does not provide legal or financial advice. If you need advice, talk to a licensed professional.
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