Yes — and the law leaves no room for debate. But the real question isn't whether you need one. It's whether you should be your own — or use a professional service. Spoiler: the answer is almost always the professional service. Here's everything you need to know.
Before deciding whether to be your own or hire a service, you need to understand exactly what a Registered Agent is — and what they're legally responsible for.
A Registered Agent is a designated individual or company that a business formally appoints to receive legal documents, government correspondence, and official notices on behalf of the LLC. Every state requires every LLC to maintain a Registered Agent with a physical street address (not a PO Box) in the state of formation. The Registered Agent must be available to receive documents during normal business hours, usually from Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm — at that address.
The role sounds simple — but the documents a Registered Agent handles are among the most important your business will ever receive. Missing any of them can be catastrophic:
If your LLC is sued, the lawsuit papers (summons and complaint) are delivered to your Registered Agent. You have a strict legal deadline — usually 20–30 days — to respond. If you miss it because the documents went to an address you weren't monitoring, the court may enter a default judgment against you automatically.
Annual report notices, state fee invoices, compliance warnings, and other official correspondence from the Secretary of State are typically sent to your Registered Agent or registered office. Missing these notices can lead to late fees, penalties, loss of good standing, and—in some cases—administrative dissolution of your LLC.
In some cases, the IRS and other federal agencies send correspondence to the registered address on file for the business. Tax compliance notices, audit initiation letters, and penalty notices may arrive here.
Most states require LLCs to file an annual (or biennial) report and pay a filing fee to remain in good standing. Your Registered Agent typically receives the reminder notices that trigger this obligation.
In some cases, subpoenas and other legal requests for records may be served on your Registered Agent, depending on state law and court rules. Failing to respond to a valid subpoena can result in court sanctions, including contempt or adverse legal inferences.
A Registered Agent isn't administrative paperwork. It's the legal lifeline between your LLC and the court system, the IRS, and your state government. Some of the document they receive may carry a strict deadline — and every missed deadline carries a consequence.
Yes — without exception. Every single US state mandates that every LLC maintain a Registered Agent with a physical address in the state of formation. This is not optional, not advisable, not best practice — it is the law.
Failing to maintain a Registered Agent does not just incur penalties — in most states, the Secretary of State can administratively dissolve your LLC. An administratively dissolved LLC loses its legal existence, its liability protection, and its right to conduct business in that state. Every bank account, contract, and business relationship built under that LLC is at risk.
If an LLC fails to maintain a valid Registered Agent—because none was designated, the agent resigned, or the agent’s address is invalid—the state may flag the company as noncompliant. The Secretary of State typically issues a notice of deficiency or compliance warning to the business’s address on file, instructing it to appoint or correct its Registered Agent within a specified timeframe.
Most states provide a limited time period to correct a missing or invalid Registered Agent after issuing a compliance notice. If the LLC fails to respond, it may be administratively dissolved. In some cases, notices may not be received if the company’s registered contact information is outdated, which increases the risk of missing the correction deadline.
If a Registered Agent deficiency is not corrected, states may impose late fees, loss of good standing, and reinstatement penalties. Fees vary significantly by state and filing type, typically ranging from tens to several hundred dollars, with additional costs required to reinstate the LLC after administrative dissolution.
After the grace period expires, the state administratively dissolves your LLC. It still appears in public records — but as "dissolved" or "inactive."
Reinstating a dissolved LLC requires paying all back fees, penalties, and filing reinstatement documents with the state. In some states, reinstatement isn't available after a certain period — and you'd need to form a brand new LLC.
As a non-resident US LLC owner, you are almost certainly not physically present in the state where your LLC is formed. Wyoming, Delaware, and Florida are the most popular formation states — but you likely live in India, Nepal, the Philippines, the UK, or elsewhere. Without a professional Registered Agent maintaining a physical presence in your formation state, your LLC may not have a valid legal address in the US.
Technically, if you meet the legal requirements, you can be your own Registered Agent. The question is whether you should. Here's an honest side-by-side of what each path actually looks like in practice.
Technically allowed — practically problematic
The smart choice for serious business owners
"The cost of a professional Registered Agent service is typically $99–$149 per year. The cost of missing a lawsuit summons because you missed a legal notice or deadline is potentially significant. This is the easiest cost-benefit calculation in business."
— Bizfyle Formation TeamYou don't have to search for a Registered Agent separately. Bizfyle includes professional, compliant Registered Agent service in every US LLC formation package — covering Wyoming, Delaware, Florida, and all major formation states. Your address stays private. Your LLC stays compliant. You stay focused on your business.
Not all Registered Agent services are equal. Here's exactly what to evaluate before you choose one — and why Bizfyle's service ticks every box.
Must be a genuine street address — not a PO Box, virtual mailbox, or forwarding service. The street address must be capable of accepting in-person service of process during business hours.
The address must be staffed and capable of accepting hand-delivered legal documents during normal business hours, every business day. Ask how their office handles unexpected delivery of process servers.
Every received document should be scanned and emailed to you the same or next day it arrives. Delays in notification = missed legal deadlines. Confirm their exact turnaround time for document notification.
All received documents should be accessible via a secure, login-protected online account — not just emailed to you. You want a permanent record of everything received.
If the RA service is a business entity (not an individual), they must be authorised to conduct business in your formation state. Verify their status with the Secretary of State before signing up.
The service should proactively remind you of annual report deadlines, state fee due dates, and other compliance obligations — ideally in advance to give you time to file without rushing.
If you plan to expand to multiple states, choose a service that can provide RA coverage across multiple states seamlessly — rather than requiring you to manage separate RA relationships in each state.
Some services offer physical mail forwarding in addition to digital scanning — useful for receiving non-legal correspondence at your US address.
If the RA service is bundled with your LLC formation (as Bizfyle provides), the registered address is set up correctly from day one — eliminating the need to separately arrange and coordinate RA details during formation.
Some RA services use a single address with thousands of clients listed as Suite 1, Suite 2, etc. While legal, a more distinctive address looks better on public records and may carry more credibility in some contexts.
You want to be able to contact your RA service quickly — especially if you've received a document with an urgent deadline. Check their response time promises and read recent customer reviews.
Watch for these warning signs when evaluating a Registered Agent service. Using an inadequate RA service can create the same risks as having no RA at all.
If the "registered address" is a PO Box (e.g., "PO Box 1234") or a clearly virtual service, it may not be legally valid in your formation state. Process servers cannot serve legal documents to a PO Box.
If the service can't confirm they're staffed during all normal business hours, they cannot reliably accept hand-delivered legal documents. This defeats the entire purpose of having a Registered Agent.
If a service takes more than 24 hours to notify you of received documents, you could miss legal response deadlines. Same-day or next-business-day notification is the minimum acceptable standard.
The most dangerous red flag. If a business RA service is not registered to do business in your formation state, the RA designation may be void — meaning your LLC technically has no valid registered agent.
If all documents are just emailed without a secure archive, you'll lose access to documents if you change your email or the email is accidentally deleted. A permanent online portal is essential.
We include Registered Agent service as part of every LLC formation package. You don't pay separately — it's bundled in. When your first year expires, annual renewal is affordable and handled through the same team that formed your LLC. No need to juggle separate vendors.
Bizfyle includes Registered Agent service in every LLC formation package. Privacy, compliance, and peace of mind — all from day one. Works for non-residents in 60+ countries.
Every important question about Registered Agents for US LLC owners — answered completely.
Technically yes — if you are a resident of the state where your LLC is formed, have a physical street address (not a PO Box) in that state, and are personally available at that address during all business hours every weekday. However, for non-resident founders, this is almost always impossible — you must be a resident of the formation state to serve as your own RA. And even for US residents, being your own RA creates significant risks: your personal address becomes public record, you must be during normal business hours, every business day, The overwhelming majority of LLC owners — resident or not — are better served by a professional RA service that costs $99–$149/year.
Yes — categorically. If you live outside the United States and own a Wyoming, Delaware, Florida, or any other US state LLC, you are legally ineligible to be your own Registered Agent. Every state requires the RA to be either a state resident (with a physical address in that state) or a company authorised to do business in that state. A non-resident cannot meet either requirement. There is no workaround. A professional Registered Agent service is a mandatory expense for every non-resident LLC owner — it is not optional. Bizfyle includes this service in every LLC formation package specifically because of this requirement.
Service of process delivered to your Registered Agent starts a legal response deadline, which typically ranges from about 20–30 days depending on the court and jurisdiction. If no response is filed within the required timeframe, the court may enter a default judgment against the LLC based on the plaintiff’s claim, which can result in financial liability including damages, interest, and court costs.
While default judgments can sometimes be challenged or set aside under specific legal grounds, doing so is often procedurally difficult and time-sensitive. If a Registered Agent fails to properly receive or forward legal documents, the business owner may remain unaware of the lawsuit until a judgment has already been entered. A reliable Registered Agent system helps ensure that legal notices are promptly forwarded to the business owner so deadlines are not missed.
This is a genuinely complex area that varies by state and by the specific service used. Most states explicitly prohibit PO Boxes as registered agent addresses. Virtual mailboxes (e.g., Anytime Mailbox, PostScan Mail) are more ambiguous — some states accept them, others consider them equivalent to PO Boxes and reject them. The core issue is whether the address is capable of receiving in-person hand delivery of legal documents (service of process) during business hours. A virtual mailbox typically has a staff member to accept mail — which may satisfy this requirement. However, the safer and definitively compliant solution is a professional Registered Agent service whose address is explicitly authorised for this purpose. Bizfyle does not recommend virtual mailboxes as registered agent addresses due to the legal uncertainty.
Professional Registered Agent services typically cost between $99 and $149 per year for a single state. Bizfyle includes Registered Agent service as part of every LLC formation package — you don't pay an additional line item for it during the formation year. Annual renewal is handled through Bizfyle at competitive rates. To put this in perspective: the cost of a Registered Agent service is less than a single hour of attorney time. The protection it provides — against missed lawsuits, administrative dissolution, privacy breaches, and compliance failures — is worth orders of magnitude more than its cost.
Yes — changing your Registered Agent is straightforward in every state. The process typically involves filing a "Statement of Change of Registered Agent" or similar document with the Secretary of State, along with a small filing fee ($5–$50 depending on the state). The new RA information becomes effective when the state processes the filing (usually 1–5 business days). Important: during the period between filing the change and it being processed, your old RA address remains the legal registered address. Ensure there is no gap in coverage — have your new RA service confirmed and ready before filing the change. Bizfyle handles RA changes for clients and ensures seamless transitions with no coverage gaps.
Yes — your Registered Agent must have a physical address in the same state where your LLC is formed (or registered as a foreign LLC). If your LLC is formed in Wyoming, your RA must have a Wyoming address. If it's formed in Delaware, your RA must have a Delaware address. This is why non-residents cannot simply use their home address — they are not residents of Wyoming or Delaware. Professional Registered Agent services maintain offices in every US state, allowing them to serve as RA for LLCs formed anywhere in the country. If you operate in multiple states, you'll need a RA in each state where you're registered — which is another reason professional RA services (which typically offer multi-state coverage) are far more practical than self-service.
These terms are related but distinct. A Registered Agent is the person or company designated to receive legal documents and government correspondence on behalf of your LLC. A Registered Office is the physical street address of that agent within the formation state. Your Registered Agent designates a Registered Office. When you appoint a professional RA service, both the Agent and the Office are provided — the service serves as the agent and their physical office address becomes your registered office. You list both on your Articles of Organization / Certificate of Formation when forming your LLC. Some states use additional terms like "Statutory Agent" (Arizona, Ohio) or "Resident Agent" (Maryland, Nevada) — all refer to the same legal concept.
Yes — if your attorney or accountant has a physical office in the state where your LLC is formed, they can serve as your Registered Agent. Many attorneys and CPAs do offer this as an added service for their clients. However, there are practical considerations: attorneys and CPAs may charge significantly more than a dedicated RA service. They may not have systems specifically designed for same-day document notification. And if they move offices, retire, or change firms, you could inadvertently lose your RA coverage without realising it. A dedicated professional RA service has institutional processes specifically designed for this function — notification systems, document portals, address stability, and multi-state coverage — that most law firms and accounting offices simply don't provide as core competencies.
Almost certainly yes — especially if that person is not a resident of your formation state, does not maintain a consistent physical address there, or is not reliably available during all business hours. Using a friend or family member as an informal RA creates several problems: their home address is now publicly listed as your LLC's registered address; if they move without filing an RA change, your LLC is technically non-compliant; if they're unavailable when a lawsuit arrives, you could miss a legal deadline; and they may not know the proper procedures for handling received documents. Switching to a professional RA service is a simple process that takes a few days and eliminates these risks permanently. The change can be made anytime — Bizfyle can handle the transition even if we didn't form your original LLC.
Don't leave your LLC's compliance to chance, a home address, or a favour from a friend. Bizfyle's professional Registered Agent service keeps your LLC in good standing, your address private, and your legal obligations covered — from anywhere in the world.