Closing a California LLC the right way takes a member vote, Articles of Dissolution filed with the California Secretary of State, and a clean wind-down of debts and tax filings. Here is what the process looks like and what happens if you skip the steps.
The instinct, when an LLC is no longer being used, is to ignore it. Stop filing the annual report. Stop paying the agent for service of process. Wait for the state to dissolve it administratively. That works, eventually — but it costs more than doing it on purpose. California can keep billing for missed annual reports, late fees compound, your liability shield erodes during the lapse period, and the LLC stays on your credit and tax record longer than it should.
A formal dissolution closes the LLC cleanly: the state record shows "dissolved" rather than "administratively dissolved," your tax obligations end on a known date, and the agent for service of process service stops without surprise renewal charges. The filing itself is usually a short form and a small fee with the California Secretary of State.
California imposes an $800 minimum annual franchise tax on every LLC, payable to the Franchise Tax Board regardless of income. It is owed every year the LLC exists, even in a loss year, and is separate from the Secretary of State filing fees. LLCs with gross receipts above $250,000 owe an additional gross-receipts fee on top of the $800 minimum.
Most operating agreements specify how dissolution is approved — typically a majority or unanimous vote of members. Document the decision with a written consent or meeting minutes. Single-member LLCs document the owner's decision in writing for the record. California courts and the IRS will look at this paperwork later.
Stop taking new business. Notify customers, vendors, and contract counterparties. Settle outstanding debts and collect outstanding receivables. Sell or distribute remaining business assets according to the operating agreement and California statute (creditors first, then members in proportion to their interest).
File a final federal tax return for the LLC — Form 1065 with the "final return" box checked for multi-member LLCs, or include the closure on the owner's Schedule C for single-member LLCs. Cancel the EIN by mailing a brief letter to the IRS once final returns are filed (the EIN is never reassigned, but closure is documented).
Tax notes for California: IMPORTANT: $800 annual franchise tax required by Franchise Tax Board (separate from SOS fees). LLCs with income over $250K pay additional fee ($900-$11,790 based on income). 24-hour expedite $350; same-day $750. First-year exemption (AB 85) expired after 2023. Some states require a tax clearance certificate or a "consent to dissolve" from the state tax agency before the California Secretary of State will accept the dissolution filing.
California's dissolution form is typically called Articles of Dissolution, Statement of Dissolution, or Certificate of Cancellation. Submit through the California Secretary of State portal at sos.ca.gov. You list the LLC's name, California file number, effective date of dissolution, and the reason. Verify with the California Secretary of State for the current state filing fee.
Close the business bank account once final disbursements clear. Cancel California business licenses, sales tax permits, and any local registrations. Notify the agent for service of process that the LLC is dissolved so renewal notices stop. Keep records (formation docs, dissolution docs, final tax returns) for at least seven years for IRS and California purposes.
California law generally provides a winding-up period after dissolution during which the LLC continues to exist for the limited purpose of paying debts, defending lawsuits, and distributing remaining assets. Creditors typically have a statutory window to bring claims against a dissolved LLC — often two to three years after the dissolution date.
If a member receives a distribution from the LLC at dissolution and a creditor later proves the LLC owed money at that time, the member can be required to return the distribution up to the amount of the debt. This is one reason to settle known liabilities before distributing remaining assets — not after.
If California already administratively dissolved your LLC for missed annual reports, you have two paths: reinstate it (pay the back fees and reports, then file a clean dissolution) or leave it dissolved. Reinstating-then-dissolving leaves a cleaner public record and is the path we recommend for any LLC that held assets, took on debt, or had outside counterparties. Verify with the California Secretary of State for current reinstatement fees and the deadline to reinstate before dissolution becomes permanent.
If you formed a California LLC with us and now need to close it, we can prepare the Articles of Dissolution and file them with the California Secretary of State as a separate paid service. Our role is administrative — we are a filing service, not tax or legal advisors. For the tax and creditor side, work with your accountant or a California attorney.
Reservation takes three minutes. A formation specialist in Sacramento handles the rest.