Ten questions we get most often about forming an LLC in North Carolina — with straight answers, not hedged ones.
5–10 business days for standard online processing through the North Carolina Secretary of State. Once the LLC is approved, we obtain the EIN the same day and deliver your bank-ready packet within a day or two after that.
Our service is $299 flat. North Carolina's state filing fee is $125, paid directly to the North Carolina Secretary of State. First-year total is $424, with no upsells and no tiered pricing.
No. North Carolina allows non-residents to form and own LLCs in the state. You do need a North Carolina registered agent — that's included in the $299 for the first year. Our Raleigh office serves as the agent of record.
Yes. North Carolina allows single-member LLCs, which the IRS treats as disregarded entities by default — meaning the LLC's income flows through to the owner's personal tax return.
Four things: your North Carolina Articles of Organization filed by a formation specialist, federal EIN obtained from the IRS, a custom operating agreement drafted to your actual ownership structure, and one year of registered agent service in North Carolina. No hidden costs, no tiered pricing.
North Carolina charges $200 annually for the report. Miss the deadline and the state imposes a late fee, and eventually administrative dissolution if the lapse continues.
Yes, North Carolina law requires every LLC to maintain a registered agent with a physical address in the state to receive service of process and official correspondence. Our Raleigh office serves as your registered agent for the first year as part of the $299.
Yes. After the first year you can renew our service at $119/year, or designate yourself, an employee, or another agent by filing a change-of-agent form with the North Carolina Secretary of State. The state typically charges a small fee for the change.
Yes. Our operating agreements are drafted to your actual ownership structure — member names, percentages, voting rights, profit allocations — not a fill-in-the-blank template. Every major U.S. bank accepts them for business account opening.
Annual report $200 by mail or $203 online. Due by April 15 each year. One of the more expensive annual report fees in the country.
Annual report $200 by mail or $203 online.
Reservation takes three minutes. A formation specialist in Raleigh handles the rest.