Filed Accurately and On Time
We file your Articles of Dissolution to close your entity cleanly and avoid future tax liabilities.
When you’re ready to close your LLC, your state requires Articles of Dissolution to formally end the entity and stop future filing obligations.
Without a formal dissolution, you may still owe annual fees, face tax liabilities, or remain on the hook for state requirements – even if the business isn’t operating. We handle the full dissolution filing for you.
Read the Terms & ConditionsPricing Breakdown
Who This Is For

First-time founders who don’t want to guess what the state needs

Owners who received a notice or have an upcoming deadline

Multi-state or multi-entity operators with scattered due dates

Business owners who simply want this handled correctly, every time
We believe in total transparency
No hidden fees. No surprise add-ons.
Pricing Breakdown
- Preparation of your Articles of Dissolution
- Manual verification of your entity details
- Filing with your state
- Monitoring and communication if the state requests updates
- Dissolution confirmation delivered to your inbox
- Confirmation that your entity obligations have ended
- Documentation for your records confirming closure
How This Service Works
Answer a Few Questions
You’ll complete a short form with the basic details your state requires. We keep this simple - only the essentials.
We Prepare and File
We review your information, verify it against state records, prepare the filing, and submit it for you.
You Receive Confirmation
Once the state accepts your filing, we send your approval and documents directly to your inbox. We store your next due date so nothing slips next year.
FAQs
You have questions, we have
resources and answers.
If you stop operating but never file Articles of Dissolution, your state still considers the entity active. That means you’ll continue to owe annual filing fees, and in many states, penalties and interest will accumulate. You may also remain liable for state taxes, franchise fees, or other obligations tied to an active entity. Filing a formal dissolution ends those obligations and protects you from future charges.
Once your Articles of Dissolution are accepted by the state, your future filing obligations end. However, any fees, penalties, or taxes that accrued before the dissolution was filed are still your responsibility. That’s why filing sooner is better – each month you wait with an inactive-but-not-dissolved entity, the balance can grow. We’ll confirm what’s owed as part of the process so there are no surprises.
We prepare and submit your Articles of Dissolution within 24–48 hours of receiving your information. Processing time with the state varies, but most filings are accepted within 5–10 business days. We handle all communication with the state and send your confirmation documents directly to your inbox once the dissolution is complete.
"In most cases, yes. If the state has already marked your entity as administratively dissolved or suspended, there may be additional steps required before a formal voluntary dissolution can be filed, such as reinstatement or paying outstanding fees. We’ll review your entity’s current status and walk you through exactly what’s needed. You won’t have to figure out the state’s process on your own.
What Our Clients Say
Ready to Get Compliance Off Your Mind?
You do not have to manage filings, notices, and penalties alone. We take on the compliance work so your business stays active, protected, and ready for its next step.
