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Registered Agent Requirements in All 50 States

Every state requires a registered agent for LLCs and corporations. Learn what qualifies someone to serve, what the core requirements are across all 50 states, and whether you can be your own registered agent.

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Introduction

Every U.S. state requires a registered agent for LLCs and corporations — no exceptions. The core requirements are consistent across all 50 states: a physical street address in the state, availability during normal business hours, and the ability to receive legal documents on your business's behalf.

What a registered agent is required to do

A registered agent's primary job is to accept service of process — the legal term for receiving lawsuits, subpoenas, and official government notices on behalf of your business. When a court or state agency needs to reach your LLC or corporation, they do it through your registered agent.

This is why availability matters so much. If your registered agent isn't reachable during business hours and a legal notice goes undelivered, your business could miss a court deadline without ever knowing a case was filed. Most states treat that as your business's problem, not the court's.

Who qualifies as a registered agent

In every state, a registered agent can be an individual resident of the state, the business itself (if it has a physical address there), or a domestic or foreign entity authorized to do business in that state. Commercial registered agent services also qualify in all 50 states.

The individual option is where most people trip up. You can name yourself, a business partner, or a trusted employee — but that person needs to be physically present at a street address in the state during all normal business hours, every business day. That's a harder commitment than it sounds.

Core requirements across all 50 states

The requirements are consistent enough that you can apply the same checklist in any state. A registered agent must meet all of the following in every U.S. jurisdiction.

  • Physical street address in the state — P.O. boxes and virtual addresses are not accepted anywhere
  • Available during normal business hours (generally 9 AM – 5 PM, Monday through Friday)
  • Able to receive and forward service of process and official government correspondence
  • At least 18 years old if serving as an individual
  • A resident of the state, or an entity authorized to do business there

The physical address requirement is the one that catches people off guard most often. A home address works in most states, but it becomes your public record — anyone can look it up through the Secretary of State's database.

State-specific notes worth knowing

While the core requirements are consistent, a handful of states have naming conventions or procedural details that differ from the norm. These don't change what the agent does — they just change what the state calls the role or when the appointment is required.

California

California calls the role "Agent for Service of Process" rather than registered agent. The duties are identical. The agent must have a physical California street address — no P.O. boxes.

New York

New York also uses the term "Agent for Service of Process." The agent accepts official correspondence from the NYS Department of State Division of Corporations. New York LLCs must designate an agent when filing their Articles of Organization.

Florida

Florida requires a physical street address for the registered agent. A P.O. box or virtual address is not acceptable. Florida also requires the registered agent to sign the Articles of Organization, acknowledging the appointment.

Delaware

Delaware allows you to serve as your own registered agent, but you still need a physical Delaware address. Because many businesses form in Delaware without operating there, most use a commercial registered agent service.

Michigan

Michigan requires business entities to designate a registered agent or registered office at the time they file their Articles of Organization. You can't file without naming one.

Massachusetts

Massachusetts allows business owners to act as their own registered agent if they're at least 18 years old and have a physical Massachusetts address. The same availability requirements apply.

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania follows the standard physical address requirement. A virtual address or P.O. box cannot be used to accept official correspondence.

Should you be your own registered agent?

You can be your own registered agent in most states, but it comes with real trade-offs that most people don't think through until they're already in the situation. The cost savings are real — commercial registered agent services typically run $100–$300 a year — but so are the downsides.

Your registered agent's address becomes part of the public record. If you use your home address, it's searchable by anyone through the Secretary of State's database. Plus, you need to be physically present at that address during all business hours, every business day. If you travel, work remotely, or plan to move, that's a problem.

There's also the matter of being served in front of clients or employees. If a process server shows up at your office with a lawsuit, that's a moment most business owners would rather handle privately. A commercial registered agent receives those documents on your behalf and forwards them to you.

Registered agents for businesses operating in multiple states

If your business is registered in more than one state — or if you're a foreign entity qualifying to do business in a new state — you need a registered agent in each state where you're registered. You can't use your home state's registered agent to cover other states.

This is where managing registered agents across states gets complicated fast. Each state has its own filing requirements, and each registered agent appointment needs to stay current. A commercial registered agent service that operates in all 50 states can handle this in one place rather than requiring you to track separate appointments in each state.

FAQ

Yes. Every U.S. state requires LLCs and corporations to designate a registered agent. There are no exceptions. The registered agent must have a physical street address in the state of formation and be available during normal business hours to receive legal documents.

None. All 50 states require a registered agent for LLCs and corporations. The requirements are consistent across every state: a physical street address in the state, availability during business hours, and the ability to receive service of process on behalf of the business.

Yes, in most states. You need to be at least 18 years old, have a physical street address in the state, and be available there during all normal business hours. The trade-off is that your address becomes public record and you need to be present every business day — which isn't practical for everyone.

Yes. Your registered agent must be located in the same state where your business is registered. If you're registered in multiple states, you need a registered agent with a physical address in each of those states. An agent in one state can't cover your filings in another.

Generally, yes. The core requirements — physical street address, business-hours availability, ability to receive service of process — are consistent across all 50 states. A few states use different terminology (California and New York call the role "Agent for Service of Process") and some have minor procedural differences, but the underlying obligations are the same.

It depends. If you have a permanent physical address in the state, work there during business hours every day, and don't mind your address being public record, it's a reasonable way to save $100–$300 a year. If you travel, work remotely, or want privacy, a commercial registered agent service is worth the cost.

Yes, if you're registered to do business in multiple states. Any state where your LLC or corporation is formally registered — including states where you've qualified as a foreign entity — requires its own registered agent with a physical address in that state. You can't use one agent to cover multiple states.

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