HOW TO MOVE YOUR LLC

Get Fast Answers Based on Both States’ Laws

Every state treats LLC moves differently. We compare both states’ laws, confirm what your states allow, and deliver a practical roadmap so you get clarity fast.

“They clearly explained each step of the process… and went above and beyond to make sure everything was handled smoothly and correctly.”

Ryan Schramm — Outside Influence Machine Works, LLC

Select Your States Below to See Your Options to Move Your LLC

We compare both states’ laws and show what options are legally available. Instant results. No signup required.

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Avoid the LLC Relocation Mistakes That Cost Real Money

Moving an LLC takes more than a filing. It is a legal process that requires specific documents to be filed in a specific order under two different states’ laws. Your free analysis flags the exact traps your two states create, then gives you a safe, step-by-step plan so you keep continuity and finish the move cleanly.

Accidentally dissolving your LLC

The analysis shows whether your two states allow domestication and what filings actually preserve continuity, so you do not “start over” by mistake.

Breaking continuity through the wrong filing order

The analysis maps the correct sequence between both states so your LLC does not fall into a gap where neither state recognizes it.

Creating legal exposure with the wrong paperwork or certifications

The analysis tells you what authorizations and plan terms your two states require so you do not file unsupported documents or make improper representations to state agencies.


The right move depends on the law of two states. Our analysis compare both states’ laws and gives you the clearest answer you can get about an LLC move. We’ll show what is legally available and translate it into a practical plan you can actually act on.

Eligibility and Best Path

We confirm what your current state and new state allow, then identify the cleanest available route for your move.


Multi-State Sequence

We show the required order of actions across both states and explain why sequence matters when two jurisdictions control the outcome.


Risk Flags and Continuity Impacts

We flag the traps that break continuity or create exposure, and we highlight what protects your EIN, contracts, licenses, and banking relationships.


Required Approvals and Documents

We identify the internal authorization you need and the key outbound and inbound filings that make the move valid.


What Changes After the Move

We cover the follow-on updates that often get missed, including state agency changes, registered agent implications, and federal touchpoints.

You move an LLC to a new state (without starting over) in one of two ways: statutory domestication or legal reorganization. The correct approach depends on the laws of both states and the type of entity involved.

If both the old state and the new state allow domestication, that is usually the fastest, cleanest option because the LLC continues as the same legal entity.

When one or both states do not allow domestication, the LLC can still be moved through a structured reorganization that achieves the same result.

The analysis tells you which path your two states actually allow before you risk filings.

Most business owners move their LLC because they have relocated and now operate from a different state.

When that happens, the law often requires the LLC to register and comply in the new state while still maintaining the entity in the original state.

That means duplicate filings, extra fees, additional taxes, and higher compliance risk every year.

Moving the LLC eliminates the need to operate in two states and reduces long-term cost, complexity, and exposure.

No. Dissolving your LLC and starting over is almost never necessary. Starting over can trigger loss of your EIN, contracts, banking relationships, licenses, and operating history. A properly executed move keeps the business intact and avoids unnecessary disruption.

Warning: Many online formation companies suggest forming a new business and starting over. That is because they lack the technology and legal structure to handle domestication or reorganization correctly. There is a better way, and it preserves what you have already built.