The renewal itself is simple — once you know which of the three paths you are taking and have the lead time to do it cleanly. Here is the full process for staying with your current provider, switching to a new one, or going DIY.
Three options, each with a different process and timeline. Decide first — switching mid-renewal is harder than picking the right path up front.
Easiest path. Verify the renewal invoice, confirm card on file, done. Takes 5 minutes.
Lower cost, but requires filing a Statement of Change with the state. Allow 1–2 weeks for state processing.
No more annual service fee. Requires a physical address in the state and availability during business hours.
A reminder 30 to 60 days ahead gives you time to choose the right path.
Done in seconds. No sign-up required.
Most providers auto-renew via the card on file. The renewal lands a few weeks ahead of your anniversary, the card gets charged, the service continues. The trap is that auto-renewal can fail silently — expired card, changed bank, declined transaction — and most providers do not chase failed renewals aggressively.
Switching is the most common scenario when the current provider raises rates significantly at renewal. The process is straightforward, but order matters.
Never cancel the old agent before the new one is on file with the state. Even a one-day gap with no registered agent on record is a compliance flag — and if anything gets served during that window, your business has no one to receive it.
The "free" option — no annual service fee, no auto-renewal to track. The catch is real, but manageable if you understand it.
The process to switch to yourself is the same as Path 2 — sign up with yourself by filing the Statement of Change, then cancel the old service. The address you list will be searchable in the state business registry, which is the main reason most owners pay for a service rather than use their home address.
Whichever path you choose, do it ahead of the renewal date, not on it. Path 1 needs 5 minutes but is easier to verify when you have time. Path 2 needs 1 to 2 weeks of buffer for state processing. Path 3 needs the same buffer plus the decision-making time to choose your address and confirm you can actually be available during business hours.
See the when-to-renew guide for setting the right reminder window, or the cost breakdown if you are deciding between the three paths on price.
Most providers auto-renew via the card on file. Log into your account, confirm the renewal date, update your billing card if needed, and verify the renewal invoice. If you want to make sure auto-renewal does not fail silently, set a reminder ahead of the date and check the account that morning.
Three steps: sign up with the new provider, file a Statement of Change of Registered Agent with your state Secretary of State, and cancel your old provider once the change is confirmed in the state record. Order matters — never cancel the old one before the new one is filed with the state.
If you are staying with the same registered agent, usually no — your annual report is the separate state filing. If you are switching agents, yes — you file a Statement of Change of Registered Agent (form numbers vary by state, but every state has one). The state fee is usually $0 to $50.
Online filings are typically processed in 1 to 5 business days. Mail filings can take 2 to 4 weeks. Some states offer expedited processing for an additional fee. Plan the switch so the new agent is filed with the state before the old one is cancelled.
In most states, yes. Requirements: physical address in the state where the LLC is registered, availability during business hours to accept service of process, and willingness to have that address on the public state record. File a Statement of Change designating yourself, then cancel the service.
Most providers offer a refund window (often 30 days) for accidental renewals. Contact support, explain you intended to switch or become your own agent, and request a refund. If you have already filed a Statement of Change to a new agent, the cancellation should be straightforward.
Yes — every major registered agent service supports online renewal through your account dashboard. Most state Statement of Change filings can also be done online through the Secretary of State portal. Mail filing is still an option in every state, just slower.
Free reminder, 30 to 60 days ahead of your renewal — enough time to compare providers, file the right paperwork, and avoid the scramble. Follow-ups until it's done.
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