What Is a Registered Agent? A Freelancer's Guide for LLCs
Every LLC or corporation in the US needs a registered agent — a person or company that accepts legal documents on the business's behalf. It sounds bureaucratic, and most freelancers form an LLC without thinking about it. But picking the wrong registered agent (or trying to be your own) is one of the most common ways small businesses lose lawsuits by default — without ever knowing they were sued. This guide covers what an RA does, when you can be your own, and what to look for when picking one.
The 30-second answer
- A registered agent is a designated person or company at a physical street address in your state of LLC formation, available during business hours to receive lawsuits, subpoenas, and government notices on behalf of your business.
- Every state requires one. You name your RA when you file your LLC or corporation paperwork.
- You can be your own RA in most states (you must have a physical street address there and be available 9-5).
- Professional RA services run $40-300/year and exist to handle the address requirement, the privacy concerns, and the actual delivery problem.
What does a registered agent actually do?
The RA's job is narrow but legally critical:
- Accept service of process — when someone sues your LLC, the sheriff or process server delivers the summons to your registered agent. The agent receives it, signs for it, and forwards it to you.
- Receive state correspondence — your state's Secretary of State sends annual report reminders, franchise tax notices, name-availability rejections, and dissolution warnings to your RA's address.
- Receive certain federal tax notices — IRS subpoenas and certain audit notices come through the RA when an entity is involved.
- Be physically present — at the listed address, during business hours (typically 9 AM – 5 PM weekdays), to receive deliveries.
The RA does NOT manage your business, file your taxes, give legal advice, or do bookkeeping. They're a designated mailbox with a person attached.
Why "every LLC needs one" matters
It's not just bureaucratic — the RA is the legal channel through which you find out you've been sued. If a process server can't deliver papers to your RA (wrong address, agent moved, agent went on vacation, agent never opened the mail), the plaintiff can request service by publication — basically a small-print notice in a local newspaper. You won't see it. You miss the response deadline. You lose by default.
Default judgments against LLCs are surprisingly common when:
- The owner used their old apartment address as the RA address and moved.
- The owner used a P.O. box (not allowed — must be a street address).
- The owner was the RA themselves, on vacation when papers arrived.
- The RA service got bought out and the new owner didn't forward correctly.
In each case, the LLC owner finds out months later that their business has a $50,000 judgment recorded — and the appeal window already closed.
Can you be your own registered agent?
In all 50 states + DC, yes, with these requirements:
- You have a physical street address in the state where the LLC is formed (no P.O. boxes, no virtual mailboxes that don't accept service of process).
- You're available at that address during normal business hours.
- You consent in writing to act as the agent.
- The address becomes public record — anyone can look up your LLC and see where you (the RA) are located.
This works fine for some setups. It doesn't work when:
- You travel often (you'll miss the legal documents).
- You work from home and don't want your home address in the public LLC database (where anyone can see it).
- You formed your LLC in a state where you don't actually live (e.g., Delaware LLC owned by a California freelancer).
- You're a foreign-resident LLC owner — in that case, you can't be your own RA at all, you need a US-based RA in the state of formation.
The privacy issue most freelancers miss
When you list yourself as the RA at your home address, that address becomes part of public record. State Secretary of State databases are searchable. Anyone — a former client with a grudge, an angry customer, a stalker, a competitor — can look up your LLC, see your home address, and show up.
This is the single most common reason freelancers switch to a professional RA. Privacy isn't paranoia; it's the default for businesses with real customers, real disputes, and real risk exposure.
What a professional registered agent costs
The market range is wide. Here's what you actually get at each tier:
- $40-100/year — bare-bones RA. They accept service of process and forward documents (usually scanned + emailed). Good for: low-revenue LLCs, single-state filings. Examples: Northwest Registered Agent ($125/yr standard), Harbor Compliance, ZenBusiness ($199/yr after first year).
- $100-200/year — RA + compliance reminders + online dashboard for tracking documents + sometimes annual report filing assistance. Good for: most freelancer LLCs.
- $200-400/year — RA + compliance + premium support + sometimes a 1-state RA included in a multi-service bundle. Good for: businesses operating in multiple states.
Beware the bait-and-switch: services advertise "free first year" then charge $300+/year on auto-renewal. Read the renewal terms before signing up. Northwest Registered Agent has a flat $125/year with no upsells — one of the cleaner pricing models in the space.
What happens if your RA fails
RA failures cause real damage. Common failure modes and consequences:
- Mail not forwarded promptly → you miss the 30-day response window on a lawsuit, lose by default.
- Annual report missed → your LLC is administratively dissolved by the state. You lose limited liability protection retroactively.
- RA service goes out of business or you don't pay → state lists your LLC as having "no agent on file" → eventual dissolution.
- RA changes address without telling state → you're effectively unreachable.
Switching RAs is straightforward — file a "Statement of Change of Registered Agent" with your Secretary of State (typically $5-50). Don't tolerate flaky RAs out of inertia.
Multiple-state LLCs need an RA in each state
If your LLC is formed in Delaware but does business (registered as a "foreign LLC") in California, you need:
- A registered agent in Delaware (state of formation)
- A registered agent in California (state where you registered as foreign)
Most professional RA services charge per state ($40-150 each). Some bundle multiple states for a discount.
Picking the right RA — the checklist
- Physical street address in the state of formation
- Open during business hours (and ideally has redundancy — multiple staff)
- Same-day or next-day document scanning + email
- Online dashboard to track received documents
- Compliance reminders for annual reports
- Privacy: their address is the public-record one, not yours
- Transparent renewal pricing — no "free year" gotcha
- Good customer reviews on Trustpilot and BBB
Brief: when to switch RAs
- You moved out of the state where your LLC is formed.
- Your RA service was acquired and prices went up.
- You missed a notice because of slow forwarding.
- You want to add states (form foreign LLCs) and your current RA doesn't operate there.
- You realize your home address is public record and want to redact it.
FAQs
Can I use my home address as the RA address? Yes, in most states, if you're available there during business hours. But your home address becomes public record. Most freelancers regret this once a process server shows up.
Can I use a P.O. box as the RA address? No. The RA address must be a physical street address where someone can be served papers in person.
Can a virtual mailbox (like iPostal1, Earth Class Mail, Anytime Mailbox) be a registered agent? Generally no — virtual mailboxes are not authorized to accept service of process in most states. A few hybrid services have RA capabilities, but read the fine print.
If my RA fails to forward a lawsuit, can I sue them? Maybe — RA service contracts typically limit their liability heavily. The default-judgment damage often exceeds what you can recover from the RA. Pick a reliable one upfront.
How does this interact with S-corp election? No interaction. Whether you're a sole prop, LLC, or LLC-electing-S-corp, you still need an RA at the state level. See our S-corp election guide for the broader entity-tax picture.
Do I need an RA if I'm just a sole proprietor (not an LLC)? No. RAs are an LLC/corporation requirement. As a sole prop with no separate entity, lawsuits go directly to you personally.
What about Wyoming or Delaware "anonymous LLC" services? These are essentially RA services that double as the listed organizer/manager so your name doesn't appear on public records. Useful for privacy but doesn't change the underlying RA requirement — you still need someone in-state to receive service of process.

