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Registered Agent

Should You Be Your Own Registered Agent? Costs, Risks, and Operational Trade-offs in 2026

Being your own registered agent saves $100-$300 per year per state but exposes your home address publicly, requires business-hours availability, and risks default judgments. Learn when self-RA works and when it costs more than it saves.
Small business owner working from a home office reviewing legal documents, illustrating the decision to be a self-registered agent.
Small business owner working from a home office reviewing legal documents, illustrating the decision to be a self-registered agent.

What Self-Registered Agent Actually Means

Business mailbox at a residential address, illustrating the privacy implications of using a home address as a registered agent.
Business mailbox at a residential address, illustrating the privacy implications of using a home address as a registered agent.

When you form an LLC or corporation in any US state, the state requires you to designate a registered agent, a person or company who accepts legal documents and government notices on behalf of the business. The legal requirements are minimal: the agent must be 18 or older, have a physical street address in the state, be available during business hours, and consent to the appointment. There is no requirement that the agent be a third party or commercial service.

This means you can name yourself as the registered agent for your own LLC or corporation. Many small business owners do exactly this when they form their first entity, often without realizing the full set of trade-offs involved. The $100-$300 annual savings is real and immediate. The operational and privacy costs are also real but show up more gradually, usually only when something goes wrong.

Who counts as a self-registered agent

In the self-RA arrangement, you (or another owner, member, or employee) are listed as the registered agent on the state's entity record. Your name and physical address appear on the public business search portal alongside the entity name. State notices, legal documents, and tax correspondence are delivered to your address. You are personally responsible for receiving these documents, recognizing their importance, and routing them appropriately within the business.

The narrow circumstances where it works well

Self-registered agent works reasonably well in three narrow circumstances. First: single-state operations where you have a stable commercial office address (not your home) and someone is always present during business hours. Second: very small businesses with no employees, no significant assets, and minimal litigation exposure where the privacy and legal risks are genuinely low. Third: cost-sensitive early-stage entities in their first year before generating enough revenue to justify the commercial RA fee. Outside these circumstances, the cost-benefit balance shifts decisively toward commercial service.

The Three Real Costs of Being Your Own Registered Agent

Self-RA vs Commercial RA: Direct Comparison

FactorSelf (you as RA)Commercial RA service
Annual cost (1 state)$0$100-$300
Annual cost (5 states)Not possible (need agent per state)$500-$1,500
Public address privacyYour home/office on public recordCommercial address shields yours
Service of process deliveryTo your front door (in person)Scanned + emailed in hours
Business-hours requirementYes, you must be available 9-5Service handles this for you
Travel / move flexibilityFile change of address with stateAddress stays constant
Risk of missed deliveriesHigh (vacation, sick, traveling)Very low (staffed full-time)
Multi-state operationsNeed separate agent in each stateOne provider, all 50 states

The $0 price tag obscures three categories of real cost that compound over time and across operations.

Cost 1: Permanent loss of address privacy

The registered agent address appears on the state's public entity search portal. Anyone can search for your business name and see your address. Data aggregators, marketing companies, web scrapers, and bad actors regularly harvest this data. Your home or office address becomes searchable, indexable, and impossible to fully remove from the data ecosystem. Even if you later change to a commercial agent, your old address remains in archived state records, indexed in third-party databases, and visible on historical business filings, typically for many years.

Cost 2: Service of process at your doorstep

When a lawsuit is filed against your business, a process server is sent to your registered agent's address to physically deliver the legal papers. This is service of process, the formal legal notification that starts the clock on your response deadline. As the self-RA, you receive this in person, at your home or office, often in front of family, employees, or customers. The delivery is unpleasant and reputational in ways that scanned-and-emailed delivery from a commercial agent is not. Beyond the optics, a missed delivery can result in a default judgment against your business, meaning the court rules against you because you failed to appear.

Cost 3: Operational rigidity

A registered agent must be physically present at the registered address during normal business hours. Travel, vacation, illness, or moving offices all create gaps in coverage. If a critical state notice arrives during a gap, it sits at the address unaccepted. State notices have response deadlines, typically 30-60 days, so a notice that sits at an unattended address for two weeks consumes a significant fraction of your response window before you even see it. For founders who travel, work from multiple locations, or live in a different state than their business operates in, the operational rigidity becomes incompatible with daily business reality.

When the Math Actually Favors Self-Registered Agent

Despite the costs above, self-registered agent makes financial sense in a few specific scenarios. The key is matching your operational profile honestly to the constraints involved.

Scenario 1: Single-state, single-location, stable

Your business operates in exactly one state, from exactly one commercial location, with someone present during all business hours. Your home address has no role in the business. You operate at low litigation risk and have basic processes to handle incoming mail. In this profile, the $100-$300 annual saving is real and the operational risk is manageable. This describes about 15-20% of US small businesses honestly.

Scenario 2: Pre-revenue, pre-bank-account, pre-launch

Your LLC or corporation was just formed and hasn't started operations yet. There is no bank account, no contracts, no customers, and no plausible litigation. In this short window (typically 1-12 months), self-RA imposes minimal real risk. The standard recommendation is to upgrade to commercial RA before opening a business bank account or signing your first contract, both of which trigger meaningful operational complexity and elevate compliance stakes.

Scenario 3: Owner-managed, family-business, no growth plans

For businesses that are intentionally small and family-managed, a single-location retail shop, a small consulting practice, a side business that will stay a side business, the operational disruption of self-RA may be acceptable. Privacy concerns are typically lower for owners who don't separate work and home life. The trade-off works for the lifestyle.

When You Should Definitely Switch to Commercial Registered Agent

Five trigger events should prompt an immediate switch from self-RA to commercial service. If any of these apply to your situation, the savings no longer justify the costs.

Trigger 1: You start operating in a second state

The moment your business foreign qualifies in a second state, you need a registered agent there too. Hiring a different commercial agent in each state creates multi-vendor complexity. Consolidating to a single national provider saves both money (multi-state discounts) and operational overhead. File.Business covers all 51 US jurisdictions from one dashboard with one bill.

Trigger 2: You hire your first employee

Hiring an employee elevates litigation risk meaningfully, employment disputes are among the most common small-business lawsuits. The combination of more potential lawsuits + the discomfort of receiving service of process in front of employees makes commercial RA worth the cost. The professional separation between business legal activity and the workplace itself is itself an HR best practice.

Trigger 3: You sign your first significant contract

Material contracts (over $50K, multi-year commitments, vendor agreements with sophisticated counterparties) create real litigation exposure. Counterparties will verify your entity status. Some require evidence of commercial registered agent service as part of contract due diligence. Switching at contract signing avoids potential issues at the worst moments.

Trigger 4: You operate from your home

A home-based business should use commercial RA from day one. The privacy trade-off is unambiguous and the cost is negligible compared to the alternatives (PO box services, mail forwarding) that don't solve the legal address requirement.

Trigger 5: You prepare for fundraising or sale

Investors and acquirers conduct due diligence that includes registered agent records. A commercial RA at a recognized provider signals professional operation. Self-RA with a residential address can raise concerns during diligence. Switching 12-18 months before a planned fundraise or sale gives the new agent time to appear consistently in the public record.

How to Make the Switch

Transitioning from self-registered agent to commercial service is a routine state filing that takes 1-3 weeks to complete.

Step 1: Select the commercial registered agent

Compare providers on the five quality attributes that matter: same-day digital scanning of received documents, multi-state coverage if you operate in more than one state, compliance monitoring beyond basic mail forwarding, privacy protection policies, and company history (avoid very new low-cost providers). File.Business is $149 per state per year with multi-state discounts and free first year for new entity formations.

Step 2: File the Change of Registered Agent form

Every state has a Change of Registered Agent form (filing fees $0-$50). The form is short, typically requires your entity name, file number, old agent name, new agent name and address, and signature. The new agent must provide written consent (which they'll handle automatically when you sign up). Submit the form through the state's online portal.

Step 3: Confirm the update and document the change

The change appears on the public record in 5-10 business days. Confirm it by searching your entity on the state's entity portal. The new agent's address should appear instead of yours. Save a copy of the filed Change of Agent form for your records, banks and counterparties may ask for evidence of the change during future transactions.

How File.Business Provides Registered Agent Service

File.Business serves as commercial registered agent in all 51 US jurisdictions for $149 per state per year. For new entity formations, the first year is included free. For businesses switching from self-RA, we handle the Change of Registered Agent filing in every state at no additional cost, including coordination of multi-state changes filed in parallel. The service includes commercial physical address in each state, business-hours staffing, same-day digital scanning and forwarding of all received documents, automated annual report deadline tracking, and proactive notification of any state-status risk.

Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

Can I legally be my own registered agent?

Yes, in every US state. The legal requirement is that you be 18+ years old, have a physical street address in the state (not a PO Box), be available during business hours to accept service of process, and consent to the role. There is no requirement that the registered agent be a separate person or company.

How much does being my own registered agent save?

Roughly $100-$300 per year per state in commercial RA fees. For a single-state LLC, that's $100-$300 annually. For a multi-state operation in 5 states, that's $500-$1,500 per year saved. The hidden costs (privacy loss, missed deliveries, operational disruption) often exceed the savings for businesses operating professionally.

What are the actual risks of being my own registered agent?

Three categories: (1) Privacy, your home address becomes part of the permanent public business record. (2) Legal, if you miss a service of process delivery, the court may rule against you by default. (3) Operational, you must be at the address during business hours; travel, vacations, or moves create gaps in coverage.

Can I use a PO Box as my registered agent address?

No. Almost every state explicitly prohibits PO Boxes as registered agent addresses. The address must be a physical street address where someone can be physically located during business hours to accept legal papers. UPS Store mailboxes are also rejected in most states.

What happens if I miss a service of process?

The court can issue a default judgment against your business. This means the plaintiff wins their case automatically because your business failed to appear. Default judgments can result in liens, garnished bank accounts, frozen assets, and damaged credit, all without you having any chance to defend yourself.

When does being my own registered agent actually make sense?

For very small, single-state operations where: you work full-time at a stable physical address, you have no privacy concerns about your address being public, you operate from a commercial location (not your home), you have backup coverage when you travel, and the operational scale doesn't justify a commercial RA cost. For most growing businesses, the trade-offs favor commercial service.

Can I have a co-owner be the registered agent instead?

Yes, any owner, manager, member, or employee with a physical address in the state can serve. This is often used by small partnerships where one partner has a stable office address. However, the same risks apply: their availability, their privacy, and their reliability all become factors in your business compliance.

What's the easiest way to transition from self-RA to commercial service?

File a Change of Registered Agent form in your state (typical fee $0-$50). The commercial agent will provide the new address and acceptance consent. The change takes 5-10 business days to update on the public record. File.Business handles this transition free of charge for new RA customers.

Next step

Let File.Business handle the filing.

We pull your record from the state, prefill every field, and validate before submission. Same-day filing in most states. First year of registered agent included with new entity formations.

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Written by

Emily Brennan

Covers registered agent obligations, business privacy, and the public-record implications of formation choices. Background in entity governance and corporate secretarial work at a Boston law firm. Specializes in Protect a Business topics. Reach out: emily@file.business

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