Utah Reinstatement 2026: How to Restore a Dissolved LLC or Corporation
The complete 2026 guide to reinstating a dissolved Utah business entity: $70 base fee plus back-filings, 5-10 business days processing through corporations.utah.gov, and how File.Business handles the entire process end-to-end.
What Utah's Business Reinstatement Actually Is
Reinstatement is the formal legal process of restoring a business entity to active status with the Utah Division of Corporations after administrative dissolution or revocation. An administratively dissolved entity in Utah loses the legal right to transact business, sue or be sued in Utah courts, enter contracts, and (in most cases) maintain bank accounts in the entity name. Reinstatement reverses that status and returns the entity to good standing as if the dissolution had never occurred, subject to bringing all delinquent filings and fees current.
Low $18 annual renewal fee combined with $10 late penalty keeps Utah among the cheapest total back-fee burdens. This is one of the distinguishing features of Utah's reinstatement process compared to other jurisdictions. The filing is processed by the Utah Division of Corporations through corporations.utah.gov, with typical processing times of 5-10 business days once all required documentation is submitted correctly.
Who must reinstate in Utah
Any LLC, corporation, or other registered entity that has been administratively dissolved by the Utah Division of Corporations must file the Application for Reinstatement to restore active status. The most common triggers for administrative dissolution in Utah are missed annual reports, missed franchise tax payments, failure to maintain a registered agent, or failure to respond to state correspondence sent to the registered agent address on file. Foreign entities operating in Utah that have lost their certificate of authority also use the reinstatement process.
What you lose while administratively dissolved
An administratively dissolved entity in Utah cannot legally transact business in the state. Contracts entered after dissolution may be voidable or unenforceable. The entity cannot sue in Utah courts, though it can still be sued. Banks generally cannot open or maintain accounts in the dissolved entity's name. Counterparties performing due diligence will see the dissolved status on the public record, which can derail financings, customer contracts, and acquisition discussions until reinstatement is complete.
What's Actually Involved in Filing Utah's Application for Reinstatement
Utah Reinstatement at a Glance
| Item | Value |
|---|---|
| Filing name | Application for Reinstatement |
| Filing agency | Utah Division of Corporations |
| Base reinstatement fee | $70 |
| Back-fees structure | all missed Annual Renewals ($18/year) + $10 late penalty per year |
| Tax clearance required | Not required |
| Reinstatement window | 24 months after dissolution |
| Processing time | 5-10 business days |
The Utah Application for Reinstatement is more than a single form. Reinstatement is a multi-step compliance recovery process that requires bringing the entity's entire historical record current with the state. Five things make this process more failure-prone than it appears, and they explain why most founders choose to have File.Business handle it.
Step 1: Calculating accurate back-fees
Reinstatement in Utah requires payment of all missed filings and accumulated late penalties from the date of dissolution to the present. The structure: all missed Annual Renewals ($18/year) + $10 late penalty per year. Calculating this accurately requires identifying the exact dissolution date, counting each missed annual filing period, applying the correct per-period fee and late penalty, and accounting for any state-specific compounding or interest provisions. A miscalculation here causes rejection and restarts the process.
Step 2: Bringing the registered agent current
If the Utah reinstatement is being filed for an entity whose registered agent has changed, resigned, or moved during the dissolution period, the Utah Division of Corporations requires a current, valid registered agent before reinstatement can be processed. This often means filing a Change of Registered Agent or appointing a new agent simultaneously with the reinstatement. File.Business serves as registered agent in Utah with same-day digital scanning of all received documents.
Step 3: Obtaining tax clearance (where required)
For Utah reinstatements, no separate tax clearance is required, though all state-level tax obligations should be current. Where required, the tax clearance certificate is a separate filing with the state revenue department that confirms all state-level tax obligations (corporate income tax, franchise tax, sales tax, employer withholding) are current. Tax clearance can take 2-6 weeks on its own. The Utah Division of Corporations will not process the reinstatement without this certificate where it is required.
Step 4: Filing the {reinst_name} and back-filings together
Once back-fees are calculated and tax clearance is in hand (if required), the Application for Reinstatement itself is filed through corporations.utah.gov along with all missed annual reports. The state's 5-10 business days processing window starts from the date the complete package is submitted, not the date the first form was filed.
Step 5: Confirming reinstatement and updating the public record
Reinstatement is effective on the date the Utah Division of Corporations approves the filing, not the date you submitted it. Until then, the entity remains administratively dissolved on the public record. Once approved, the Utah record reverts to active status as if the dissolution had not occurred. File.Business confirms the new active status, retrieves the approved reinstatement certificate, stores it in your document vault, and re-enrolls the entity in compliance monitoring to prevent recurrence.
Utah-Specific Reinstatement Mistakes to Avoid
Utah filers consistently encounter four mistakes that delay reinstatement or cause outright rejection.
Mistake 1: Underestimating back-fees
Many filers calculate base reinstatement fee plus one or two missed annual reports without accounting for the per-period late penalties that Utah applies. The all missed Annual Renewals ($18/year) + $10 late penalty per year structure compounds quickly. Submitting an underpayment results in rejection and starts the entire process over, often pushing the entity into another late-filing period.
Mistake 2: Filing reinstatement before tax clearance
For Utah reinstatements where tax clearance is required, filing the reinstatement application without the tax clearance certificate already in hand causes immediate rejection. The Utah Division of Corporations cannot process the reinstatement until the certificate is in their system. Order the tax clearance first; file the reinstatement second.
Mistake 3: Using an outdated registered agent
During the dissolution period, your registered agent may have changed, resigned, or no longer offer service in Utah. A reinstatement filing that names an invalid registered agent will be rejected. Confirm current registered agent status before filing; if invalid, file the change of registered agent first or simultaneously.
Mistake 4: Missing the reinstatement window
Utah permits reinstatement within 24 months of administrative dissolution. Beyond that window, the entity name may be released to other registrants, and what was administrative dissolution effectively becomes permanent. Past the window, the only path back is a new entity formation under the same or different name, which carries its own complications around contracts, EIN continuity, banking, and historical compliance records.
How File.Business Handles Utah Reinstatement
File.Business runs Utah reinstatements as a managed process. We pull the entity's current Utah record from the Utah Division of Corporations, calculate exact back-fees including all missed annual filings and accumulated late penalties, order any required tax clearance certificate from the state revenue department, bring the registered agent current (acting as the Utah registered agent at no charge during the reinstatement engagement), file the Application for Reinstatement along with all back-filings through corporations.utah.gov, pay all fees from the authorized payment method, and confirm acceptance. The entity returns to active status with a clean compliance forecast and re-enrollment in ongoing monitoring.
What this looks like in practice
For a Utah entity dissolved three years ago with missed annual reports each year, the typical engagement runs: day 1 entity record pull and back-fee calculation; days 2-7 tax clearance request (if required); day 7-10 registered agent update and reinstatement package preparation; day 10-12 submission to Utah Division of Corporations; day 12 through 5-10 business days acceptance and confirmation. The total elapsed time varies primarily based on tax clearance processing speed, which is outside File.Business's control but tracked end-to-end with status updates to the entity owner.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to reinstate a Utah LLC or corporation?
The base Utah Application for Reinstatement fee is $70. Total cost depends on back-fees: all missed Annual Renewals ($18/year) + $10 late penalty per year. Total reinstatement costs in Utah typically range from $70 for a recent dissolution to several thousand dollars for entities dissolved 5+ years ago with accumulated back-fees.
How long does Utah reinstatement take?
Processing the Application for Reinstatement alone takes 5-10 business days once the Utah Division of Corporations receives a complete package. Total elapsed time from engagement to active status typically runs 2-6 weeks, with tax clearance processing being the longest variable component where required.
Is tax clearance required for Utah reinstatement?
No separate tax clearance certificate is required in Utah, though all state-level tax obligations should be current.
How long do I have to reinstate a Utah entity after dissolution?
Utah permits reinstatement within 24 months of the administrative dissolution date. Beyond any applicable statutory window, the entity name may be released and the only path back is a new entity formation.
Can I keep my original EIN after reinstating a Utah entity?
Yes, in most cases. Reinstatement restores the original entity to active status, so the EIN and banking relationships continue. The IRS treats the entity as continuous through the dissolved period for federal tax purposes, though you should consult a tax advisor about any returns or filings missed during dissolution.
Can File.Business handle my Utah reinstatement?
Yes. File.Business runs Utah reinstatements end-to-end: back-fee calculation, tax clearance ordering, registered agent update, Application for Reinstatement filing through corporations.utah.gov, payment of all fees, and confirmation of active status. The reinstated entity is enrolled in ongoing compliance monitoring to prevent recurrence.
Ready to reinstate your Utah entity?
File.Business handles the entire Utah reinstatement process: back-fee calculation, tax clearance, registered agent update, Application for Reinstatement filing, and re-enrollment in compliance monitoring. One engagement, end to end.