What closing an LLC in Louisiana actually involves.
Member vote and resolution
Every Louisiana LLC closure starts with a member vote per the Operating Agreement. Most agreements require unanimous written consent for dissolution. We draft the resolution and consent forms.
Louisiana tax clearance
Louisiana requires tax clearance from the Louisiana Department of Revenue before the Secretary of State will accept the Articles of Dissolution. Louisiana requires a tax clearance from the Department of Revenue before dissolution can be accepted by the SOS.
Final federal returns
File a final Form 1065 (multi-member) or Schedule C (single-member, disregarded) with the FINAL box checked. Final 941, final 940, final W-2 / W-3 if you had employees. All before EIN cancellation.
Louisiana Articles of Dissolution
The centerpiece filing with the Louisiana Secretary of State. State fee passes through. We prepare, file, and return the stamped Articles to your dashboard. This is the same wizard as our dissolution service.
Cancel state tax accounts
Close Louisiana sales tax account, withholding account (where applicable), SUI account, and any industry-specific tax registrations. Leaving them open generates phantom delinquency notices for years.
Cancel EIN with the IRS
Mail a closure letter to the IRS that references the EIN, legal name, and the reason for closing. The EIN itself is never reassigned, but the IRS marks the account closed so no further returns are expected.
A clean handoff, in 7 steps.
Hold the member vote
Per the Louisiana LLC statute and your Operating Agreement, members vote to dissolve. Most agreements require unanimous written consent. Document the resolution in the corporate record.
Wind down operations
Stop accepting new business, complete in-flight obligations, collect outstanding receivables, and inventory remaining assets. The wind-down period can last weeks to months depending on the business.
Settle creditors and notify in Louisiana
Louisiana requires reasonable notice to known creditors before distributing assets. Newspaper publication notice is optional but limits the period creditors have to bring claims after dissolution.
Obtain tax clearance
Louisiana requires tax clearance from the Louisiana Department of Revenue before the Secretary of State will accept the Articles of Dissolution. Louisiana requires a tax clearance from the Department of Revenue before dissolution can be accepted by the SOS.
File Articles of Dissolution with Louisiana SOS
The formal SOS filing. State fee passes through. We use the same wizard as our dissolution service. Processing varies by state, typically 1 to 4 weeks.
File final federal returns
Final Form 1065 or Schedule C with the FINAL box checked. Final 941 / 940 / W-2 / W-3 if you had employees. K-1s issued to all members covering the final partial year.
Distribute remaining assets and cancel EIN
Distribute remaining assets per the Operating Agreement waterfall (creditors first, then capital accounts). Mail the IRS closure letter referencing the EIN. Cancel Louisiana state licenses and any city / county permits.
File the dissolution, or handle the entire wind-down.
Closing an entity properly avoids personal liability for unresolved obligations. Pick the level of care this needs.
- Articles of Dissolution prepared and filed in Louisiana
- Pre-dissolution checklist: confirm taxes settled, debts addressed, votes recorded
- State-stamped dissolution receipt to your vault
- Plain-English review before submission
- Filing accuracy guarantee
- Everything in Standard Dissolution
- Final Articles Annual Report filed (if state requires before dissolution)
- IRS Form 966 prepared (corporate dissolution notification)
- Final tax-clearance letter requested from state Department of Revenue
- Registered Agent cancellation coordinated post-dissolution
- Permanent record vault (7-year retention for audit/litigation)
- Priority human support through full wind-down
Common questions.
What is the difference between dissolving and closing a Louisiana LLC?
They describe the same goal from two angles: closing is the whole process of winding down, and dissolution is the specific legal filing with Louisiana that formally ends the entity. A complete close means more than the filing: settling debts, closing tax accounts, filing final returns, and canceling licenses. We handle the full Louisiana close, not just the one form, so nothing keeps running after you think you are done. See the compliance side too.
How long does it take to fully close a Louisiana LLC?
The dissolution filing itself can clear in days to a few weeks, but the full close takes longer because of tax clearance, final returns, and creditor notice periods. If Louisiana requires tax clearance, that is usually the long pole. We sequence the steps so they do not stall each other and give you a realistic Louisiana timeline for the complete wind-down rather than just the filing.
Does Louisiana require tax clearance before dissolution?
In many states, yes: Louisiana may require proof from the tax authority that you owe nothing before accepting the dissolution. It is often the slowest step, so we start it early. Where Louisiana does not require it, we file directly. Either way we tell you the Louisiana path upfront so a tax hold does not surprise you at the very end of the process.
What happens if I just stop using my Louisiana LLC?
It does not close; it drifts into bad standing while Louisiana keeps billing annual report fees and penalties, and eventually dissolves it administratively on the state's terms. That can leave tax and liability loose ends. A proper close ends the obligations cleanly, and if Louisiana already dissolved you, a reinstatement may be needed first to close correctly.
Do I need to cancel my EIN with the IRS to close?
Your EIN is never reused, but you close the IRS business account by filing final returns marked final and can send a closure letter. Dissolving with Louisiana does not notify the IRS. We flag the final federal steps so the entity is closed on both sides, not just the state, and no return keeps being expected.
What if my Louisiana LLC has unpaid debts at closure?
You generally must settle or make provision for debts and notify creditors before distributing anything to members; paying yourself ahead of creditors can create personal liability. An insolvent LLC has its own wind-down rules. We help you sequence the Louisiana close so creditor claims are handled properly and the distribution to members is defensible rather than clawback-prone.
Can I close my Louisiana LLC if I have unfiled annual reports?
Usually you must bring filings current first: Louisiana often will not process a dissolution for an entity that is behind, and back annual report fees may be owed. We catch up the required Louisiana filings, or fold them into the close, so the dissolution is accepted rather than bounced for a delinquency you did not know about.
Do I need to cancel my Louisiana licenses and permits separately?
Yes. Dissolving the entity does not cancel local business licenses, sales tax accounts, or registrations in other states, which can keep generating fees. Part of a clean Louisiana close is canceling each. We identify the accounts to close so nothing keeps billing after the LLC itself is gone.
What if I want to keep the Louisiana LLC name for later?
Once you dissolve, Louisiana can release the name for others to take, so if you may use it again, options include keeping a minimal entity active, reserving the name where Louisiana allows, or trademarking the brand. We explain what Louisiana offers so you do not lose a name you plan to reuse, and can point you toward reforming cleanly if you return.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here: we keep the rest tracked.