Articles of Organization, explained
The Articles of Organization is the one-page form that legally creates your LLC. Every state has one, though the name varies: Certificate of Formation in Delaware and Texas, Certificate of Organization in Massachusetts, Articles of Organization everywhere else. The required fields are remarkably consistent.
It is the only document the government requires to bring the company into existence. The operating agreement, the EIN, the business bank account, and the licenses all come after, and none of them are part of this filing. Understanding exactly what goes on the form (and what does not) is the difference between an approval in two business days and a rejection that resets the clock.
What the form actually does
Filing the Articles of Organization is a request to the state to recognize a new limited liability company. When the Secretary of State (or, in a handful of states, a different business-filing agency) accepts it, three things happen at once: the LLC legally exists, the name is reserved against anyone else in that state, and the liability shield separating the owners' personal assets from business debts switches on. Nothing about the form makes the business profitable, compliant with licensing rules, or tax-registered. It only creates the legal entity.
Because the document becomes part of the permanent public record, everything written on it is searchable by anyone. That single fact drives most of the privacy decisions covered below: the registered agent address, the principal address, and (in states that require them) the member names are all visible to the public the moment the filing is approved.
Required on every state's form
- LLC name. Must include a designator: "LLC", "L.L.C.", or "Limited Liability Company". It cannot duplicate or be confusingly similar to an existing entity registered in the state, and most states block words implying a bank, insurer, or government agency without extra approval. Running the state's free name-availability search before filing prevents the single most common rejection.
- Registered agent name + physical address. A person or company that agrees to accept legal mail and state notices on the LLC's behalf. The address must be a physical street address in the state of formation; PO boxes are rejected everywhere. The agent must be available during normal business hours.
- Principal office address. The LLC's main business address. It can be a home, an office, or in many states the registered agent's address. This becomes public, which is why privacy-focused owners use a commercial agent's address here.
- Organizer signature. The person submitting the paperwork. The organizer does not have to be an owner of the LLC; a formation service or attorney commonly signs as organizer on the client's behalf.
Required in some states
- Member or manager names and addresses. Required in California, Florida, New York, Texas, and others. Skipped entirely in Wyoming, New Mexico, and Nevada, which is why those three are the go-to "anonymous LLC" states.
- Management structure. Many forms ask whether the LLC is member-managed (owners run it) or manager-managed (a designated manager runs it). Single-member LLCs are almost always member-managed.
- Purpose statement. Most states accept the catch-all "any lawful purpose"; a few (and certain regulated industries) want a specific description.
- Duration / dissolution date. Only required if the LLC has a fixed end date. The default in every state is perpetual existence.
- Effective date. Some states let you delay the start date, which is useful for forming in December but starting the tax clock on January 1 to avoid a short first-year return.
Same document, different name in every state
The biggest source of confusion is the name on the form. The document is functionally identical across the country, but the title changes by state. When forming in more than one state, expect the label to change while the contents stay the same.
| Document name | States that use it |
|---|---|
| Articles of Organization | Most states (CA, FL, NY, AZ, CO, IL, OH, and ~35 others) |
| Certificate of Formation | Delaware, Texas, Washington, New Jersey, Mississippi, Alabama, Maine |
| Certificate of Organization | Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Utah |
| Articles of Formation | A small number of states use this wording |
| Certificate of Limited Liability Company | Used by a few states in older statutes |
How to file: online, mail, or in person
Nearly every state now offers an online business-filing portal, and online is almost always the fastest and cheapest route. The three filing channels:
- Online portal. The form is validated as you type, fees are paid by card, and approval usually lands in one to three business days. Some states (Colorado, Florida, Tennessee) approve instantly.
- Mail. A printed form plus a check. Adds one to three weeks and surfaces rejections slowly, since you only learn of a problem after the document is reviewed by hand.
- In person / walk-in. Available in some state capitals, occasionally with same-day counter service for an expedite fee.
The filing fee itself ranges from $35 (Montana) to $500 (Massachusetts), with most states landing between $50 and $150. That fee is one-time. The recurring costs (annual reports, franchise taxes, registered agent renewal) come later and are covered in the full cost breakdown.
Expedited processing
Roughly half the states offer to move a filing to the front of the queue for an extra fee. Tiers vary widely: a flat $25–$100 in most states, but Delaware runs four tiers up to a two-hour turnaround for $1,000 and a one-hour option for $1,500. Expediting only speeds up the state's review — it does nothing for the steps that come after approval, so it is rarely worth it unless a bank, investor, or contract deadline genuinely depends on the formation date.
Why filings get rejected, and how to avoid it
Most rejections trace to a short list of fixable errors. Catching them before submission is the entire game:
- Name conflict. The chosen name is too close to an existing entity. Fix: run the state name-availability search first, and consider reserving the name.
- Missing or invalid registered agent. No agent listed, a PO box used, or an out-of-state address. Fix: confirm the agent has consented and uses an in-state street address.
- Omitted signature. The organizer line is blank. Fix: sign before submitting.
- Wrong or missing fee. The check amount does not match the current fee schedule. Fix: verify the fee on the state site the day you file.
- Prohibited words. "Bank", "insurance", "trust", "university" and similar require special approval. Fix: drop the restricted word or secure the agency sign-off.
Online portals catch most of these at submission, so the rejection is instant and easy to correct. Mailed filings can take weeks to bounce back, which is the strongest argument for filing online.
What you get back, and what comes next
After approval the state returns proof the LLC exists: a stamped Certificate of Formation (Delaware/Texas), an Acknowledgment of Filing, or a stamped copy of the Articles. Banks ask for this document when opening the business account, and lenders and payment processors often want it too.
Approval is the starting line, not the finish. The standard next steps are: get an EIN from the IRS (free, and required to open a bank account or hire), draft an operating agreement even if the state does not require one, open a dedicated business bank account to preserve the liability shield, and check whether the state or city requires a business license. Owners forming outside their home state also need to look at foreign qualification in the states where they actually do business.
Amending the Articles later
The Articles are not locked in stone. To change the LLC's name, registered agent, or stated purpose, file Articles of Amendment (sometimes called a Certificate of Amendment) with a fee that typically runs $25–$150. Internal changes like transferring ownership percentages, swapping managers, or updating profit splits live in the operating agreement and usually require no state filing at all. Knowing which changes are public (amendment required) versus private (operating agreement only) saves both fees and exposure.
Single-member vs multi-member: what changes on the form
The number of owners barely changes the Articles of Organization itself, which surprises a lot of first-time filers. A single-member LLC and a five-member LLC use the same form and pay the same filing fee. The differences show up elsewhere:
- On the form. In states that require member names, a multi-member LLC simply lists more people. The management box is more likely to be checked "manager-managed" when there are passive investors. Otherwise the form is identical.
- After the form. A single-member LLC is taxed as a "disregarded entity" by default (profits flow onto the owner's personal return), while a multi-member LLC defaults to partnership taxation and must file Form 1065. This is a tax-classification consequence, not something written on the Articles.
- Operating agreement weight. For a single-member LLC the operating agreement mostly documents the liability separation; for a multi-member LLC it is the contract that prevents partner disputes, so it carries far more weight.
The takeaway: do not over-think the formation document based on owner count. The form is the same. The structural decisions live in the operating agreement and in the tax election.
Professional and licensed-industry LLCs
Law, medicine, accounting, architecture, engineering, and other state-licensed professions cannot use a standard LLC in many states. Instead they file as a Professional Limited Liability Company (PLLC), which uses a near-identical form with two extra requirements: every member usually must hold the relevant professional license, and the state licensing board often has to approve the formation before or alongside the Secretary of State filing. The liability shield of a PLLC protects against business debts but does not shield a licensed professional from personal malpractice claims. Anyone in a regulated field should confirm whether their state mandates a PLLC before filing a plain LLC, because converting later means re-filing.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between Articles of Organization and an LLC operating agreement?
Articles of Organization is the public-filing document submitted to the Secretary of State to create the LLC. It is one or two pages, lists the LLC's name, registered agent, and principal address, and becomes part of the state's public business record. The operating agreement is a separate, private, internal contract that governs how the LLC actually runs — who owns what, how decisions are made, what happens at dissolution. The Articles of Organization is required to be filed; the operating agreement is never filed with any government agency and is kept with the LLC's internal records.
Do I need an attorney to file Articles of Organization?
No. Articles of Organization is a standard form. Every state provides a fillable PDF or online-portal version, and most filings are completed in under 30 minutes. Attorneys add value when the LLC structure is unusual — multi-state operations, complex ownership, regulated industries, or planned outside investment. For a single-member or small multi-member LLC with straightforward facts, the form is simple enough that the filing fee is the only cost.
What happens if my Articles of Organization is rejected?
Most rejections are for fixable reasons: name conflict with an existing entity, missing registered agent designation, omitted required signature, or incorrect filing fee. The Secretary of State sends a rejection notice with the specific reason, the filing fee is typically refunded or held against a re-file, and the LLC owner submits a corrected document. Online filings usually flag issues at submission so rejection is caught immediately. Mailed filings take one to three weeks to surface a rejection.
Can I change my Articles of Organization after filing?
Yes, via a separate filing called Articles of Amendment (sometimes called a Certificate of Amendment). The amendment lists the specific changes — new LLC name, new registered agent, new business purpose — and is filed with the Secretary of State along with an amendment fee that typically ranges from $25 to $150 depending on state. Internal changes like ownership transfers or operating-agreement updates do not require an amendment to Articles of Organization.
How long does it take to get Articles of Organization approved?
Online filings in most states are approved within one to three business days. Some states (Colorado, Florida, Tennessee) process instantly. Mailed filings take one to three weeks. Expedited processing — same-day or 24-hour approval — is available in roughly half the states for an additional fee that ranges from $25 to $1,000 depending on the state and the expedited tier. Delaware offers four expedited tiers including a two-hour option for $1,000.
Why is the form called Certificate of Formation in Delaware and Texas?
The name of the document varies by state but the purpose is identical. Delaware and Texas use Certificate of Formation. Massachusetts uses Certificate of Organization. Most other states use Articles of Organization. A few states use Articles of Formation. All of these terms refer to the one or two-page public-record document that creates the LLC at the state level. When filing across multiple states, expect the form name to change but the content to be substantially the same.