LLC publication requirements by state
Some states require extra post-formation steps we don't handle directly — like publishing a notice in a local newspaper. Check the list below so nothing catches you by surprise.
ClearFormation does not handle publication.
Publication costs vary wildly by county — from $0 (Maricopa/Pima in AZ) to $1,600+ (NYC counties). You arrange it directly with the county clerk and the approved newspaper(s). We list every state's rule below so nothing catches you off guard.
State-by-state requirements
Find your state below for the exact deadline, where to publish, and estimated cost.
All other US states have no publication requirement. Reviewed against state secretary of state sources (last reviewed June 2026).
How to do this yourself — step by step
You handle publication directly with the county and newspaper(s). It's not complicated, but the steps are easy to miss. Here's the exact process most founders follow:
1. Call your county clerk
Use the county where your LLC's office address sits. Ask: "Which newspapers are approved for LLC publication in this county?" In Arizona you can instead check the Corporation Commission's approved list online.
2. Get a quote from the approved newspaper(s)
NY requires two papers (one daily, one weekly) chosen by the county clerk. AZ and NE typically use one paper of general circulation. Most papers offer a turnkey package — they draft the notice from your filing and handle the affidavit.
3. Pay the paper and run the notice for the required weeks
NY: 6 consecutive weeks. AZ: 3 consecutive publications. NE: 3 consecutive weeks. You pay the newspaper directly — the cost depends entirely on the county, not on us.
4. File the affidavit of publication with the state
The newspaper sends you a signed affidavit when the run is complete. In NY, file the Certificate of Publication + affidavits with the Department of State ($50 fee). In AZ and NE there's nothing further to file — keep the affidavit in your records.
Why these three states still require publication
Publication requirements predate the internet — they go back to the era when buying space in a local newspaper was the only way to give the public legal notice that a new business had been formed in their county. Most states quietly retired the rule. New York, Arizona, and Nebraska still keep it on the books, mostly because in-state newspapers lobby successfully to preserve the revenue stream. The legal effect is the same as it ever was: until the notice runs and the affidavit is filed, your LLC is partially impaired.
How much does publication actually cost?
- New York City counties (NY, Bronx, Kings, Queens): $1,200–$1,800 typical, plus the $50 state Certificate of Publication filing fee.
- Upstate NY counties (Albany, Saratoga, Onondaga, etc.): $80–$400.
- Arizona (Maricopa and Pima counties): $0 — waived by statute. The Corporation Commission publishes the notice for you.
- Arizona (other counties): $30–$200.
- Nebraska: $40–$150 depending on the paper.
Many NYC founders deliberately list a registered agent address in an upstate county to keep publication costs in the $100s rather than $1,000s. It's legal as long as the registered agent is genuinely located there — ask your agent before relying on it.
What happens if you skip publication
New York: your LLC's authority to carry on, conduct, or transact business in New York is suspended. You can't sue in NY courts (though you can still be sued), can't enforce contracts in NY, and risk fines if discovered. The LLC stays alive — just legally impaired until you complete publication and file the Certificate.
Arizona: failure to publish doesn't dissolve the LLC, but it's a statutory violation that can affect enforceability. The Corporation Commission may flag the LLC's record.
Nebraska: the Secretary of State can administratively dissolve the LLC for repeated noncompliance.
Common mistakes
- Missing the NY 120-day deadline
The clock starts at formation, not at the point you remember. Schedule publication the week the state approves your LLC.
- Picking your own NY newspapers
Only papers the county clerk has specifically designated will be accepted — picking any city paper at random gets the filing rejected.
- Forgetting the Certificate of Publication
Running the ad isn't enough in NY. You also have to file the certificate plus affidavits with the Department of State and pay the $50 fee.
- Assuming Maricopa applies statewide
The Arizona waiver is county-specific. Form in Yavapai or Coconino and you still owe publication.
- Listing an NYC county address you don't need
Your LLC's office address sets the publication county. Using an upstate registered agent address (where the agent actually is) can drop your bill from $1,600 to $200.
