Georgia LLC at a glance — Formation by the Numbers
Key fees, timing, and compliance rules for forming a Georgia LLC with the Georgia Secretary of State.
| State filing fee | $100 |
|---|---|
| Processing time | 5-7 business days online |
| Filing agency | Georgia Secretary of State |
| Registered agent | Required — physical GA street address |
| Annual report | Annual Registration — $50, due April 1 |
| Franchise / business tax | None |
| Registered agent (ClearFormation) | Included with formation — $0 year one |
| Operating agreement | Included with ClearFormation |
What is a Georgia LLC?
A Georgia LLC is a limited liability company formed under Georgia law and registered with the Georgia Secretary of State. It separates your personal assets from business debts, defaults to pass-through taxation at the federal level, and is the most common structure for small businesses, freelancers, and holding companies.
Atlanta hub for logistics, fintech, and media. Forming in Georgia makes sense when you live or operate there, hold Georgia property, or choose GA for its fee structure and rules. Non-US founders can own 100% of a Georgia LLC with no residency requirement.
Benefits of a Georgia LLC — benefits of an LLC
- Limited liability — members are generally not personally liable for LLC debts and lawsuits.
- Pass-through tax — profits flow to members' returns unless you elect C-Corp or S-Corp treatment.
- Flexible ownership — single-member or multi-member; no member cap like S-Corps.
- US banking — LLC + EIN unlocks Mercury, Relay, Stripe, and other business accounts.
Georgia LLC pros and cons — drawbacks of starting an LLC in Georgia
Drawbacks to weigh before you file:
- Self-employment tax on active LLC profits (unless you elect S-Corp payroll later).
- Georgia does not impose a separate LLC franchise tax, but federal and local taxes still apply.
- Not ideal for US venture capital — investors typically expect a Delaware C-Corp.
Types of LLCs in Georgia
- Single-member LLC — one owner; taxed as a disregarded entity by default. Single-member LLC guide.
- Multi-member LLC — partnership taxation by default (Form 1065 + K-1s). Multi-member LLC guide.
- Member-managed vs manager-managed — declare in your operating agreement who runs day-to-day operations.
- Professional LLC (PLLC) — may be required for licensed professions; check Georgia Secretary of State rules.
Is a Georgia LLC right for you?
Compare alternatives before filing:
- LLC vs sole proprietorship — liability shield vs simplicity.
- C-Corp in Georgia — better for VC and stock options.
- S-Corp vs LLC — payroll tax savings with added compliance.
- Best state to form an LLC — if you're not sure Georgia is the right state.
Before you file: Essential Georgia LLC requirements
Before submitting Articles of Organization to the Georgia Secretary of State, confirm you have: (1) a distinguishable LLC name with the required designator, (2) a Georgia registered agent with a physical GA street address, (3) the $100 state filing fee, and (4) a decision on member-managed vs manager-managed structure. Non-US founders do not need a US address or SSN — only the registered agent must be in-state.
Management structure: member-managed vs. manager-managed
Georgia lets you declare whether the LLC is member-managed (all owners run day-to-day decisions) or manager-managed (appointed managers operate the business). Most small GA LLCs are member-managed. Choose manager-managed if you have passive investors or want a cleaner separation between ownership and operations. Record the choice in your operating agreement and formation filing.
Registering an out-of-state LLC in Georgia
If your LLC was formed in another state but you operate in Georgia, you typically need to foreign-qualify with the Georgia Secretary of State. That means filing a Certificate of Authority (or equivalent), appointing a Georgia registered agent, and paying a state fee. Domestic formation in GA is different — you file Articles of Organization as a new entity.
Georgia Secretary of State Contact Information
File your Articles of Organization with the Georgia Secretary of State. Search their business entity database to confirm name availability before you submit. After approval, keep stamped formation documents with your operating agreement and EIN letter — you need them for banking and compliance.
How to start an LLC in Georgia
Registering an LLC in Georgia means filing Articles of Organization with the Georgia Secretary of State and paying the $100 state fee. You need a Georgia registered agent with a physical GA address before the state will approve your filing. Most founders complete these seven steps in 5-7 business days online.
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Step 1: Name your Georgia LLC
Your LLC name must include "LLC" or "Limited Liability Company" and be distinguishable from existing Georgia entities on Georgia Secretary of State records. Search the state database before filing — restricted words like "bank" or "insurance" may need approval. ClearFormation runs a name availability check before we submit your Articles of Organization.
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Step 2: Appoint a registered agent for your Georgia LLC
Georgia requires a registered agent with a physical street address in GA — available during business hours to accept lawsuits and state mail. You can be your own agent if you have an in-state address, but most founders use a commercial service for privacy. ClearFormation provides registered agent service in all 50 states, included with formation.
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Step 3: File Georgia Articles of Organization
Submit Articles of Organization (or the Georgia equivalent) with the $100 state filing fee. Standard processing through the Georgia Secretary of State is 5-7 business days online. You'll list your LLC name, registered agent, principal address, and whether the LLC is member-managed or manager-managed. ClearFormation prepares and files online on your behalf.
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Step 4: Create an operating agreement for your Georgia LLC
Not legally required in Georgia, but every LLC should have one. It defines ownership percentages, voting rights, profit splits, and what happens if a member leaves — and it's core evidence that your LLC is separate from you personally. Banks often require it. Included with ClearFormation.
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Step 5: Apply for an EIN for your Georgia LLC
An EIN (Employer Identification Number) is required to open a US business bank account, hire employees, and file federal taxes. The IRS issues EINs for free; ClearFormation can file Form SS-4 for you as an optional add-on — including for non-US founders without an SSN.
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Step 6: Get the licenses and permits your business needs
State LLC approval doesn't replace city, county, or professional licenses. After formation, check local Georgia requirements for your industry — contractors, restaurants, healthcare, and financial services often need separate permits. Many cities require a general business license even for home-based companies.
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Step 7: File your annual reports and stay compliant
Georgia requires the Annual Registration ($50), due April 1. ClearFormation tracks deadlines and pre-fills your report for approval.
Questions? Book a call
Georgia LLC fees and ongoing requirements — cost of starting an LLC in Georgia
Forming an LLC in Georgia has three cost layers: the one-time state filing fee, ongoing state compliance (the annual registration and any franchise tax), and federal-level requirements like an EIN.
One-time Georgia formation cost
The Georgia LLC filing fee is $100, paid to the Georgia Secretary of State when you submit your Articles of Organization. You'll also want an operating agreement to define ownership and management — included with every ClearFormation LLC.
Ongoing Georgia LLC cost
The Annual Registration is $50, due April 1. LLCs are pass-through by default, so profits flow to your personal federal return unless you elect S-Corp or C-Corp taxation.
What's included with ClearFormation
Georgia registered agent service is bundled into every formation plan — no separate annual RA fee. EIN filing is available as an optional add-on (we can file it for non-US founders without an SSN). An operating agreement template is included so you have the governance paperwork banks and partners expect from day one.
Fees reviewed against Georgia Secretary of State (last reviewed June 2026).
Taxes for Your Georgia LLC — Georgia LLC taxation
Federally, a Georgia LLC is a pass-through entity by default — profits are reported on members' personal returns, plus 15.3% self-employment tax on active business income. At the state level: Georgia does not impose a separate LLC franchise tax on most small LLCs. You must also file the Annual Registration ($50) with the Georgia Secretary of State.
You can elect C-Corp (Form 8832) or S-Corp (Form 2553) taxation if it saves money. Read how LLCs pay taxes for the full picture. If you operate outside Georgia, you may need to foreign-qualify in other states.
Georgia Business Resources
Official GA filings go through the Georgia Secretary of State. Use these starting points when you verify fees, search entity names, or check good standing before banking or contracting.
- Georgia Secretary of State — file Articles of Organization, amendments, and annual registration filings.
- Entity name search — confirm your LLC name is available before filing ($100 state fee is non-refundable on rejected names).
- Georgia registered agent — required on every formation and foreign qualification filing.
- Form a C-Corp in Georgia — if you are raising venture capital instead of operating as an LLC.
Common Georgia LLC mistakes
- Skipping the operating agreement. Banks and courts expect written governance. Included with ClearFormation.
- Mixing personal and business funds. Weakens your liability shield.
- Missing the annual registration. Can cost you good standing or trigger administrative dissolution.
- Acting as your own registered agent while traveling. Use a commercial GA registered agent.
Georgia LLC pricing
One simple plan — pay only for what you need. Add EIN or annual report filing only if you want them.
Business Formation + Registered Agent
+ $100 GA state filing fee · Renews at $150/yr for Registered Agent
Everything you need to launch your Georgia GA company.
Add EIN or annual reports separately only if you need them.
- Georgia LLC formation ($150 one-time)
- GA Registered Agent — 1 year included ($150/yr after)
Optional add-ons
EIN / Federal Tax ID filing
+ $50 one-timeWe file IRS Form SS-4 and deliver your CP 575 confirmation letter. Required to open a US business bank account.
Annual report filing + reminders
+ $50/yr (+ state fee)We track your Georgia due date, pre-fill the report, send 90/60/30-day reminders, and file after you approve.
You'll pick add-ons in the wizard — no add-on is required.
Next steps after forming your Georgia LLC
Getting the stamped Articles of Organization back from the Georgia Secretary of State is the legal birth of the company — but it's only step one. The next 30 days are where most founders cut corners and create problems that surface at tax time or when a bank asks for paperwork. Here's the order we recommend for a Georgia LLC.
1. Adopt an operating agreement
The operating agreement is your LLC's internal rulebook: ownership percentages, voting rights, profit splits, how new members join, and what happens if a member leaves. Georgia doesn't legally require one, but every LLC should have one. Banks routinely ask for it when opening a business account, and single-member LLCs need one too — it's core evidence that your LLC is separate from you personally. ClearFormation includes an operating agreement template with every formation.
2. Get your EIN and open a business bank account
The LLC needs its own EIN (Form SS-4) to open a US business bank account, hire, and file federal taxes. Take the stamped Articles of Organization, EIN letter, and operating agreement to the bank. Commingling personal and business funds is the fastest way to weaken your liability shield and expose yourself personally to business debts. EIN filing is available as an optional add-on through ClearFormation — including for non-US founders without an SSN.
3. Lock in tax and compliance calendars
Federal: a single-member LLC reports on Schedule C with your personal Form 1040; a multi-member LLC files Form 1065 and issues K-1s to members. State: the Annual Registration is $50, due April 1. If you'd rather be taxed as an S-Corp, file IRS Form 2553 within 75 days of formation (or by March 15 for the current tax year).
4. BOI report — only if foreign-formed
As of March 21, 2025, FinCEN exempted domestic US entities from the Beneficial Ownership Information report. A Georgia-formed LLC does not file a BOI report. If you later register a foreign-formed entity to do business in the US, that foreign entity must file within 30 days of US registration.
Annual cadence: Annual Registration renewal, federal tax return, and an updated member ledger if ownership has changed. Keep business and personal finances separate — that's what preserves the liability shield.
LLC vs C-Corp in Georgia: which should you form?
Most Georgia founders ask this exact question. Both entities give you the same personal-liability shield. The real differences are taxes, ownership, and the kind of capital you can raise.
Form an LLC in Georgia if
- • You're owner-operated or have a small group of founders and want pass-through tax (no corporate-level tax).
- • You don't plan to raise from US institutional venture capital.
- • You want minimal ongoing paperwork — no required board meetings, no shareholder formalities.
- • You're a consulting business, ecommerce store, agency, real-estate holding company, or freelancer.
Form a C-Corp in Georgia if
- • You plan to raise from venture capital, angels via SAFEs, or eventually go public.
- • You want to issue stock options to employees (an ISO plan requires a C-Corp).
- • You need multiple share classes (preferred for investors, common for founders).
- • You're targeting a strategic acquisition where the acquirer expects a clean cap table.
Rule of thumb: if you're raising priced rounds from US VCs, the market default is a Delaware C-Corp. An LLC in Georgia is the right call for operating businesses that don't need the Delaware-VC track.
Georgia LLC FAQs — Frequently asked questions
Also for Georgia founders: Form a C-Corp in Georgia · Georgia registered agent
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