Connecticut Registered Agent

    Connecticut registered agent

    Physical CT address · same-day digital mail

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    Connecticut registered agent at a glance

    Every Connecticut LLC and corporation must maintain a registered agent on file with the Connecticut Secretary of the State.

    RequirementPhysical CT street address (no PO box)
    AvailabilityNormal business hours, year-round
    Filing agencyConnecticut Secretary of the State
    Applies toDomestic and foreign-qualified LLCs and corporations
    Typical standalone cost$50–$300 per year (included with ClearFormation formation)

    What is a Connecticut registered agent?

    A Connecticut registered agent is the person or company your LLC or corporation designates to receive service of process (lawsuits, subpoenas) and official mail from the Connecticut Secretary of the State. The agent's address is public on your formation record — not your home address if you use a commercial service.

    Proximity to the New York metro and a stable legal system. Whether you formed in Connecticut or registered a foreign entity to do business there, you need an in-state agent for as long as the entity exists.

    Who needs a Connecticut registered agent?

    Every business entity on file with the Connecticut Secretary of the State needs a Connecticut registered agent — there are no exemptions for size or ownership structure. This includes:

    • LLCs formed in Connecticut (single-member and multi-member)
    • C-Corporations and S-Corporations incorporated in CT
    • Foreign LLCs and corporations registered to do business in Connecticut
    • Professional LLCs (PLLCs) and professional corporations (PCs)

    If you are forming a new entity, you list the agent on your Articles of Organization or Incorporation. If you already operate in Connecticut without a valid agent on record, file a change-of-agent immediately to restore good standing.

    Why is a registered agent required in Connecticut?

    US states require a registered agent so courts and government agencies have a reliable in-state contact for your business. If someone sues your company, a process server must be able to deliver papers to a physical CT address during business hours — not a P.O. box and not an owner who might be traveling abroad.

    Without an active registered agent on file with the Connecticut Secretary of the State, your entity can miss annual report notices, fall out of good standing, or face administrative dissolution. For non-US founders, a commercial Connecticut registered agent is especially important because you cannot personally receive legal mail at a CT address.

    Why use a commercial Connecticut registered agent?

    • Privacy — your personal address stays off public Connecticut Secretary of the State databases.
    • Reliability — staffed coverage so you never miss legal service when traveling.
    • Compliance — missing agent updates is a common path to administrative dissolution.
    • Non-US founders — you can own the company from abroad; only the agent must be in CT.
    • Same-day digital delivery — legal and state mail uploaded to your dashboard with email alerts.

    Can I be my own registered agent in Connecticut?

    Technically yes, if you have a physical street address in Connecticut (not a PO box) and you're available there during normal business hours. In practice, most founders use a commercial Connecticut registered agent for three reasons:

    • Privacy. The registered agent's address becomes public on Connecticut business filings. Using a service keeps your home address off the public record.
    • No missed mail. If you're not physically present when a process server arrives, you can lose a lawsuit by default.
    • You can move or travel. A commercial CT registered agent stays the same even if you relocate, change phone numbers, or spend months abroad.

    Who can serve as a Connecticut registered agent?

    Connecticut allows an individual who is a Connecticut resident with a physical street address in the state, or a business entity authorized to act as a registered agent in CT. The agent must consent to the appointment. Most founders choose a commercial registered agent service because it meets the physical-address and availability requirements without listing their home on public records.

    PO boxes, mailbox stores, and most virtual office addresses do not qualify. The address must be a real location where someone can accept legal papers in person during business hours.

    What a Connecticut registered agent does

    1. 1

      Accepts service of process in Connecticut

      If your company is sued or served with a subpoena, the registered agent receives the documents on your behalf at their Connecticut address. Process servers deliver to the address on file with the Connecticut Secretary of the State — not your personal mailbox.

    2. 2

      Receives official Connecticut Secretary of the State mail

      Annual report reminders, tax notices, and compliance correspondence are delivered to the registered agent and forwarded to you digitally the same day.

    3. 3

      Keeps your home address off the public record

      The registered agent's address is what appears on public Connecticut business filings — not your personal address. This matters for privacy and for non-US founders who don't have a US home address.

    4. 4

      Maintains continuous availability

      Connecticut requires the agent to be available during normal business hours, year-round. A commercial service avoids gaps when you travel, move, or work from another country.

    5. 5

      Helps you stay in good standing

      Missed legal mail can lead to default judgments or administrative dissolution. An active registered agent is a baseline compliance requirement for every CT LLC and corporation.

    6. 6

      Provides a reliable statutory contact

      Courts and the Connecticut Secretary of the State need a fixed in-state address for your entity. The registered agent is that contact — even if you operate remotely or have no physical office in Connecticut.

    7. 7

      Supports foreign-qualified entities

      If your company was formed elsewhere but does business in Connecticut, you still need a CT registered agent on your foreign qualification filing with the Connecticut Secretary of the State.

    How to appoint a registered agent in Connecticut

    Appointing a registered agent happens on your formation filing or a separate change-of-agent form. You will need the agent's legal name, physical CT street address, and written consent to act.

    1. 1

      Choose a qualifying Connecticut agent

      Pick an individual Connecticut resident with a physical in-state address, or a commercial registered agent service. PO boxes and most virtual offices do not qualify.

    2. 2

      List the agent on your Connecticut Secretary of the State filing

      New formations: include agent details on Articles of Organization or Incorporation. Existing entities: file a Statement of Change of Registered Agent with the Connecticut Secretary of the State.

    3. 3

      Keep the appointment active

      Your agent must stay on file for the life of the entity. If your agent resigns or you move, appoint a replacement immediately — gaps trigger compliance problems with the Connecticut Secretary of the State.

    How ClearFormation Connecticut registered agent service works

    Stay compliant and protected with a physical CT address on your public record and a team that handles legal mail professionally.

    1. 1

      You appoint ClearFormation on your formation or change-of-agent filing

      We provide a physical Connecticut street address and file consent with the Connecticut Secretary of the State. Included with every formation plan — or switch an existing entity anytime.

    2. 2

      Legal and state mail arrives at our CT office

      Process servers, subpoenas, and Connecticut Secretary of the State correspondence are accepted in person during business hours at our staffed Connecticut address.

    3. 3

      We scan and upload documents to your dashboard

      You get an email alert the same day we receive service of process or official state mail — with a PDF in your ClearFormation account.

    4. 4

      You respond on time

      Lawsuits have strict response deadlines. Seeing the notice immediately — not weeks later in a pile of mail — protects your liability shield and avoids default judgments.

    5. 5

      We stay on file year-round

      Your registered agent must remain active for the life of the entity. ClearFormation maintains continuous coverage — no gaps when you move, travel, or change personal addresses.

    How you receive documents from your Connecticut registered agent

    When ClearFormation receives legal or state mail for your Connecticut entity, we scan it and upload a PDF to your dashboard. You also get an email notification with a direct link. Originals are held according to our retention policy if you need them for court.

    If a lawsuit is served, treat it as urgent — consult an attorney immediately. Missing the response window because mail sat unopened at your home is one of the most expensive mistakes owner-operators make.

    When should you appoint a Connecticut registered agent?

    Appoint your agent before or when you file formation documents with the Connecticut Secretary of the State. The registered agent name and CT address appear on your Articles of Organization or Articles of Incorporation. You can also add or change an agent later via a change-of-agent filing.

    Foreign-qualified entities (formed in another state but doing business in Connecticut) must appoint a Connecticut registered agent when they register with the Connecticut Secretary of the State — see our foreign qualification guide.

    Do you need a separate registered agent in each state?

    Yes. Every state where your LLC or corporation is formed or foreign-qualified requires its own in-state registered agent with a physical street address in that state. A Wyoming agent cannot serve as your Connecticut agent — you need a separate CT address on file with the Connecticut Secretary of the State.

    ClearFormation provides registered agent service in all 50 states, so you can use one provider across your domestic formation and any foreign qualifications.

    Can you use the registered agent address as your business address?

    The registered agent address goes on public formation records as your statutory contact — it is not a general business mailing address, virtual office, or storefront. Banks, vendors, and the IRS typically want your actual principal place of business or a separate mailing address.

    Using a commercial agent keeps your home address private while you operate from anywhere. Non-US founders often use the RA address only where required by the Connecticut Secretary of the State and maintain their real operating address in their home country.

    Do LLCs and corporations both need a Connecticut registered agent?

    Yes. Connecticut requires every LLC, corporation, and foreign-qualified entity to maintain a registered agent — there is no exemption for single-member LLCs or small corporations. Forming a new entity? Registered agent is included when you form an LLC in Connecticut or incorporate in Connecticut with ClearFormation.

    How to change your registered agent in Connecticut

    Switching your Connecticut registered agent is straightforward. You file a Statement of Change of Registered Agent (the exact form name varies by state) with the Connecticut Secretary of the State — the new agent must consent in writing, and the state charges a small change-of-agent filing fee.

    1. 1

      Pick your new Connecticut registered agent

      Confirm they have a physical CT street address and accept the appointment. ClearFormation provides this in Connecticut as part of every formation plan — or you can switch an existing entity to us anytime.

    2. 2

      Gather entity details for the filing

      You will need your entity name, Connecticut Secretary of the State file number, current registered agent on record, and the new agent's name and CT address. ClearFormation pulls this from your account when you start a registered agent change order.

    3. 3

      File the change-of-agent form

      Submit the statement of change to the Connecticut Secretary of the State with the state fee. We prepare and file it for you, including the new agent's written consent.

    4. 4

      Notify your prior agent

      If you were paying an outside service, cancel that subscription so you're not double-billed. Many founders switch to ClearFormation to consolidate registered agent, formation, and compliance into one bill.

    How much does a Connecticut registered agent cost?

    Registered agent pricing in Connecticut has two layers: what standalone commercial agents charge per year, and what you actually pay when RA service is bundled with formation. Here's how it breaks down.

    Typical Connecticut registered agent pricing

    Commercial Connecticut registered agent services typically run $50–$300 per year. Pricing varies based on whether the provider offers mail scanning, compliance alerts, and same-day document upload.

    What you pay with ClearFormation

    With ClearFormation, your CT registered agent is bundled into your formation plan — there's no separate annual registered agent fee in year one, and renewal pricing is published upfront so you're never surprised by a hidden hike.

    Switching to ClearFormation as your Connecticut agent

    If you already have a Connecticut entity formed elsewhere, you can switch your registered agent to ClearFormation at any time. We file the change of agent with the Connecticut Secretary of the State on your behalf and notify your prior provider so you stop being billed.

    Requirements reviewed against Connecticut Secretary of the State (last reviewed June 2026).

    Stay compliant and protected in Connecticut

    A registered agent is not optional — it is the foundation of Connecticut entity compliance. Here is what goes wrong without one, and how ClearFormation keeps you protected.

    • Missed lawsuits. If service of process cannot be completed at your listed address, courts may allow a plaintiff to serve you by alternative means — or enter a default judgment if you never see the complaint.
    • Administrative dissolution. The Connecticut Secretary of the State can dissolve or revoke your good standing if you have no registered agent on file or if your agent resigns without a replacement.
    • Missed state deadlines. Annual report notices and tax correspondence sent to your registered agent address may never reach you if the agent is unreliable or you listed yourself and moved.
    • Privacy exposure. Listing your home address as registered agent puts it on public Connecticut Secretary of the State records indefinitely — searchable by competitors, clients, and data brokers.

    ClearFormation's Connecticut registered agent service gives you a staffed CT address, same-day digital mail delivery, and email alerts — so you stay in good standing without putting your personal address on the public record.

    Starting a company?

    Form your Connecticut LLC and get registered agent service included.

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    Connecticut pricing

    Connecticut registered agent pricing

    Just need a CT registered agent? One simple plan — add annual report filing only if you want it.

    Base plan

    Connecticut Registered Agent

    $150/yr

    Billed annually · no state filing fee required

    Physical CT street address, legal mail handling, and online document portal.

    • Physical Connecticut street address
    • Same-day scan of legal & state mail
    • Email alerts + online document portal
    • Free address use on CT filings

    Optional add-on

    Annual report filing + reminders

    + $50/yr (+ state fee)

    Optional add-on. We track your Connecticut 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 — none required.

    Get a CT registered agent

    Connecticut Registered Agent FAQs

    Also for Connecticut founders: Form an LLC in Connecticut · Form a C-Corp in Connecticut

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