Choosing the right state for your LLC can feel confusing because every state seems to market itself as “business-friendly.” Wyoming promises low fees. Delaware is famous for big companies. Florida looks simple. Texas has no personal income tax. New Mexico sounds cheap and private.
Then the real fear kicks in: What if I choose the wrong state and end up paying double fees, extra taxes, or fixing paperwork later?
I’ve seen many new business owners make this mistake. They form a Wyoming or Delaware LLC because someone online said it is the “best,” but they actually live and operate in California, Florida, or Texas. A few months later, they learn they may still need to register in their home state as a foreign LLC. Now they are paying two registered agents, two state compliance costs, and sometimes penalties.
That is why this decision is a game-changer. The best state is not always the cheapest state. It is the state that fits your business model, tax situation, location, privacy needs, and future plans.
For most small business owners, the best state to form an LLC is usually the state where they actually operate. For online entrepreneurs and non-US residents without a physical US office, Wyoming, New Mexico, and Delaware often become the top choices. For investor-backed startups, Delaware is still the default favorite. For local businesses, your home state usually wins.
Let’s break this down in a practical way.
Why Your LLC State Matters
An LLC is created under state law, not federal law. That means each state controls its own filing fees, annual reports, franchise taxes, registered agent rules, and compliance process. The IRS also explains that LLC rules vary by state, and LLC owners can include individuals, corporations, other LLCs, and foreign entities.
Why this matters: if you form your LLC in a state where you do not actually operate, you may still need to register in the state where your business has real activity.
For example, let’s say you live in California and form a Wyoming LLC because Wyoming has lower annual fees. If you run the business from California, have your office there, serve local customers there, or manage the business from there, California may still treat you as doing business in California. That can create extra filings and costs.
Skipping the right state choice can lead to:
- Double state fees if you need foreign qualification
- Missed annual reports and late penalties
- Loss of good standing
- Tax confusion
- Problems opening a bank account
- Trouble signing contracts or raising funds
- Possible administrative dissolution
Also, the BOI reporting rule changed in 2025. FinCEN now says U.S.-created entities that were previously called “domestic reporting companies” are exempt from BOI reporting, while some foreign companies may still have reporting obligations.
So, yes, state selection matters. But you do not need to overcomplicate it. You just need to match the state to your real business situation.
Quick Comparison: Best States to Start an LLC in 2026
| State | Best For | Formation Cost | Ongoing Cost | Main Catch |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wyoming | Online businesses, privacy, non-US founders | $100 | Minimum $60 annual license tax | Not a tax shelter if you operate elsewhere |
| Delaware | Startups, investors, holding companies | $110 | $300 annual tax | Often not ideal for small local businesses |
| New Mexico | Low-cost simple LLCs, privacy-focused owners | Around $50 | No regular annual report in many cases | Less investor-friendly than Delaware |
| Florida | Florida-based businesses | $125 | $138.75 annual report | Late annual report can become expensive |
| Texas | Texas-based businesses | $300 | Franchise tax reports may apply | Higher filing fee and reporting rules |
| Nevada | Some privacy-focused businesses | Usually higher first-year cost | Higher annual compliance cost | Often oversold compared to Wyoming |
| California | California-based businesses | State filing cost plus tax obligations | $800 annual franchise tax | Expensive, but hard to avoid if you operate there |
| South Dakota | Low-tax, simple domestic businesses | $150 online | $55 annual report online | Less common for nonresident online founders |
Wyoming’s official fee schedule lists a $100 filing fee for original articles of organization, and its annual license tax is generally $60 minimum or based on Wyoming assets, whichever is greater. Delaware’s LLC formation fee is $110, and Delaware LLCs pay a $300 annual tax with no annual report requirement for LLCs. Florida lists a $125 total filing cost for a new LLC and a $138.75 annual report fee, with a much higher late annual report cost after May 1.
Step-by-Step Breakdown: How to Choose the Best State for Your LLC
1. Start With Where Your Business Actually Operates
Before you look at Wyoming, Delaware, or Nevada, ask one simple question:
Where does my business have real activity?
How to do it:
Write down:
- Where you live and manage the business
- Where your office, store, warehouse, or inventory is located
- Where your employees or contractors work
- Where your main customers are
- Where you need licenses, permits, or sales tax registration
Where to do it:
Check the Secretary of State website and tax department website for the state where your business activity happens.
Pro-tip to save time:
If you run a local service business, such as a salon, cleaning company, consulting office, restaurant, real estate business, repair service, or local agency, your home state is usually the cleanest choice.
Here is the catch: forming in Wyoming does not erase your connection to your real operating state. If your business is actually based in Florida, Texas, or California, that state may still want you to register and comply.
2. Match the State to Your Business Model
Different businesses need different states.
If you are a local business owner, your home state is usually best.
If you are a freelancer or solo consultant, your home state may still be best unless you are a non-US resident or have no fixed US business location.
If you are a non-US resident starting a US LLC, Wyoming and New Mexico are often attractive because of lower costs and simpler maintenance.
If you plan to raise venture capital, Delaware is usually the stronger choice because investors and startup attorneys are familiar with Delaware entities.
How to do it:
Pick your category first, then compare states. Do not start with the cheapest filing fee.
Where to do it:
Use official state business filing portals, not random ads. Search for the Secretary of State business division in the state you are considering.
Pro-tip to save time:
If your goal is a simple online business, do not choose Delaware just because large companies use it. Delaware is excellent for certain startup structures, but a solo affiliate marketer, consultant, or eCommerce seller may not need that level of setup.
3. Compare the Real 3-Year Cost, Not Just the Filing Fee
A $50 filing fee can look attractive, but the full cost matters more.
You should calculate:
- Initial state filing fee
- Registered agent fee
- Annual report fee
- Franchise tax or annual tax
- Business license fee
- Foreign qualification fee, if needed
- Compliance service fee, if using a formation company
- CPA or tax filing support
How to do it:
Create a simple 3-year cost table before you file.
Example:
| Cost Item | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| State filing fee | One-time | $0 | $0 |
| Registered agent | Annual | Annual | Annual |
| Annual report or tax | Annual | Annual | Annual |
| Business license | If needed | If needed | If needed |
| Foreign registration | If needed | If needed | If needed |
Where to do it:
Use state fee pages, Secretary of State forms, and state tax websites.
Pro-tip to save time:
Do not compare only “formation package” prices from LLC services. A $0 formation package may still leave you paying state fees, registered agent renewal, EIN assistance, operating agreement charges, and compliance add-ons.
4. Choose a Registered Agent Strategy
Every LLC needs a registered agent in its formation state. A registered agent receives legal notices, official state mail, and service of process.
How to do it:
You can usually choose:
- Yourself, if you have a physical address in the state
- Another qualified person or business
- A professional registered agent service
Where to do it:
You list the registered agent when filing your Articles of Organization or Certificate of Formation with the state.
Pro-tip to save time:
If you are a non-US resident or you do not have a physical address in that state, use a professional registered agent. Do not use a random friend’s address unless they understand the responsibility.
Also, remember this: a registered agent address is not always the same as a business mailing address. Banks, payment processors, and marketplaces may ask for extra verification.
5. File the LLC Formation Documents
The actual filing is usually simple.
Most states ask for:
- LLC name
- Registered agent name and address
- Principal or mailing address
- Organizer name
- Management type, member-managed or manager-managed
- Filing fee
How to do it:
Search your LLC name first. Make sure it is available and includes an approved ending such as “LLC,” “L.L.C.,” or “Limited Liability Company.”
Where to do it:
File through the state’s official business filing portal. In Delaware, the formation document is commonly called a Certificate of Formation. In many other states, it is called Articles of Organization.
Pro-tip to save time:
Save the stamped approval document immediately after filing. You may need it for your EIN, bank account, payment processor, affiliate network, merchant account, or business verification.
6. Get an EIN and Prepare Internal Documents
After your LLC is approved, the next step is usually getting an EIN from the IRS. An EIN works like a federal tax ID for your business.
How to do it:
Apply directly with the IRS. The IRS says applying for an EIN is a free service, and business owners should beware of websites that charge for it.
Where to do it:
Use the IRS EIN application system if eligible. Non-US residents without an SSN or ITIN may need to use Form SS-4 by fax or mail.
Pro-tip to save time:
Use the exact legal name from your LLC approval. Even a small mismatch can create delays with banks and payment platforms.
You should also prepare:
- Operating agreement
- Ownership records
- Business bank account
- Bookkeeping system
- Tax classification decision, if needed
- Licenses and permits, if required
7. Build a Compliance Calendar Before You Start Selling
This is the step many people skip.
How to do it:
Add reminders for:
- Annual reports
- Franchise taxes
- Registered agent renewal
- State business licenses
- Sales tax filings
- Payroll registrations
- Federal tax return deadlines
- BOI review if a foreign company is involved
Where to do it:
Use Google Calendar, Notion, Trello, your CPA’s portal, or your registered agent dashboard.
Pro-tip to save time:
Set reminders 30 days and 7 days before each deadline. Most penalties happen because the owner forgot, not because the rules were difficult.
Best States for LLC Formation in 2026
Wyoming: Best Overall for Online and Nonresident Founders
Wyoming is one of the most popular states for LLCs because it has low fees, simple annual maintenance, and strong privacy appeal.
Wyoming works well for:
- Online businesses
- Non-US residents
- Consultants
- Affiliate marketers
- Digital product sellers
- Holding companies
- Small businesses that do not need Delaware’s investor structure
The filing fee is $100, and the annual license tax is usually a minimum of $60 unless the company has enough Wyoming-based assets to increase the amount.
The catch: Wyoming is not magic. If you actually operate in another state, you may still need to register there.
Delaware: Best for Investor-Backed Startups
Delaware is famous because investors, startup lawyers, and larger companies are comfortable with it.
Delaware works well for:
- Startups planning to raise capital
- Companies issuing equity
- Businesses with complex ownership
- Holding companies
- Founders planning a future corporation conversion
Delaware’s LLC formation fee is $110, and the annual LLC tax is $300. Delaware LLCs do not file an annual report, but the tax still applies.
The catch: if you are a small freelancer with no investor plans, Delaware may be more expensive than necessary.
New Mexico: Best Low-Cost Option for Simple LLCs
New Mexico is often mentioned for low-cost LLC formation and privacy. It can be attractive for simple online businesses that want a lean setup.
New Mexico commonly has a low filing cost, often cited around $50, and it is known for not requiring a standard annual report for LLCs.
New Mexico works well for:
- Solo founders
- Simple online businesses
- Privacy-focused owners
- Low-maintenance LLC structures
The catch: it is not as popular with investors as Delaware, and you still need to think about taxes where you actually live or operate.
Florida: Best If You Operate in Florida
Florida is a strong option if you live in Florida or your business is based there. It is straightforward, familiar, and avoids the extra layer of forming elsewhere and registering back into Florida.
Florida lists a $125 filing cost for a new LLC, made up of a $100 filing fee and $25 registered agent fee. The annual report fee is $138.75, and if filed late after May 1, the cost becomes much higher.
Florida works well for:
- Florida residents
- Local service businesses
- Real estate businesses
- Agencies and consultants based in Florida
- eCommerce businesses operated from Florida
The catch: do not miss the annual report deadline.
Texas: Best If You Operate in Texas
Texas has no personal state income tax, strong business activity, and a large market. But it is not the cheapest LLC state.
Texas Form 205 instructions list a $300 filing fee for LLC formation. Texas also has franchise tax rules, although many small businesses fall under the no-tax-due threshold. For 2026 and 2027 reports, the no-tax-due threshold is $2,650,000, while the 2024 and 2025 threshold is $2,470,000. Even when no tax is due, Texas entities may still need to handle certain information reports.
Texas works well for:
- Texas-based businesses
- Larger local businesses
- Agencies and service companies
- eCommerce operations based in Texas
The catch: the formation fee is higher, and you should understand franchise reporting.
California: Best Only If You Are Actually Doing Business There
California is not usually recommended for low-cost LLC formation. But if you live or operate there, avoiding California can create bigger problems.
California’s Franchise Tax Board says LLCs doing business in California or organized in California must pay the $800 annual tax, even if they are not actively conducting business, until properly canceled.
California works well for:
- California-based businesses that cannot avoid California nexus
- Local service businesses
- Businesses with employees, offices, or operations in California
The catch: it is expensive, but forming elsewhere may not save you if California still considers you to be doing business there.
Cost and Timeline Breakdown
Here is a practical cost view for 2025 planning.
| State | Approx. Formation Cost | Main Annual State Cost | Timeline Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wyoming | $100 | $60 minimum annual license tax | Online filings are usually fast |
| Delaware | $110 | $300 annual tax | Expedited processing available for extra fees |
| New Mexico | Around $50 | Often no standard annual LLC report | Usually simple online filing |
| Florida | $125 | $138.75 annual report | Annual report deadline is important |
| Texas | $300 | Franchise reporting may apply | Processing depends on filing method |
| South Dakota | $150 online | $55 online annual report | Paper filings cost more |
| California | Filing cost plus state taxes | $800 annual tax | Extra fees may apply based on income |
South Dakota lists $150 for online domestic LLC articles of organization and $55 for an online annual report.
Your real cost may also include:
- Registered agent: $50 to $300 per year
- Operating agreement: $0 to $200
- EIN: Free if obtained directly from IRS
- Business license: Varies by city and industry
- Foreign qualification: Varies by state
- CPA or tax support: Often $300 to $1,500+ per year
- Formation service fee: $0 to $300+, plus state fees
Common Mistakes to Avoid
1. Choosing a State Only Because It Looks Cheap
Cheap formation does not always mean cheap ownership. Look at the 3-year cost.
2. Forming in Wyoming or Delaware While Operating Elsewhere
If your business is truly based in another state, you may need foreign qualification there.
3. Forgetting Annual Reports or Taxes
One missed deadline can lead to late fees, loss of good standing, or dissolution.
4. Paying for an EIN When You Do Not Need To
The IRS provides EINs for free. Pay only if you want a service provider to handle the process for convenience.
5. Mixing Personal and Business Money
Open a separate business bank account. This helps protect your LLC’s liability separation.
6. Ignoring State Tax Nexus
Your LLC state and your tax state are not always the same thing.
7. Using a Bad Registered Agent
If your registered agent misses legal mail, you could miss lawsuits, tax notices, or state warnings.
8. Assuming BOI Rules Are the Same for Everyone
Domestic U.S.-created entities are currently exempt under FinCEN’s 2025 update, but foreign companies may still need to review reporting obligations.
Compliance Checklist for 2025-2026
Use this checklist after forming your LLC:
- Confirm your LLC is active and in good standing
- Keep your registered agent active
- Save your approved formation document
- Create and sign an operating agreement
- Get your EIN directly from the IRS
- Open a separate business bank account
- Track income and expenses from day one
- File annual reports or annual taxes on time
- Register for sales tax if your business needs it
- Handle payroll registration if you hire employees
- Renew city, county, or industry licenses
- Update state records if your address, manager, or ownership changes
- Review BOI rules if a foreign company structure is involved
- Talk to a CPA before choosing tax status
FAQs About the Best States to Start an LLC in 2026
1. What is the best state to start an LLC in 2026?
For most people, the best state is the state where they actually operate. For non-US residents and online founders without a fixed US business location, Wyoming and New Mexico are often strong options. For investor-backed startups, Delaware is usually the better choice.
2. Is Wyoming better than Delaware for an LLC?
Wyoming is usually better for simple online businesses, privacy-focused owners, and nonresident founders who want lower annual costs. Delaware is usually better for startups that plan to raise money, issue equity, or work with investors.
3. Can a non-US resident start a US LLC?
Yes. The IRS notes that LLC members can include foreign entities and individuals, and state rules usually allow non-US residents to own LLCs. You will still need a registered agent, EIN, and proper tax planning.
4. Do I pay taxes in the state where my LLC is formed?
Not always. Taxes usually depend on where the business operates, where income is sourced, where owners live, and how the LLC is taxed. Your formation state is only one part of the tax picture.
5. Is Florida a good state to form an LLC?
Yes, if you live or operate in Florida. Florida’s LLC filing cost is reasonable, but you must file the annual report on time to avoid expensive late costs.
6. Is Texas a good state for an LLC?
Texas is good if your business is based there, but the $300 filing fee is higher than many states. Texas also has franchise tax reporting rules, though many small businesses fall under the no-tax-due threshold.
7. Should I form an LLC in Nevada?
Nevada is often promoted for privacy and tax reasons, but it can be more expensive than Wyoming or New Mexico. For most small online businesses, Wyoming is usually the cleaner comparison point.
8. Do I need a registered agent in the state where I form my LLC?
Yes. Your LLC needs a registered agent with a physical address in the formation state. If you do not live there, a professional registered agent is usually the easiest option.
9. What happens if I miss my annual LLC filing?
You may face late fees, loss of good standing, blocked filings, or administrative dissolution. In some states, the penalty can be much higher than the original filing fee.
10. Do LLCs still need to file BOI reports in 2026?
Most U.S.-created LLCs are now exempt from BOI reporting under FinCEN’s 2025 update. Some foreign companies may still have reporting obligations, so review your structure carefully.
Final Action Plan
If you want the safest decision, follow this order:
- Choose your home state if you physically operate there.
- Choose Wyoming if you are a non-US resident or online founder with no strong state connection.
- Choose Delaware if you plan to raise capital or build a startup with investors.
- Choose New Mexico if you want a low-cost, simple LLC and do not need Delaware’s startup reputation.
- Avoid chasing tax myths without checking where your business actually operates.
- Build your compliance calendar before you make your first sale.
The best LLC state is not the one with the loudest marketing. It is the one that keeps your business simple, legal, affordable, and easy to manage.