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Dissolve Your Company

Close Your Business the Right Way.

Simply stopping operations is not enough. To avoid ongoing annual fees, penalties, and potential liability, you must formally dissolve your LLC or corporation with the state. Corplys handles the entire filing.

βœ“Officially terminate your business with the state
βœ“Stop future annual report obligations and fees immediately
βœ“Avoid ongoing registered agent costs and compliance burden
βœ“Protect yourself from future claims with proper closure
Start Today
Start My Dissolution
Flat-fee service + state filing fees
πŸ”’ Secure checkout Β· 100% satisfaction guarantee
πŸ”’Clean legal closure
πŸ“‹All 50 states
πŸ’ΈStop future fees
βœ…Protect yourself
⭐4.9/5 rating

How It Works

We handle the complexity so you don't have to.

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1

Submit Your Details

Tell us your business name, state, and type. We review the specific dissolution requirements for your state.

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2

We Prepare Documents

Corplys prepares your Articles of Dissolution (or equivalent) and any required consent or tax clearance documents.

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3

Filed with the State

Your dissolution documents are submitted to the Secretary of State, officially closing your entity.

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4

Closure Confirmed

You receive confirmation of your dissolution and your ongoing compliance obligations cease.

Why formally dissolve?

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Annual Fees Keep Accumulating

Even a dormant business that never files another annual report will accumulate late fees and penalties until it is formally dissolved.

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Ongoing Compliance Obligations

As long as your business is technically active, you are legally required to maintain a registered agent and file annual reports each year.

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Potential Personal Liability

An improperly closed business can expose owners to claims and creditor actions. Proper dissolution includes settling debts and notifying creditors.

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Clean Legal Slate

Formal dissolution creates a clean legal record showing your business was closed properly β€” protecting you from future claims related to that entity.

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Tax Obligations Continue

State and federal tax filings may still be required for an active but dormant business. Dissolution officially stops these ongoing obligations.

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Peace of Mind

Stop thinking about your old business. Formal dissolution means it is legally, officially done β€” and you can move on with confidence.

Common Questions

Still have questions? Our team is here Mon–Fri, 9am–6pm CST.

πŸ“ž Call Us
What is the dissolution process?β–Ύ
Dissolution typically involves: (1) a member or shareholder vote to dissolve, (2) notifying creditors and settling debts, (3) filing Articles of Dissolution with the state, and (4) in some states, obtaining a tax clearance certificate.
Do I need to notify creditors before dissolving?β–Ύ
Most states require you to notify known creditors of your intent to dissolve, giving them a window to submit claims. Proper creditor notification protects you from future claims after dissolution is complete.
What happens to my business bank account?β–Ύ
You should close your business bank account only after all debts are settled and the dissolution is complete. Closing it prematurely can complicate the dissolution process.
What if I have employees?β–Ύ
You must pay all outstanding wages, file final payroll tax returns, and issue final W-2s to employees before dissolving. Final employment tax filings must also be submitted to the IRS.
What about my EIN after dissolution?β–Ύ
Your EIN is never truly cancelled β€” the IRS keeps it on record permanently. However, after filing your final tax return and noting the business has closed, it becomes essentially inactive.
Can I reopen my business after dissolving?β–Ύ
Once dissolved, your business no longer exists as a legal entity. You would need to form a new entity. If you think there is a chance you will want to continue operations later, consider putting the business in inactive status rather than dissolving.

Ready to close your business?

Do it properly, protect yourself, and stop the fees. Corplys makes business dissolution simple.