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Florida Annual Report: Filing Requirements and Deadlines

Every Florida LLC and corporation must file an annual report with the Division of Corporations to maintain active status. Missing this deadline can result in administrative dissolution and loss of your business entity. Here’s everything you need to know about Florida’s annual report requirements.

What Is a Florida Annual Report?

A Florida annual report is a filing that updates the state on your business’s current information. Despite the name, it’s less of a “report” and more of a confirmation that your business information is accurate.

The annual report confirms:

  • Your business still exists
  • Current principal address
  • Current mailing address
  • Current registered agent information
  • Current officer/member/director information

The annual report does NOT require:

  • Financial statements
  • Tax information
  • Revenue data
  • Detailed business activities

Who Must File?

All active Florida business entities must file annual reports:

Entity Type Annual Report Required?
Florida LLC Yes
Florida Corporation Yes
Florida Limited Partnership Yes
Florida Limited Liability Partnership Yes
Foreign LLC (registered in FL) Yes
Foreign Corporation (registered in FL) Yes
Nonprofit Corporation Yes

Sole proprietorships and general partnerships that haven’t filed with the state don’t have annual report requirements (because they’re not registered entities).

Filing Deadline

Standard Deadline: May 1

All Florida annual reports are due by May 1 of each year.

Example: Your 2026 annual report is due May 1, 2026.

Grace Period

Florida provides a grace period through the third Friday in September before administrative dissolution begins.

However: Waiting until the grace period triggers a $400 late fee. File by May 1 to avoid penalties.

Timeline

Date What Happens
January 1 Annual report filing opens
May 1 Due date (no late fee if filed by this date)
May 2 $400 late fee applies
Third Friday of September Last day before dissolution proceedings
After September deadline Administrative dissolution

Filing Fees

LLCs

Filing Status Fee
On time (by May 1) $138.75
Late (after May 1) $538.75 ($138.75 + $400 late fee)

Corporations

Filing Status Fee
On time (by May 1) $150.00
Late (after May 1) $550.00 ($150.00 + $400 late fee)

Nonprofit Corporations

Filing Status Fee
On time (by May 1) $61.25
Late (after May 1) $461.25 ($61.25 + $400 late fee)

The $400 late fee is significant. Filing on time saves substantial money.

How to File Your Florida Annual Report

Online Filing (Recommended)

The easiest method is filing through Sunbiz.org.

Steps:

  1. Go to Sunbiz.org
  • Navigate to sunbiz.org
  • Select “Annual Reports”
  1. Enter your document number
  • Find this on your formation documents or previous filings
  • Or search by business name
  1. Review current information
  • System displays information currently on file
  • Verify each section is accurate
  1. Update any changes
  • Correct addresses if needed
  • Update officer/member information if changed
  • Change registered agent if applicable
  1. Confirm and pay
  • Review all information
  • Pay by credit card
  • Receive confirmation

Processing: Immediate for online filings

Paper Filing

You can mail a paper annual report, but it’s slower and less convenient.

Mail to: Division of Corporations P.O. Box 6327 Tallahassee, FL 32314

Processing: 5-10 business days

What Information Is Required?

The annual report requires current information in these categories:

Principal Address

Your main business address (where business is conducted).

  • Must be a street address
  • Cannot be a P.O. Box
  • Can be a home address if that’s where you operate

Mailing Address

Where you receive mail.

  • Can be different from principal address
  • P.O. Box is acceptable
  • Often the same as principal address

Registered Agent

Your designated agent for receiving legal documents.

  • Must be a Florida resident or registered business
  • Must have a Florida street address
  • Must consent to serve as agent

Options:

  • Yourself (if you’re a Florida resident)
  • Another individual
  • A registered agent service company

Officers, Directors, or Members

Depending on entity type:

Corporations: List directors and officers (President, VP, Secretary, Treasurer)

LLCs: List members and/or managers

Required information:

  • Name
  • Address
  • Title (for corporations)

Registered Agent Requirements

Your registered agent is responsible for receiving service of process (lawsuits) and official state correspondence.

Registered Agent Rules

  • Must be a Florida resident individual OR a Florida authorized business entity
  • Must have a physical Florida street address (not P.O. Box)
  • Must be available during normal business hours
  • Must consent to serve

Changing Your Registered Agent

If changing your registered agent on the annual report:

  • New agent must consent
  • No additional fee if done on annual report
  • Change takes effect upon filing

What If Your Information Hasn’t Changed?

You still must file.

Even if nothing has changed since last year:

  1. Access the annual report filing
  2. Confirm all information is still accurate
  3. Submit and pay the fee

The annual report is required regardless of whether updates are needed.

Common Filing Mistakes

1. Missing the Deadline

The single biggest mistake. May 1 arrives quickly—set calendar reminders.

Consequence: $400 late fee (nearly triple the cost)

2. Wrong Address Type

Using a P.O. Box for your principal address.

Consequence: Filing may be rejected

3. Outdated Officer Information

Forgetting to update officers/members who changed during the year.

Consequence: State records don’t reflect actual management

4. Expired Registered Agent

Your previous registered agent no longer serves (resigned, closed business).

Consequence: You may miss important legal notices

5. Paying from Wrong Account

Using a personal card when you meant to use business funds.

Consequence: Accounting and record-keeping issues

After Filing

Confirmation

After successful filing, you’ll receive:

  • Online: Immediate confirmation page
  • Email: Confirmation sent to address on file
  • Updated Sunbiz record

Save Your Records

Keep confirmation of each year’s filing:

  • Print or save the confirmation page
  • Note the confirmation number
  • Keep with business records

Verify on Sunbiz

After filing, verify your status on Sunbiz:

  • Search for your entity
  • Confirm status shows “Active”
  • Verify updated information appears

Multiple Entities

If you own multiple Florida entities:

  • Each requires a separate annual report
  • Each has its own fee
  • Set reminders for all entities

Tip: File all entities at the same time to ensure none are missed.

New Businesses

If you formed your business after January 1 of the current year:

  • No annual report due until the following year
  • Your first report is due May 1 of the year after formation

Example: LLC formed March 2026 → First annual report due May 1, 2027

Reinstatement After Dissolution

If your entity was dissolved for missing annual reports:

  1. File all delinquent annual reports
  • Each missed year requires separate filing and fee
  1. Pay reinstatement fee
  • LLCs: $100
  • Corporations: $150
  1. Wait for processing
  • Typically 3-5 business days
  1. Verify active status

Total cost example (LLC, 2 years delinquent):

  • Year 1 report: $138.75
  • Year 2 report: $538.75 (includes late fee)
  • Reinstatement: $100
  • Total: $777.50

Never Miss an Annual Report

Critical Compliance Services handles Florida annual report filing so you never miss a deadline.

Our services include:

  • Annual report preparation and filing
  • Deadline reminders
  • Registered agent service
  • Compliance monitoring

File Your Annual Report


Frequently Asked Questions

When is the Florida annual report due?

May 1 of each year. A $400 late fee applies after this date.

How much does the Florida annual report cost?

LLCs: $138.75 on time, $538.75 late. Corporations: $150 on time, $550 late.

What happens if I don’t file my annual report?

Your entity will be administratively dissolved, meaning it loses its legal status. You’ll need to reinstate and pay additional fees.

Can I file early?

Yes. Annual report filing opens January 1. Filing early ensures you don’t miss the deadline.

Is the annual report the same as a tax return?

No. The annual report goes to the Division of Corporations and confirms business information. Tax returns go to the IRS and Florida Department of Revenue.