A calm, plain-English walkthrough of every step — with state fees, form names, and the small stuff nobody warns you about. Read it once, and you'll know more than most.
To start an LLC in Alaska, file Articles of Organization with the Alaska Division of Corporations, Business and Professional Licensing and pay the $250 state filing fee. Most online filings are approved in 10–15 business days. You'll also need to appoint a registered agent with a Alaska street address, pick a name ending in "LLC" that's not already taken, and — after approval — get a free federal EIN from the IRS.
After that, Alaska requires an annual report each year by the biennial due date ($100). Miss it and you owe a state-imposed late fee. Doing it yourself costs the state filing fee — $250. If you'd rather hand it to us, we file it for you at $49 flat on top of the state's $250. Alaska has no state income tax and no annual report, but it does require a biennial report every two years. Set a long-range calendar reminder now — nothing kills momentum like a forgotten filing two years after launch.
The honest numbers, up front. Alaska's state fee is in the middle of the pack — not the cheapest, not the worst.
If you file yourself, you'll pay $250 to the state and spend about an hour on the paperwork. If you'd rather we handle it, it's a flat $49 on top of the state's $250 — so $174 all-in, no upsells. Either way, the state is who approves the LLC; we just fill in the forms faster.
Alaska's $250 is reasonable. Where people get burned is the state-imposed late fee if you forget the annual report. The day you form, put a calendar reminder on a reliable date each year for life. You'll thank yourself.
This is the whole thing. Nothing is hidden behind a paywall on this page.
Search Alaska's Alaska Division of Corporations database to make sure your name isn't taken. It has to end in "LLC," "L.L.C.," or "Limited Liability Company." More on naming below.
Someone (you, a friend, or a service) with a Alaska street address who agrees to receive legal mail during business hours. You can be your own registered agent for free.
It's a one-page form (Form L-LLC on Alaska Division of Corporations). $250. Submit it online and you'll usually hear back in 10–15 business days. Or click "File for $49" and we'll do it.
After approval, grab a free EIN from the IRS (10 minutes, online) and draft a quick operating agreement. Alaska doesn't technically require one, but your bank will.
On the Articles, Alaska asks whether your LLC is member-managed or manager-managed. If that sentence made you glaze over, you're not alone. Most single-owner and small-partner LLCs pick member-managed — it means the owners run the company. Pick manager-managed only if you have passive owners (investors) who won't be involved day-to-day.
Alaska's rules are friendlier than most — but here's what to avoid, and how to reserve a name if you're not ready to file yet.
Your name must include "LLC," "L.L.C.," or "Limited Liability Company." It has to be distinguishable from every other Alaska business entity — which is stricter than "not identical." "Sunshine Coffee LLC" and "Sunshine Coffees LLC" may be too close; the state will bounce it back.
Search the name on commerce.alaska.gov. If no active business shows up, you're probably clear. Then grab the matching domain (even just a holding page) and the matching social handles. Do that before you file — it's not uncommon for someone to register a conflicting domain the day after your LLC goes public.
It sounds like a bigger deal than it is.
A registered agent is a person or company with a street address in your state who agrees to accept legal papers — lawsuits, state notices, tax letters — on behalf of your LLC during business hours. That's it. It's an address and a willingness to sign for mail.
In Alaska, yes, as long as you have a Alaska street address (no P.O. boxes) and you're available during business hours. Most single-owner LLCs do exactly this for free. You sign the Articles' registered agent consent line and you're done.
When you don't want your home address on the public record, when you're often out of the state, or when you just don't want to worry about missing a signed-for envelope on a Tuesday. Commercial services run $100–$200 a year. We can be yours — flat $99/year, no lock-in — or pick anyone you want. The registered-agent guide walks through how to choose.
Be your own for the first year if your home address is acceptable. You can switch to a paid agent later by filing a quick amendment — no harm done. Don't let a $150/yr service be the thing holding up your filing.
This is the part where a lot of people get upsold. Here's the truth: the EIN is free, and it takes about ten minutes.
An EIN — Employer Identification Number — is your LLC's federal tax ID. You'll need it to open a business bank account, file taxes, or hire employees. You can only get it after your LLC is approved by Alaska.
The IRS will ask for your LLC's legal name and formation date — both of which come from your Alaska approval.
Search "IRS EIN application." It's free. Sessions time out at 15 minutes, so have your info ready (legal name, address, responsible party's SSN, member count).
You'll get a PDF at the end (Form CP 575). Save it — your bank will ask for it when you open your business account. The IRS won't re-issue it easily.
Alaska doesn't technically require one. Your bank and your future self both will.
An operating agreement is an internal document that spells out who owns what percentage, how decisions get made, how profits are split, and what happens if someone leaves. For a single-member LLC it's mostly a formality — but banks increasingly ask to see one before opening a business account, and it's cheap insurance if you ever add a partner.
Ownership percentages · Capital contributions (who put in what) · Distribution rules (how profits are paid out) · Management structure (member vs. manager) · Voting rules · What happens if a member wants out · Dissolution procedure.
If you're a single-member LLC, a 2-page template is fine. Two or more owners? Spend an afternoon on it, and if anything feels unclear, a one-hour call with a small-business attorney is money well spent. Ambiguity in partnerships is where most disputes come from.
Annual reports, record-keeping, and the deadlines you cannot miss.
Every year, during the annual filing window, Alaska requires you to file an annual report through Alaska Division of Corporations. It confirms your registered agent, address, and members are still current. It costs $100, and it's non-negotiable.
Seriously, put the date you pick on your calendar now. That late fee is one of the easiest painful mistakes to avoid. If you miss it long enough, Alaska will administratively dissolve your LLC — which is worse than the fine.
Update your registered agent within 30 days if it changes. Keep your operating agreement up to date if ownership shifts. And save every piece of paperwork the state sends you — you'll want it for your accountant each April.
If you live in Alaska, yes — always form in the state where you actually do business. If you don't live in Alaska but heard it's "tax-friendly," be careful: you'll owe foreign-qualification fees in your home state, which usually cancels any savings. File where you live.
You can, but you'll need a Alaska registered agent with a Alaska street address, and you may need to register as a foreign LLC in your home state too. It's rarely the smart choice for most small businesses.
Online filings through Alaska Division of Corporations are typically approved in 10–15 business days. Paper filings take longer, sometimes 4–6 weeks. If speed matters, file online.
Alaska has no personal income tax, and standard LLCs are pass-through entities — so profits hit your federal return but not a Alaska individual one. Alaska does have a corporate income tax that can apply if you elect corporate taxation, which most small LLCs don't.
One short form, we handle the Alaska Division of Corporations submission, and you get a stamped certificate in your inbox in 10–15 business days. No upsells, no payment until we email to confirm.