NH
The Granite State · Est. 1788
Concord · New Hampshire Div. of Corporations

Form an LLC in New Hampshire, step by step.

7.5% Business Profits Tax + Business Enterprise Tax; $100 annual report due April 1. No sales or individual income tax.

✓ Updated April 2026 · ✓ Verified by New Hampshire Div. of Corporations · ✓ 18 min read
Certificate of formation · Specimen
Not a legal document — design reference only
SAMPLE CO. LLC
A New Hampshire limited liability company
Entity type
Limited Liability Co.
State
New Hampshire
Registered agent
Registered Agents Inc.
Filing date
Apr 2026
Status
In good standing
FILE № NH-0000-88-SAMPLE FILED
On this page 9 sections
New Hampshire walkthrough

The 7-step walkthrough.

  1. 01

    Pick a unique New Hampshire LLC name

    ⏱ 10 min Free

    Must end in "LLC", "L.L.C." or "Limited Liability Company." Search the New Hampshire Division of Corporations name database before you file.

  2. 02

    Appoint a registered agent

    ⏱ 5 min $39–$199/yr

    Must have a physical New Hampshire address. Use a commercial service or your own address if you live in-state and are there during business hours.

  3. 03

    File your formation certificate

    ⏱ 15 min $100.00

    The one-page form goes to the New Hampshire Secretary of State. Online is fastest; mail and in-person filings are still accepted.

  4. 04

    Create an Operating Agreement

    ⏱ 30 min Free

    Not filed with the state, but legally required inside the LLC. Our free template covers ownership, distributions, and dissolution.

  5. 05

    Get an EIN from the IRS

    ⏱ 10 min Free

    Federal tax ID. Free, online, ten minutes. Never pay anyone for an EIN — the IRS form is free.

  6. 06

    Open a business bank account

    ⏱ 30 min Free

    Mercury, Relay, or a local bank. Requires EIN and stamped certificate. Separates personal and business liability.

  7. 07

    Pay the annual report / franchise fee

    ⏱ 15 min $100.00/yr

    Annual compliance for New Hampshire LLCs. Set a calendar reminder — late fees compound quickly.

If you're not raising venture capital, Delaware is probably the wrong choice. It looks prestigious. It's expensive if you operate elsewhere.

— The Editors · Incorporator.org
⚠ Watch out The foreign qualification trap

Living in one state but forming in another? You'll pay twice.

If your LLC is based in New Hampshire but you do business in another state, you must register as a "foreign LLC" there — a second filing fee, a second registered agent, and a second annual report. For most solo founders, forming in your home state is cheaper than chasing another state's reputation.

Common mistakes

Three things we see founders get wrong.

  1. Paying for an EIN. The IRS issues them for free in ten minutes. Third-party "EIN services" are marking up a free government form.
  2. Skipping the Operating Agreement. New Hampshire doesn't require you to file one — but the courts will treat the default statute as your agreement if you don't write your own. Protect yourself; use the template.
  3. Missing the annual report deadline. Late fees compound. Add the date to your calendar the day you file.
Our recommendation

Don't want to file it yourself?

Our top-rated service for New Hampshire LLCs is Northwest. $39 + state fees. Real humans. No upsells.

Form with Northwest
Further reading

More on incorporating in New Hampshire