Forming a Florida LLC involves more paperwork than most business owners expect - and missing any of it creates real legal and operational problems. Some documents are legally required by the State of Florida. Others are not required to be filed, but are so important to your legal protection that operating without them is a serious risk. And a few are triggered by specific circumstances that many new LLC owners do not anticipate.
Whether you are forming a new LLC in Tampa Bay or St. Petersburg, or cleaning up the paperwork on an existing one, this complete 2026 breakdown covers every document your Florida LLC needs, what each one does, where it is filed (if anywhere), the current fees, and the consequences of not having it.
Document 1: Articles of Organization
The Articles of Organization is the founding document that creates your LLC. Without it, your LLC does not legally exist. It is filed with the Florida Division of Corporations through Sunbiz.org.
What It Contains
- LLC name (must include "LLC," "L.L.C.," "Limited Liability Company," or similar)
- Principal office address
- Name and address of the registered agent
- Management structure designation (member-managed or manager-managed)
- Name and address of the organizer (the person filing the articles)
- Effective date (optional - can be future-dated up to 90 days)
Filing Details
- Filing fee: $125
- Standard processing: 3-5 business days
- Filed with: Florida Division of Corporations (Sunbiz.org)
- Public record: Yes - visible on Sunbiz.org
Before filing, search Sunbiz.org to confirm your desired LLC name is available and not already in use by another Florida entity. The Division of Corporations will reject your filing if the name is not distinguishable from an existing entity.
Document 2: Operating Agreement
The operating agreement is the governing document for your LLC - the contract among the members that defines ownership, management, voting, distributions, and what happens in every important scenario the business might face. It is the most important document your LLC will have, and it is the one most often skipped or handled badly.
Florida does not require an operating agreement to be filed with the state. It is a private document. But Florida Chapter 605.0105 makes clear that where there is no operating agreement - or where the agreement is silent - Chapter 605 default rules govern. Those defaults were not written for your specific business, which is why a customized operating agreement is essential.
What a Complete Operating Agreement Should Cover
- Member names, ownership percentages or units, and initial capital contributions
- Management structure (member-managed or manager-managed) and decision-making authority
- Voting rights and voting thresholds for different types of decisions
- Distribution rules - when, how, and in what proportion profits are distributed
- Transfer restrictions - who can receive membership interests and under what conditions
- Buy-sell provisions - what happens when a member wants to leave, dies, becomes disabled, or is expelled
- Succession provisions - what happens to the LLC and its members upon a member's death
- Fiduciary duties, indemnification, and liability limitations
- Amendment procedures - how the operating agreement can be changed
- Dissolution and winding up procedures
Filing Details
- Filing fee: None - not filed with any government agency
- Public record: No - private contract between members
- Legally required: Not required to be filed, but effectively essential for proper LLC governance
- Banks often require it: Most Florida business banks require an operating agreement to open a business checking account
Document 3: EIN Confirmation Letter (Form SS-4)
An Employer Identification Number (EIN) - also called a Federal Tax Identification Number - is a nine-digit number issued by the IRS that functions as your LLC's federal tax ID. You need an EIN to:
- Open a business bank account
- File federal tax returns
- Hire employees and set up payroll
- Apply for business credit
- Apply for certain Florida business licenses
When you apply for an EIN (through the IRS website at IRS.gov - it is free), the IRS issues a confirmation letter - Form SS-4 or the online equivalent. This letter is your official proof of EIN assignment. Keep the original letter - banks, lenders, and government agencies will ask for it.
Filing Details
- Filing fee: None - EIN application is free through IRS.gov
- Processing: Online applications are typically issued immediately
- Filed with: IRS (not the Florida Division of Corporations)
- Note: Single-member LLCs with no employees can use the owner's Social Security Number in some circumstances, but a separate EIN is best practice
Document 4: Annual Report
The Florida annual report is a yearly renewal filing that every Florida LLC must submit to maintain its status as an active entity. It is not a tax return - it is a state registration renewal confirming your current registered agent, principal address, and authorized representative.
Failure to file the annual report by May 1 results in a $400 late fee assessed on May 2. Continued non-filing results in administrative dissolution of the LLC by the Florida Division of Corporations. A dissolved LLC loses its liability protection and cannot enforce contracts in Florida courts until reinstated.
Filing Details
- Filing fee: $138.75
- Late filing penalty: $400 (assessed May 2)
- Due date: May 1 of each year (for both the initial year and all subsequent years)
- Filed with: Florida Division of Corporations (Sunbiz.org)
- Public record: Yes
The $400 late fee is automatic on May 2 - there is no grace period and no waiver process. Set a calendar reminder in March each year to file early. Missing the annual report deadline for two consecutive years typically results in dissolution. Many LLC owners lose their entity without realizing it until they try to open a bank account or sign a contract.
Document 5: Registered Agent Designation
Florida law requires every LLC to maintain a registered agent at all times. The registered agent is the person or entity designated to receive legal notices, lawsuits, and official government documents on behalf of the LLC. This is how the state and the courts know they can reliably serve your LLC with legal process.
The registered agent must:
- Be a Florida resident or a business entity authorized to conduct business in Florida
- Have a physical street address in Florida (no P.O. Boxes)
- Be available during normal business hours to receive documents
- Consent in writing to serve as registered agent (this is part of the Articles of Organization filing)
If your registered agent resigns, you must appoint a new one immediately. A gap in registered agent designation can lead to the Division of Corporations revoking your Articles of Organization. You can serve as your own registered agent (if you have a Florida address), use a member or employee, or hire a registered agent service.
Filing Details
- Initial designation: Included in Articles of Organization filing
- Change of registered agent filing fee: $25
- Filed with: Florida Division of Corporations
- Registered agent service cost: Typically $50-$150/year from commercial providers
Document 6: Member Resolutions and Written Consents
Unlike corporations, Florida LLCs are not legally required to hold annual meetings or maintain written meeting minutes. However, major decisions should be documented in writing - through either a formal resolution or a written consent signed by the appropriate members or managers.
Written documentation of LLC decisions serves several important purposes:
- Establishes that the LLC acted through proper authority (a necessary element for binding contracts)
- Provides evidence that the LLC was operating as a real, separate entity - important for maintaining the liability protection against veil-piercing claims
- Creates an official record for financial institutions, lenders, and investors
- Documents the authorization for specific transactions (opening a bank account, purchasing real estate, taking out a loan, adding a new member)
Common types of LLC resolutions and written consents:
- Banking resolution: Authorizes specific individuals to open and operate bank accounts on behalf of the LLC. Banks typically require this.
- Membership admission resolution: Formally admits a new member and documents their capital contribution and ownership interest.
- Real property transaction resolution: Authorizes the purchase, sale, or encumbrance of real estate owned by the LLC.
- Major contract resolution: Authorizes entry into a significant contract, lease, or financing agreement.
Document 7: Certificate of Status
A Certificate of Status (also called a Certificate of Good Standing in some states) is an official document issued by the Florida Division of Corporations confirming that your LLC is active, in good standing, and authorized to conduct business in Florida. It is a snapshot certificate, not an ongoing document - it confirms status as of the date issued.
You will need a Certificate of Status when:
- Opening certain types of bank accounts or obtaining business financing
- Registering to do business in another state as a foreign LLC
- Completing a merger, acquisition, or entity conversion
- Applying for professional licenses in Florida or other states
- Domesticating your entity out of Florida
- Entering into certain real estate transactions
Filing Details
- Fee: $5 per certificate (online) or $8.75 (certified)
- Obtained from: Florida Division of Corporations (Sunbiz.org)
- Processing: Immediate (online orders)
- Note: Certificates are typically accepted only if dated within 30-60 days of the transaction requiring them
Summary: Florida LLC Document Checklist
| Document | Required By | Filing Fee | Filed With | Public Record | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Articles of Organization | Florida law (Chapter 605) | $125 | FL Division of Corporations | Yes | |
| Operating Agreement | Not required to file, but practically essential | None | Not filed | No | |
| EIN Confirmation Letter | IRS (needed for banking/taxes) | Free | IRS | No | |
| Annual Report | Florida law - due May 1 annually | $138.75 | FL Division of Corporations | Yes | |
| Registered Agent Designation | Florida law (ongoing requirement) | Included in Articles | FL Division of Corporations | Yes | |
| Member Resolutions/Written Consents | Best practice for governance | None | Internal LLC records | No | |
| Certificate of Status | When required by third parties | $5-$8.75 | FL Division of Corporations | Yes (upon request) |
Frequently Asked Questions
Get Your Florida LLC Documents Right the First Time
FL Patel Law helps Tampa Bay and St. Petersburg business owners form Florida LLCs with every required document properly prepared - from Articles of Organization to customized operating agreements. Flat-fee and hourly pricing available. Call (727) 279-5037 to schedule a consultation.
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