Every LLC has a formation state. It is the state whose secretary of state holds the entity’s articles of organization, whose laws govern its internal affairs, and whose taxing authority has primary jurisdiction. For LLC owners who formed their entities in California, New York, or other high-cost states, the formation state has become an annual liability.
The good news is that it can be changed. The legal mechanism for changing an LLC’s formation state is a direct conversion, available under the entity laws of most jurisdictions. It allows the LLC to move from one state to another while preserving its identity and its entire legal history. The entity continues to exist without interruption. The bad news is that the process is technical, the margin for error is narrow, and the wrong approach can produce results worse than leaving the entity where it is.
The Procedures That Do Not Work
Business owners researching how to change their LLC’s formation state encounter three procedures that appear similar but are not.
Foreign qualification registers the LLC in a second state. It does not change the formation state. The state that originally issued the articles of organization retains full jurisdiction. Its taxes apply. Its compliance requirements apply. Its regulatory agencies maintain authority. An LLC formed in New York that foreign-qualifies in Florida is still formed in New York. The formation state has not changed.
Dissolution and reformation terminates the LLC and creates a replacement. The original entity ceases to exist. Contracts are voided. The FEIN is abandoned. Tax elections are lost. Members assume personal liability for the dissolved entity’s debts. Taxable events are triggered at the federal and state level. This approach is destructive and unnecessary.
A merger-based approach forms a new LLC in the destination state and merges the original into it. The process adds cost and complexity without adding value when a direct conversion is available. The risk that the IRS will not treat the merger as tax-free introduces additional exposure.
The correct method is a direct conversion that allows an owner to change an LLC’s formation state while maintaining the entity’s continuous legal existence. The LLC’s FEIN, contracts, bank accounts, tax elections, intellectual property, capital accounts, and membership interests all survive. The entity before the conversion and the entity after it are the same legal entity, now governed by the law of the new state.
The Financial Driver
The annual cost of formation in a high-burden state is not a single expense. It is the sum of franchise taxes, entity-level fees, filing costs, publication requirements, and compliance obligations. In California, the minimum annual franchise tax for an LLC is $800, with a graduated fee that can add up to $11,790 based on gross receipts. In New York, the biennial publication requirement for LLCs adds thousands of dollars in newspaper advertising costs.
These costs are eliminated when the entity converts to a state that does not impose them. The savings accrue every year the entity exists in the new jurisdiction. Over a ten-year horizon, the cumulative savings are material.
The trend is confirmed by corporate precedent. Tesla, SpaceX, and Coinbase have each completed or initiated conversion filings. Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin have relocated personal holding entities out of California. The DEXIT movement, originally describing the departure of entities from Delaware, has expanded to include every high-cost state. Recent elections have confirmed that fiscal policy in these states will tighten further.
What Survives the Conversion
A properly executed conversion creates no disruption to the LLC’s operations. The entity’s FEIN remains the same. Bank accounts remain open. Contracts remain in force. Payroll systems operate without modification. Vendor and customer relationships continue without notification. Membership percentages, capital accounts, and distribution schedules carry forward unchanged.
When the conversion is part of a coordinated strategy to eliminate nexus with the former state, the LLC can cease filing returns and remitting taxes to the old jurisdiction. This outcome is not available through foreign qualification, which preserves the entity’s connection to the original state.
“An LLC’s formation state is not a birthplace,” states Chad D. Cummings, Esq., CPA, who leads Cummings and Cummings Law, a flat-fee practice with more than 500 completed state-to-state conversions. “It is a subscription. And subscriptions can be canceled.”
How Conversions Fail
The filing package includes a Plan of Conversion, member consents, articles of organization for the new state, and a conversion filing with the origin state. Both states’ requirements must be met. The filing sequence matters. Errors in order, substance, or timing can result in a rejected filing, loss of good standing, or inadvertent dissolution.
Inadvertent dissolution terminates the LLC. Members become personally liable for all company debts. A taxable event is created at both the federal and state level. Remediation requires reinstatement petitions, amended returns, counterparty disclosures, and potential litigation. The remediation cost exceeds the cost of a correct conversion by a wide margin.
Before Any Filing
Before submitting a conversion filing, the LLC owner must verify that the entity’s operating agreement, investor agreements, lender covenants, professional licenses, and federal and state tax elections will survive a change in formation state. A conversion that breaches a restrictive covenant or violates a licensing condition creates exposure that does not appear for months. When it does, the cost of correction can exceed the cost of the conversion by multiples.
This process sits at the intersection of multi-state entity law, federal tax law, and state tax law. It is not a form-filing exercise. The cost of competent execution is modest. The cost of incompetent execution is not.










































































