How to Close a Foreign-Owned US LLC
Step-by-step guide to properly dissolving your LLC — from filing final tax returns to canceling your registered agent. Avoid ongoing fees and $25,000 penalties.
Key Facts
Why Proper Dissolution Matters
Simply stopping business operations does not close your LLC. Without proper dissolution, your LLC continues to exist as a legal entity, which means you remain liable for:
- Annual state franchise taxes and filing fees
- Annual registered agent fees
- IRS filing requirements — Form 5472 must be filed every year the LLC exists
- BOI reporting updates with FinCEN
Critical: Each year you fail to file Form 5472, you face a $25,000 penalty. If you stopped operating 3 years ago but never dissolved, you could owe $75,000 or more in penalties alone.
Step-by-Step Dissolution Process
Follow these five steps in order to properly close your foreign-owned LLC:
File Final Tax Returns
File Form 1120 with 'Final Return' checked + final Form 5472 with the IRS.
File State Dissolution
File Articles of Dissolution (or Certificate of Cancellation) with your state.
Cancel Your EIN
Send a letter to the IRS to close your Employer Identification Number.
Close Bank Accounts
Withdraw all funds and close your U.S. business bank account.
Cancel Registered Agent
Notify your registered agent that the LLC is dissolved.
Step 1: Filing Final Tax Returns
You must file a final Form 1120 (with Form 5472 attached) for the year in which the LLC ceases operations. This is required even if the LLC had no income during its final year.
Form 1120 — Final Return
- Check the "Final return" box at the top of page 1 (Item A)
- Report any income, deductions, and transactions for the final period
- The tax year ends on the date of dissolution (short-year return)
Form 5472 — Final Filing
- Report all related-party transactions through the dissolution date
- Include any final distributions to the foreign owner
- Include any payments for dissolution fees, legal costs, etc.
Our filer supports final returns: Use our Form 5472 filer to generate your final Form 1120 + Form 5472. The "Final Return" checkbox is supported.
Step 2: State Dissolution / Withdrawal
You must file dissolution paperwork with the state where your LLC was formed. The document name and process varies by state:
| State | Document Name | Filing Fee |
|---|---|---|
| Delaware | Certificate of Cancellation | $200 |
| Wyoming | Articles of Dissolution | $0 (free) |
| New Mexico | Articles of Dissolution | $0 (free) |
| Florida | Articles of Dissolution | $25 |
| Texas | Certificate of Termination | $40 |
Important: Before filing dissolution, make sure all state taxes and annual report fees are current. Many states will not process a dissolution if there are outstanding obligations.
If your LLC was registered as a foreign entity in additional states (i.e., you registered to do business in states beyond your formation state), you'll also need to file a Certificate of Withdrawal in each of those states.
Step 3: Canceling Your EIN
To close your EIN account with the IRS, you need to send a letter to:
Internal Revenue Service
Cincinnati, OH 45999
The letter should include:
- The LLC's complete legal name
- The EIN number
- The LLC's business address
- The reason for closing (e.g., "LLC has been dissolved and is no longer conducting business")
- A copy of the state dissolution confirmation (if available)
You can also fax this letter to the IRS. Use Alohi Fax to send documents to the IRS online.
Note:An EIN is never truly "canceled" — it remains permanently assigned to your LLC. What you're actually doing is closing the business account associated with the EIN, which stops the IRS from expecting future filings.
Step 4: Closing Bank Accounts
Before closing your bank account:
- Ensure all outstanding payments and deposits have cleared
- Transfer any remaining balance to the owner's personal account (this is a reportable distribution — include it on your final Form 5472)
- Download all bank statements for your records (you should keep these for at least 7 years)
- Contact your bank to formally close the account
Timing: Close the bank account after you have filed your final tax returns and state dissolution. You may need the account to pay dissolution fees or receive any final payments.
Step 5: Canceling Your Registered Agent
Once your LLC is dissolved with the state, notify your registered agent to cancel your service. Most registered agents will continue to charge annual fees until notified.
- Provide a copy of your state dissolution filing
- Request written confirmation of cancellation
- Check if any refund is available for the remaining service period
- Confirm there are no outstanding invoices
What Happens If You Don't Dissolve Properly
Abandoning your LLC without proper dissolution creates compounding problems:
Continued State Fees
States continue to charge annual franchise taxes, report fees, and late penalties. Delaware, for example, charges $300/year in franchise tax plus $200 late fees. These accumulate and can eventually lead to administrative dissolution with penalties.
IRS Form 5472 Penalties
The IRS requires Form 5472 for every year the LLC exists — even with zero activity. Each missed filing triggers a $25,000 penalty. Miss 3 years and you're facing $75,000 in penalties.
Registered Agent Fees
Your registered agent continues to charge $100-$300/year. If you stop paying, they may resign — which means your LLC loses its registered agent, a violation in most states.
Administrative Dissolution
If you accumulate enough unpaid fees, the state may administratively dissolve your LLC. This does not remove your IRS filing obligations — you still owe all back Form 5472 filings and penalties. Reinstatement to properly dissolve may require paying all back fees plus penalties.
Related Tools
File Final Form 5472
File your final Form 1120 + Form 5472 with the Final Return box checked.
Penalty Calculator
Estimate penalties for missed Form 5472 filings.
Catch-Up Filing
Need to file back years of Form 5472 before dissolving?
ECI Filing Service
If your LLC had income connected to a U.S. trade or business.
Need Help with Dissolution?
doola can handle the entire dissolution process for your LLC — final tax filings, state paperwork, EIN closure, and more. Focus on what's next while they take care of closing out your LLC properly.
Get Dissolution AssistanceFile Your Final Form 5472
Don't leave your LLC without a final Form 5472 filing. Our guided filer supports the Final Return checkbox and walks you through the process.
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