Every Utah LLC, corporation, and nonprofit must file an annual renewal (also called the annual report) with the Division of Corporations during its anniversary month — the fee is a flat $18 for all entity types. Utah gives a 30-day grace period; after that a $10 late fee applies, and administrative dissolution proceedings begin 60 days past due. FileForms files Utah annual renewals automatically and tracks every entity’s anniversary month.
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Utah’s annual renewal is one of the cheapest and simplest in the country — $18, filed online in minutes. The catch is that it’s anniversary-based (every entity has its own month) and the dissolution clock moves quickly: 60 days past due and the state can start winding your business down.
File Now Book a DemoThe Utah annual renewal (the state’s term for the annual report) is a yearly filing with the Utah Department of Commerce, Division of Corporations & Commercial Code. It confirms your entity’s information — registered agent, principal address, and management — and keeps it active and in good standing. Every domestic and foreign LLC, corporation, nonprofit, LP, and LLP registered in Utah must file.
All entity types pay the same $18 fee.
| Entity type | Filing agency | Method | State fee | Due date | Turnaround | Statute | Late consequence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic / foreign LLC | Utah Div. of Corporations & Commercial Code | Online (corporations.utah.gov) | $18 | During anniversary month | Immediate (online) | Utah Code § 48-3a-208 | 30-day grace, then $10 late fee; dissolution proceedings after 60 days |
| Corporation | Utah Div. of Corporations & Commercial Code | Online | $18 | During anniversary month | Immediate (online) | Utah Code § 16-10a-1607 | 30-day grace, then $10 late fee; dissolution after 60 days |
| Nonprofit corporation | Utah Div. of Corporations & Commercial Code | Online | $18 | During anniversary month | Immediate (online) | Utah Code § 16-6a-1607 | 30-day grace, then $10 late fee; dissolution over time |
Last verified: June 27, 2026 · Source: Utah Division of Corporations & Commercial Code
Utah uses an anniversary-month system: your renewal is due during the calendar month your entity was formed or registered in Utah. Formed in March? You renew every March. The state emails/mails a reminder, and you can file once the window opens — but with a different month for each entity, multi-entity owners are tracking several deadlines a year. There’s a 30-day grace period after the due date with no penalty.
It’s due during your entity’s anniversary month — the month it was formed or registered in Utah — every year. Utah adds a 30-day grace period after the due date.
A flat $18 for all entity types — LLCs, corporations, nonprofits, LPs, and LLPs. A $10 late fee applies only after the 30-day grace period.
Yes. Utah’s official term is “annual renewal,” but it’s the same yearly filing other states call an annual report.
You have a 30-day grace period with no penalty. After that a $10 late fee applies, and if the renewal stays unfiled about 60 days past due, the Division can begin administrative dissolution, requiring reinstatement.
Online through the Utah Division of Corporations & Commercial Code at corporations.utah.gov. FileForms can file on your behalf so you never track the anniversary month manually.
Yes. FileForms files Utah annual renewals for single entities or entire portfolios, tracking each entity’s anniversary month with proactive reminders and a centralized dashboard.
$149 per state filing plus applicable state fees. Never miss a Utah anniversary-month deadline again.
File Now Book a DemoUtah business services: Utah registered agent · Utah LLC formation · Utah foreign qualification · Utah certificate of good standing
More annual reports: Annual report deadlines by state · Annual report filing service (all 50 states)