Arizona charges $50 to form an LLC; New Hampshire charges $100. Day-one sticker price is only part of the story, since most of the real cost comes from the annual obligations that stack up each year you keep the LLC open.

Over a rolling three-year window, Arizona runs about $350 less in total state fees than New Hampshire. Whether that gap matters depends on whether you actually operate in one of these states or are weighing a non-resident filing.

On speed, New Hampshire typically clears standard online filings faster than Arizona. Both states offer expedited tiers at an additional cost for filers on tight timelines.

For most small operators the choice is not really between these two states at all. It is between forming where the business actually operates and trying to route through a non-resident filing. The data below shows what each option actually costs.

Formation filing fee
Arizona $50
New Hampshire $100
Arizona saves $50
Year 1 total estimate
Arizona $150
New Hampshire $300
Arizona saves $150
Ongoing per year
Arizona $100
New Hampshire $200
Arizona saves $100
3-year total
Arizona $350
New Hampshire $700
Arizona saves $350

Key differences at a glance

  • Arizona costs $50 less to form ($50 vs $100).
  • Arizona is $100 per year cheaper to maintain ($100 vs $200).
  • New Hampshire has no state individual income tax; pass-through LLC income flows to members without a state layer. The other state does tax at the member level.
  • Arizona requires newly formed LLCs to publish a formation notice in local newspapers; this can add $50 to $1,800 depending on county.
  • Arizona has no annual report filing at all. New Hampshire requires an annual (or biennial) report every reporting period.

Where each state fits

For most filers, forming in the state you actually operate from is the right call. The side-by-side below shows where the two states meaningfully diverge.

What each state offers that the other does not

Only Arizona

  • No annual report

Only New Hampshire

  • No state income tax
  • No state sales tax
  • No publication requirement

Both states

  • Online filing
  • Paid expedited tier
  • No entity-level franchise or LLC tax
  • Operating agreement not statutorily required

Three-year cost, side by side

Rough estimate of the state-facing cost to form and keep an LLC through three years. Both totals include a $100 per year registered-agent estimate.

Arizona New Hampshire
Year 1
$150
$300
Year 2
$250
$500
Year 3
$350
$700

Running total includes the one-time filing fee and annual ongoing costs (report fee or franchise tax plus a $100/year registered agent estimate).

What it costs under your specific situation

The table below runs the same LLC through four common scenarios. "Non-resident" rows assume a typical home-state foreign LLC registration adds about $200 per year of stacked cost; the real number depends on which state you live in and ranges from $50 to over $800 depending on jurisdiction.

Scenario Year 1 Each year after 3-year total
You live in Arizona, business operates there
No foreign LLC registration needed. You pay Arizona fees only.
$150 $100 $350
You live in New Hampshire, business operates there
No foreign LLC registration needed. You pay New Hampshire fees only.
$300 $200 $700
Non-resident forming in Arizona with operations elsewhere
You pay Arizona's fees plus a typical home-state foreign LLC registration of about $200 per year.
$350 $300 $950
Non-resident forming in New Hampshire with operations elsewhere
You pay New Hampshire's fees plus a typical home-state foreign LLC registration of about $200 per year.
$500 $400 $1,300

Arizona vs New Hampshire: full comparison

Dimension Arizona New Hampshire
Online filing
Can you file the formation document online?
Yes Yes
Online approval time
Standard, non-expedited
14 business days 10 business days
Expedited option
Paid fast-track filing
$35 $25
Annual report
Required in addition to tax
None Required, $100
State-imposed annual tax
Franchise, privilege, or LLC tax minimum
None None
State income tax
On pass-through LLC income at member level
Yes No
Publication requirement
Newspaper publication after formation
Required No
Operating agreement
Required by state statute
Recommended, not required Recommended, not required
Foreign LLC fee
Cost to register as a foreign LLC in this state
$150 $100
State sales tax
General statewide rate
5.6% None

Taxes in Arizona and New Hampshire

How each state handles entity-level tax on LLCs. Pass-through classification means member-level income tax also applies at each member's residence state.

Arizona tax

No entity-level franchise tax on LLCs. State income tax applies to member-level pass-through income. Corporate rate 4.9%.

New Hampshire tax

No entity-level franchise tax on LLCs. No state income tax. Corporate rate 7.5%.

Ongoing compliance

The recurring filings each state requires after formation.

Arizona

No annual state filing. Registered agent required in Arizona.

New Hampshire

Annual report $100, due 04/01 each year. Registered agent required in New Hampshire.

Formation process, side by side

What actually happens from the moment you start filing to the moment you're in good standing. Use this as a checklist.

Arizona

  1. Prepare a publication-ready notice (required in Arizona).
  2. Check business-name availability on the Arizona entity search.
  3. Appoint a registered agent with a physical Arizona street address.
  4. File Articles of Organization (Form L010) for $50.
  5. Wait for approval. Online typically 14 business days. Paid expedite from $35.
  6. Adopt an operating agreement (recommended, not required by Arizona statute).
  7. Apply for a federal EIN (free from the IRS).
  8. Open a business bank account to separate personal and business finances.
  9. No annual state filing required in Arizona.

New Hampshire

  1. Check business-name availability on the New Hampshire entity search.
  2. Appoint a registered agent with a physical New Hampshire street address.
  3. File Certificate of Formation (Form LLC-1) for $100.
  4. Wait for approval. Online typically 10 business days. Paid expedite from $25.
  5. Adopt an operating agreement (recommended, not required by New Hampshire statute).
  6. Apply for a federal EIN (free from the IRS).
  7. Open a business bank account to separate personal and business finances.
  8. File your first annual report and pay $100 when it comes due.

Before you pick either state

A few things that apply no matter which state you choose. These trip up enough first-time filers that they're worth stating explicitly.

Registered agent is non-negotiable. Both Arizona and New Hampshire (and every other US state) require every LLC to designate a registered agent with a physical street address in the state of formation. You can serve as your own agent if you live in the state; otherwise a commercial agent runs $50 to $125 per year. Using your own home address makes it part of the public record.

Forming elsewhere does not escape your home state's tax. If you live and operate a business from your home state, forming the LLC in Arizona or New Hampshire does not avoid your home state's income tax. The moment you transact business at home, your home state requires a foreign LLC registration, and state tax liability follows your residence regardless of where the entity sits on paper.

EIN applications are free. The IRS issues Employer Identification Numbers directly at no cost. Any service charging you to "get your EIN" is reselling a free form submission. Single-member LLCs with no employees technically don't need one for federal tax, but nearly every bank requires an EIN to open a business account.

Operating agreement matters more than the state you pick. A well-drafted operating agreement governs member ownership, management, profit splits, buy-sell terms, and dissolution. Without one, your LLC runs on the state's default rules, which are rarely what you want. California, Maine, Missouri, and New York require a written one by statute; every other state treats it as strongly recommended.

Agency contacts

Arizona Corporation Commission - Corporations Division

Website
azcc.gov/corporations/home
Phone
(602) 542-3026
Email
answers@azcc.gov
Mail
Arizona Corporation Commission, Corporations Division, 1300 West Washington Street, Phoenix, AZ 85007-2996
Office
Arizona Corporation Commission, 1300 West Washington Street, Phoenix, AZ 85007-2996
Hours
8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Mountain, Monday to Friday

New Hampshire Secretary of State, Corporation Division

Website
www.sos.nh.gov/corporations-0
Phone
(603) 271-3246
Email
corporate@sos.nh.gov
Mail
Corporation Division, 107 North Main Street, Room 204, Concord, NH 03301-4989
Office
State House, 107 North Main Street, Room 204, Concord, NH 03301
Hours
8:00 AM to 4:30 PM Eastern, Monday to Friday

Arizona Department of Revenue

Website
azdor.gov
Phone
(602) 255-3381
Mail
Arizona Department of Revenue, 1600 W Monroe St, Phoenix, AZ 85007
Office
1600 W Monroe St, Phoenix, AZ 85007
Hours
8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Mountain, Monday to Friday

New Hampshire Department of Revenue Administration

Website
www.revenue.nh.gov
Phone
(603) 230-5000
Mail
Governor Hugh Gallen State Office Park, 109 Pleasant Street (Medical and Surgical Building), Concord, NH 03301
Office
109 Pleasant Street, Concord, NH 03301
Hours
8:00 AM to 4:30 PM Eastern, Monday to Friday

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Is it cheaper to form an LLC in Arizona or New Hampshire?

    Arizona is cheaper at formation ($50) than New Hampshire ($100). Ongoing costs are also different: $100 vs $200 per year. Total over three years: $350 vs $700.

  • Can I form an LLC in Arizona if I live in New Hampshire?

    Yes, but your New Hampshire business will almost certainly need to register as a foreign LLC in New Hampshire too, which means paying New Hampshire's foreign registration fee and any ongoing New Hampshire obligations on top of the Arizona ones. The "form elsewhere to save" math usually doesn't work for operating businesses; it only works when you have no physical operations tied to any specific state.

  • How long does it take to form an LLC in Arizona vs New Hampshire?

    Arizona online: 14 business days; New Hampshire online: 10 business days. Arizona offers paid expedite from $35. New Hampshire offers paid expedite from $25.

  • Which state has lower taxes for an LLC, Arizona or New Hampshire?

    Arizona: state income tax applies to member-level pass-through income, no entity-level franchise or LLC tax. New Hampshire: no state income tax, no entity-level franchise or LLC tax.

  • Do both states require a registered agent?

    Yes. Every US state (and DC) requires every LLC to maintain a registered agent with a physical street address in the state. Arizona and New Hampshire both have this requirement. You can serve as your own agent if you live in the state; most out-of-state filers use a commercial agent for $50 to $125 per year.

  • Does Arizona or New Hampshire have a publication requirement?

    Arizona does. New LLCs must publish a formation notice in approved newspapers, which can add $50 to $1,800 to your first-year cost depending on the county where the LLC is based. New Hampshire has no publication requirement.

  • Which state should I pick if I run an online business from home?

    Form in the state you actually live in. Your home state's Department of Revenue treats your residence as nexus regardless of where the LLC is filed, which means you owe state income tax there anyway. Forming in Arizona or New Hampshire to escape your home state's tax doesn't work; it adds paperwork. The non-resident filings make sense when you genuinely operate nowhere in particular: international founders, purely passive holding entities, or real-estate LLCs owning property in other states.

Full state guides

More Arizona and New Hampshire comparisons

Sources

  • Filing fee: azcc.gov/docs/default-source/corps-files/fee-schedules/fee-schedule-ll… · verified April 21, 2026
    Arizona Corporation Commission Schedule of Fees - Limited Liability Companies (A.R.S. Title 29), Rev. 3.2026. 'Articles of Organization' = $50 regular, $85 expedited (the $85 figure is the total, i.e. $50 base + $35 expedited surcharge).
  • Expedited filing: azcc.gov/docs/default-source/corps-files/fee-schedules/fee-schedule-ll… · verified April 21, 2026
    Regular expedited processing for Articles of Organization totals $85 ($35 surcharge on top of the $50 base fee) and is generally completed within 3-5 business days. Arizona also offers Same Day/Next Day Accelerated Processing on top of expedited: Next Day = $100, Same Day = $200, 2-Hour = $400. We record the cheapest expedited tier (the $35 surcharge, approx 5 business days) in the struct.
  • Foreign LLC registration fee: azcc.gov/docs/default-source/corps-files/fee-schedules/fee-schedule-ll… · verified April 21, 2026
    Foreign Registration Statement = $150 regular, $185 expedited. We record the regular fee.
  • Operating agreement requirement: www.azleg.gov/ars/29/03105.htm · verified April 21, 2026
    A.R.S. §29-3105 (Arizona Limited Liability Company Act) recognizes an operating agreement as the governing document among members and permits it to be oral, written, implied, or any combination. There is no statutory requirement that an LLC adopt an operating agreement, so this is recorded as not required.
  • Publication requirement: www.azleg.gov/ars/29/03201.htm · verified April 21, 2026
    A.R.S. §29-3201(G) requires newspaper publication of the notice of LLC formation in the county of the statutory agent's street address for three consecutive publications within 60 days after filing the Articles of Organization, unless the statutory agent's street address is in a county with a population of more than 800,000, in which case the Commission inputs the notice into its public notice database. Only Maricopa County and Pima County exceed that population threshold, so LLCs with statutory agents in those two counties are exempt (covering roughly 75% of Arizona's population). LLCs in the remaining 13 counties must arrange publication; typical newspaper cost is $60-$120.
  • Franchise tax: azdor.gov/forms/corporate-income-tax-highlights · verified April 21, 2026
    Arizona has no franchise tax on LLCs or corporations. The Arizona Department of Revenue levies only a corporate income tax (4.9% on C-corp taxable income, $50 minimum) and the Transaction Privilege Tax (a gross-receipts-style sales tax at 5.6% statewide plus local rates), neither of which functions as a traditional franchise tax.
  • Corporate income tax rate: azdor.gov/forms/corporate-income-tax-highlights · verified April 21, 2026
    Arizona corporate income tax is a flat 4.9% of Arizona taxable income (A.R.S. §43-1111) with a $50 minimum tax. LLCs are pass-through by default and do not owe corporate income tax unless they elect to be taxed as a C-corp. Recorded here for the maxCorporateRate informational field.
  • Sales tax rate: azdor.gov/business/transaction-privilege-tax · verified April 21, 2026
    Arizona's statewide Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) rate is 5.6%. TPT is technically a tax on the vendor's privilege of doing business rather than a consumer sales tax, but it functions as the state's sales tax. Counties and municipalities add their own TPT rates, with combined effective rates commonly ranging 7.5% to 11.2% across Arizona. Only the 5.6% statewide rate is recorded in salesTaxRate.
  • Business name search: arizonabusinesscenter.azcc.gov/businesssearch · verified April 21, 2026
    The Arizona Corporation Commission retired the legacy eCorp system on January 12, 2026 and replaced it with the Arizona Business Center (ABC). The ABC portal hosts the current public business entity search and online filing system. The previous ecorp.azcc.gov URLs no longer resolve.
  • Online filing portal: arizonabusinesscenter.azcc.gov/homepage · verified April 21, 2026
    Arizona Business Center is the ACC's official online business filing portal as of January 12, 2026. Articles of Organization, foreign registrations, and most maintenance filings are submitted here. Approval times are generally 12-15 business days for regular online filings, faster with the expedited surcharge.
  • Certificate of Formation name: www.azcc.gov/docs/default-source/corps-files/forms/l010-articles-of-or… · verified April 21, 2026
    Form L010 - Articles of Organization (domestic LLC). Filers using the online Arizona Business Center portal complete an equivalent on-screen form. Instructions are published at azcc.gov as form L010i.
  • Annual report: www.azcc.gov/corporations/forms/llc-forms · verified April 21, 2026
    Unlike Arizona corporations, Arizona LLCs do not file an annual report. The Arizona Corporation Commission's LLC forms page lists no annual report form for LLCs, and the LLC fee schedule does not include an annual report fee. This is confirmed by A.R.S. Title 29, Chapter 7, which imposes no annual report duty on LLCs.
  • Filing fee: www.sos.nh.gov/sites/g/files/ehbemt561/files/documents/2023-12/form_ll… · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire Form LLC-1 Certificate of Formation: filing fee of $100 payable to State of New Hampshire. Online filing through NH QuickStart adds a $2 electronic processing surcharge (total $102). In-person walk-in filings carry an additional $25 expedite fee.
  • Expedited filing: sos.nh.gov/corporation-ucc-securities/corporation/forms-and-fees · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire Secretary of State Corporation Division: expedited service is available in person in the Customer Lobby for an additional $25 fee, providing next business day processing. Not offered for standard online or mail filings. Recorded the $25 walk-in tier.
  • Annual report fee: www.sos.nh.gov/corporations-0/file-annual-report · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire LLC annual report fee: $100 by mail or $102 online (includes $2 e-processing surcharge). Due April 1 each year. $50 late penalty applies if not filed by April 1. Filed through NH QuickStart.
  • Foreign LLC registration fee: www.sos.nh.gov/sites/g/files/ehbemt561/files/documents/2023-11/form_fl… · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire Form FLLC-1 Application for Foreign Limited Liability Company Registration: filing fee of $100. Matches the domestic Certificate of Formation fee.
  • Operating agreement requirement: law.justia.com/codes/new-hampshire/title-xxviii/chapter-304-c/section-… · verified April 21, 2026
    RSA 304-C:40 Form of Operating Agreement: an operating agreement may be written, oral, or implied by course of dealing or otherwise. New Hampshire does not require LLCs to adopt a written operating agreement. Recorded as not required.
  • Publication requirement: gc.nh.gov/rsa/html/nhtoc/nhtoc-xxviii-304-c.htm · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire RSA Chapter 304-C contains no newspaper publication requirement for LLC formation. Not required.
  • Corporate income tax rate: www.revenue.nh.gov/taxes-glance/business-taxes · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire Business Profits Tax (BPT) rate is 7.5% for taxable periods ending on or after December 31, 2023, and continuing for 2026 per NH DRA. This is the state's functional corporate income tax rate. Not combined with the 0.55% Business Enterprise Tax (BET), which is captured separately in taxes.notes per the playbook's maxCorporateRate = income-only rule.
  • Sales tax rate: www.revenue.nh.gov/ · verified April 21, 2026
    New Hampshire imposes no general state sales tax. A 9% Meals and Rooms (Rentals) Tax applies to prepared food, hotel lodging, and motor vehicle rentals, but no broad retail sales tax exists.
  • Business name search: quickstart.sos.nh.gov/online/BusinessInquire · verified April 21, 2026
    NH QuickStart Business Inquire portal. Use to confirm name availability before filing.
  • Online filing portal: quickstart.sos.nh.gov/online/Account/LandingPage · verified April 21, 2026
    NH QuickStart online business filing portal. Current published online processing time is 10 to 15 business days. Online submissions carry a $2 electronic processing surcharge on top of the $100 filing fee.
  • Certificate of Formation name: www.sos.nh.gov/sites/g/files/ehbemt561/files/documents/2023-12/form_ll… · verified April 21, 2026
    Mail-in paper form titled 'Certificate of Formation' (Form LLC-1), revised October 2018. Online filers complete the equivalent form through NH QuickStart.