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Mississippi LLC Penalty for Not Registering

Operating in Mississippi without a certificate of authority can bar your LLC from Mississippi courts and create back-fee exposure. Here's the full cost.

No flat fine, but you lose court access until you register

Mississippi doesn't charge a flat civil penalty for unregistered foreign LLCs under Miss. Code s. 79-29-1013. But you can't maintain any action in Mississippi courts until you register, and by transacting business without registration you automatically appoint the Secretary of State as your agent for service of process. Note: Mississippi's foreign-corporation provision (s. 79-4-15.02) imposes a $10/day penalty capped at $1,000/year, but this only applies to corporations - the LLC statute contains no similar fine. Contracts and personal liability are preserved.

What's at stake If you don't register Severity
Civil penaltyNo flat civil penalty in the statute, but this does not mean free. Your real cost runs through back fees and the loss of court access (see below). For an LLC trying to enforce a contract or collect a debt, the closed-door rule is often more expensive than any flat fine would be.Medium
Back fees on cureStandard registration fees apply on cure. The statute does not specify a separate retroactive assessment, but the state may still collect missed annual report fees.Medium
Right to sue in state courtClosed. You cannot bring or maintain any lawsuit in state court until you register. If you need to sue a customer, a partner, or a vendor, you have to register first. You can still defend yourself if someone sues you.High
Contract validityYour contracts stay enforceable. Failing to register does not void any deal you signed, and the other party still owes you what they agreed to.Low
Personal liabilityYour personal assets are still protected by the LLC. Failing to register does not by itself pierce the corporate veil. Other liability theories like veil-piercing, personal guarantees, and fraud are unaffected.Low
State tax exposurePossible. Mississippi imposes corporate income tax (3-5%) on LLCs taxed as corporations and a corporation franchise tax (the lesser of $25 minimum or graduated by capital). LLCs taxed as partnerships or disregarded entities pass through to members. Sales tax and other state taxes apply under separate Department of Revenue rules.Medium
How it gets enforcedEnforced when you try to register, sue someone in state court, or apply for state contracts or licenses. The state finds out at the worst possible moment for you.N/A

Last verified 2026-05-01 against the Mississippi statute. Some citations verified against the state legislature; others against secondary sources (Justia/FindLaw). See statutory citations ↓

Statutory citations and verbatim text
Court access
Miss. Code s. 79-29-1013(1)
"A foreign limited liability company transacting business in this state may not maintain any action, suit, or proceeding in any court of this state until it has registered in this state."
Civil penalty
Miss. Code s. 79-29-1013
Contract validity
Miss. Code s. 79-29-1013(2)
"The failure of a foreign limited liability company to register in this state does not: (a) Impair the validity of any contract or act of the foreign limited liability company; (b) Impair the right of any other party to the contract to maintain any action, suit or proceeding on the contract; or (c) Prevent the foreign limited liability company from defending any action, suit, or proceeding in any court of this state."
Personal liability
Miss. Code s. 79-29-1013(3)
"A member of a foreign limited liability company is not liable for the debts, obligations or liabilities of the foreign limited liability company solely by reason of the foreign limited liability company having transacted business in this state without registration."

Here's how to fix it before any of this catches up to you.

You can file the foreign qualification yourself directly with the Mississippi Secretary of State for the standard filing fee. The application looks straightforward, but rejections are common. A wrong form version, a missing certificate of good standing from your home state, or a name conflict with an existing entity will bounce the filing and reset the clock by two to three weeks. Every week you stay unregistered is another week of penalty accrual.

Have Northwest file it for you, correctly the first time

Northwest reviews your application before it goes in, catches the rejection-causing mistakes (form version, name conflict, missing certificate of good standing), and submits same-day in most states. They'll also serve as your registered agent so the filing meets the statutory requirement on day one. If something is wrong, they fix it before the Secretary of State sees it, not after a rejection notice arrives three weeks later.

Get Northwest Registered Agent ↗
Recommended · $125/year · Same-day filing · Privacy included

Other options

Registered Agents Inc
$200/year · Includes annual report filing
Visit site ↗
Harbor Compliance
$99/year · Full-service compliance option
Visit site ↗

Filing yourself anyway? See the Mississippi foreign LLC registration guide for the form, fee, and step-by-step process.

More Mississippi guides

Check your compliance

Answer 3 questions to find out if your LLC needs to register in other states.

Start free compliance check ↗

Need to change your registered agent?

See the form, fee, and step-by-step process for changing your registered agent in Mississippi.

Mississippi change of agent guide ↗

Not sure if you need to register?

Learn what counts as “doing business” and which activities trigger the foreign qualification requirement.

What triggers foreign qualification? ↗

This page provides general information based on publicly available Mississippi statutes. It is not legal advice and is not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney about a specific situation. Statutes change. Court interpretations vary by case. Verify current statute text with the Mississippi legislature before relying on the information here. If you are facing enforcement action or a pending lawsuit, consult a Mississippi business attorney.