South Carolinan annual report cost
South Carolinan LLCs do NOT file an annual report. Corporations file Schedule C-CL with their state income tax return. LLC annual report state fee in South Carolina is $0 (the state does not charge for LLC reports). Our standard service fee of $99 applies. Corporation annual report state fee in South Carolina is $25/year. Our standard service fee of $99 applies on top. We file your South Carolinan annual report on time, every time, for $99 one-time + state fee, or $129/year with Compliance Annual Filings (auto-renewing).
South Carolinan annual report fees
| LLC annual report state fee | $0 (state does not charge) |
|---|---|
| Corporation annual report state fee | $25/year |
| Nonprofit annual report state fee | $0 (state does not charge) |
| File.Business one-time filing service | $99 + state fee |
| File.Business Compliance Annual Filings (auto-renewing) | $129/year + state fee |
What happens if you miss the South Carolinan annual report deadline
- Late fees: South Carolina typically charges $25-$100 in late fees plus interest.
- Loss of good standing: Your entity is marked "not in good standing." This blocks loans, contracts, certain license applications.
- Administrative dissolution: South Carolina can dissolve your entity after extended non-compliance, requiring reinstatement fees ($100-$500) and reapplication.
- Personal liability exposure: Operating a dissolved entity can pierce the liability shield, exposing owners personally.
Never miss a South Carolinan annual report deadline
Our compliance suite tracks all your South Carolina deadlines and files automatically. Penalty-free guarantee: if we miss a deadline, we cover the late fees.
See South Carolinan annual report detailsYour full South Carolina compliance picture
Every File.Business resource related to running a business in South Carolina: formation, annual filings, agents, EIN, BOI, taxes, and the long-tail filings that follow.
Frequently asked questions.
How much does the South Carolina annual report cost?
South Carolina sets the fee, and it varies widely, from nothing in a few states to a modest or substantial amount in others, sometimes flat and sometimes based on revenue, shares, or entity type. Because the figure changes and differs by entity, we show the current South Carolina amount before filing and pass it through at cost. Our service pricing is on the pricing page.
Does South Carolina charge different annual report fees by entity type?
Often yes: South Carolina frequently sets different fees, and sometimes different forms and schedules, for LLCs versus corporations versus nonprofits, and corporations sometimes owe more. Filing under the wrong classification causes errors. We confirm the correct South Carolina fee and form for your exact entity type so you pay the right amount on the right report, not a guess.
Are there late fees if I miss the South Carolina deadline?
Almost always: South Carolina typically adds a late penalty, and continued nonpayment can push your entity out of good standing and toward administrative dissolution, which is far more expensive to fix. Catching the deadline is much cheaper than a later reinstatement. We track your South Carolina due date and can file automatically so a late fee never starts the spiral.
Is the South Carolina annual report fee tax-deductible?
Generally yes: a required state filing fee paid to keep your business in good standing is an ordinary and necessary business expense, so it is typically deductible on the business return. Keep the receipt with your records. While a tax professional confirms your specifics, we make sure the South Carolina fee is documented so it is easy to deduct at year-end.
Who has to file the South Carolina annual report?
Most registered entities: LLCs, corporations, and often nonprofits and foreign entities registered in South Carolina generally must file on South Carolina's schedule to stay active, though a few states exempt certain types. If you are registered in South Carolina, assume you file unless told otherwise. We confirm your South Carolina obligation, and keep a reliable agent in place to receive the notices.
How often is the South Carolina annual report due?
It depends on South Carolina: many states require it every year, some every two years, and the due date may track your formation anniversary or a fixed calendar date. The cadence is not intuitive. We track your specific South Carolina schedule on a compliance calendar so you never miss the cycle or misjudge a biennial year.
Does the fee change if my business grew?
In some states, yes: South Carolina may scale the annual report or franchise fee with revenue, capital, or shares, so a bigger business can owe more, while flat-fee states charge the same regardless. We flag whether South Carolina uses a scaling fee so a growth year does not bring an unexpected bill you did not budget for.
Can I pay the South Carolina fee and file myself?
Yes, you can always file directly with South Carolina; it does not require a service. People use us to avoid missing the non-obvious deadline, to keep every entity's filings in one place, and to have the report reviewed before submission. It is a safety net against the most common cause of losing good standing, not a requirement, and the choice is yours.
Does File.Business handle the South Carolina annual report?
Yes. We track your South Carolina due date, prepare the correct report for your entity type, pass the state fee through at cost, and file on time, with the confirmation returned to your records. It turns an easy-to-miss South Carolina deadline into something handled automatically on your compliance calendar.