Colorado annual report: fees, deadlines, and how to file.
Everything you need to know about the Colorado annual report: who must file, when it is due, what it costs, and how to file in 5 minutes.
Everything you need to know about the Colorado annual report: who must file, when it is due, what it costs, and how to file in 5 minutes.
A periodic state filing that confirms your business is active and updates officers, agents, and addresses.
It is the periodic filing that keeps your entity's information current with Colorado and your status active, confirming your address, registered agent, and management. States call it an Annual Report, Statement of Information, or similar. It is not a tax return. We prepare and file the correct Colorado version on time so your standing never lapses. Link annual-reports.
Colorado sets its own schedule: some states tie it to your formation anniversary, others to a fixed date, and some run on a two-year cycle, so the deadline is not intuitive. Missing it is easy. We track your specific Colorado due date on a compliance calendar and can file automatically so it never slips.
Colorado sets the fee, and it ranges from nothing in a few states to a substantial amount in others, sometimes based on revenue or shares. Because it changes, we show the current Colorado figure before filing and pass it through at cost. Our service pricing is on the pricing page rather than quoted where it could go stale.
Colorado typically adds a late penalty, and continued failure moves you out of good standing toward administrative dissolution, which is far more expensive to fix than the report. We monitor the Colorado date and file before a miss can spiral into a reinstatement.
Almost always: Colorado accepts these filings electronically, so you rarely need to mail anything or appear in person, and we file yours online and return the confirmation to your records. If Colorado requires a paper form for a specific entity type, we handle that exception too.
Yes: the annual report is often exactly where you update a new address, a change in members or managers, or your registered agent, so Colorado has current records. A major change may also need a separate amendment. We make sure the Colorado report reflects your current setup.
Often yes: Colorado may use different forms, fees, and information requirements for LLCs versus corporations, and corporations sometimes owe more detail. Filing the wrong version causes rejections. We file the correct Colorado form for your exact entity type so it is accepted the first time.
Yes: if you registered in Colorado as a foreign entity, you file Colorado's annual report for foreign entities on top of the one in your home state. Each state where you are registered expects its own. We track every state you operate in so none is missed.
Yes. We track your Colorado due date, prepare the correct annual report for your entity type, pass the state fee through at cost, and file on time, with confirmation returned to your records, so the most common cause of losing good standing is handled automatically.
No state-fee markup. Pay only the state fee. 60-day money-back guarantee.