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District of Columbia . Dissolution

Close your District of Columbia business the right way.

Dissolution officially ends your District of Columbia entity. Covers state fee, tax considerations, final filings, and personal liability traps.

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Wind-up checklist

  • Member or shareholder vote to dissolve.
  • Notify creditors.
  • Pay all debts.
  • File final federal tax returns. Form 966 for Corps within 30 days.
  • File final state tax returns.
  • Cancel state tax accounts.
  • Close business bank accounts.
  • Distribute remaining assets.
Wind down

District of Columbia Dissolution: at a glance.

Formally close the entity with the state: stops annual report obligations and franchise tax accrual.

Filing details

How District of Columbia handles Dissolution.

Where to fileSecretary of State office, online portal, or by mail with the required fee.
TurnaroundStandard processing: 5-10 business days. Expedited service available for an additional state fee.
Required informationEntity name + ID, current officers and registered agent, principal office address.
Common pitfallsMismatched officer addresses, expired registered agent, missed prior reports causing administrative dissolution.
Frequently asked

District of Columbia Dissolution questions.

How do I dissolve my business with the the District of Columbia Secretary of State?

You file articles or a certificate of dissolution, or termination, with the the District of Columbia SOS, after settling debts, and in many states obtaining tax clearance first. Filing it stops future reports, fees, and taxes. We prepare and file the correct the District of Columbia dissolution document and handle the steps around it so the entity is actually closed, not just marked.

Does the District of Columbia require tax clearance before dissolution?

In many states, yes: the District of Columbia may require proof you owe no taxes before accepting the dissolution, which is often the slowest step. Where it is not required, we file directly. Either way we tell you the the District of Columbia path upfront so a tax hold does not stall the close at the last moment.

What happens if I do not formally dissolve?

The entity does not disappear; the District of Columbia keeps charging annual report fees and penalties and eventually dissolves it administratively on the state's terms, leaving tax and liability loose ends. A voluntary dissolution closes it cleanly, and if the District of Columbia already dissolved you, a reinstatement may be needed first.

Do I need to settle debts before dissolving in the District of Columbia?

Yes: you generally must pay or provide for creditors and notify them before distributing anything to owners, and paying owners ahead of creditors can create personal liability. Dissolving does not erase valid debts. We help you sequence the the District of Columbia wind-down so the distribution to owners is defensible rather than reversible.

How long does the District of Columbia dissolution take?

It depends on the District of Columbia's processing and whether tax clearance is required first; a clean dissolution can clear in days to weeks, one waiting on clearance takes longer. We handle the sequence so the District of Columbia does not reject the filing and restart the wait, and give you a realistic timeline for the full close.

What about my EIN and licenses when I dissolve?

Dissolving with the District of Columbia does not close your IRS account or cancel local licenses and sales tax accounts, which can keep generating obligations. A full close includes final federal returns and canceling each account. We flag the the District of Columbia and federal steps beyond the SOS filing so nothing keeps billing after you are done. See EIN closure.

Can I reverse a the District of Columbia dissolution?

If the District of Columbia administratively dissolved you, a reinstatement is often possible within a window; if you voluntarily dissolved, reviving is harder and may mean forming anew. Be certain before filing a voluntary termination. We assess whether the District of Columbia allows the entity to be restored before you commit either way.

Do I need to dissolve foreign registrations too?

Yes: if you registered to do business in other states, you must withdraw those foreign registrations separately, or they keep expecting reports and fees. Closing the the District of Columbia home entity alone leaves the others open. We handle the withdrawals alongside the the District of Columbia dissolution so every jurisdiction is actually closed.

Can File.Business handle the District of Columbia dissolution?

Yes. We prepare the the District of Columbia Secretary of State dissolution filing, coordinate tax clearance, flag the final federal and license steps, and withdraw foreign registrations, so the entity is fully closed, not just marked dissolved in one state while obligations linger elsewhere.

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