Form a Business in New Jersey

Filing fees, deadlines, registered agent rules, and tax structure for New Jersey, verified against the New Jersey Department of the Treasury, Division of Revenue and Enterprise Services (DORES) on Jun 11, 2026.

New Jersey at a glance

LLC Formation
$125
Articles of Organization
Corp Formation
$125
Articles of Incorporation
Nonprofit Formation
$75
Articles of Incorporation: Nonprofit
Annual Report: LLC
$75
annual filing
Annual Report: Corp
$75
annual filing
Registered Agent
Street address
New Jersey address required

What makes New Jersey different

  • NJ requires TWO separate registrations for every business. (a) Business formation with DORES (LLC Certificate of Formation, Corp Certificate of Incorporation, etc.) and (b) NJ-REG Business Registration with the Division of…
  • All for-profit entity formation fees are $125 flat. LLC, Corp, LP, LLP, and foreign qualification of any of these. All $125. Atypical: most states have a notable LLC/Corp gap. NJ doesn't push either direction at the SOS level.
  • Annual Report fee is $75 for LLC, Corp, LP, LLP. Same $75 across the board. Nonprofits pay $30. Due last day of formation-anniversary month. No expedite available for Annual Reports (per fee schedule).
  • Corporation Business Tax (CBT) minimum is $375-$2,000/year tiered by gross receipts every NJ Corp owes minimum CBT regardless of profit. Filed with NJ Division of Taxation (NOT DORES). Plus 9% CBT rate on net income above the minimum.
  • NJ Corp top tax stack: 9% CBT + (formerly 2.5% CBT surtax through 2025). Personal Income Tax tops out at 10.75% on income over $1M. Among the highest combined state burdens in the US.
  • Partnership Filing Fee at DOT: $150 per partner, capped at $250,000. Applies to LLCs, LPs, LLPs, and general partnerships with NJ-sourced income. This is in ADDITION to the $75 SOS Annual Report. Wizard must surface for multi-member LLCs/LPs.
  • LLC Certificate of Cancellation $100 domestic / $125 foreign. Higher than dissolution fees in most states. Plus the entity must be current on all NJ-REG tax filings before SOS will accept the cancellation.
  • Foreign Nonprofit reinstatement is $200. Highest in the schedule. Domestic Nonprofit reinstatement $150. Standard Corp reinstatement $95.

New Jersey tax structure

Sales tax 6.625%.

For detailed tax planning, see the New Jersey Department of the Treasury, Division of Revenue and Enterprise Services (DORES) and the New Jersey Department of Revenue. File.Business is not a tax preparer, consult a CPA for personalized advice.

Ready to file in New Jersey?

We handle Articles of Organization, registered agent service, annual report monitoring, and ongoing compliance, backed by our canonical New Jersey ruleset (re-verified quarterly against New Jersey Department of the Treasury, Division of Revenue and Enterprise Services (DORES)).

Filing portal: https://www.njportal.com/DOR/businessformation/

FAQ

Common questions.

What is the first step to start a business in New Jersey?

The first real decision is your entity type, because it drives everything after: taxes, liability, and paperwork. For most small businesses in New Jersey that means forming an LLC, which you do by filing a formation document with the state and naming a registered agent. Get the structure right first, then EIN, banking, and licenses follow in order. We walk you through the New Jersey sequence so nothing is done out of turn.

Which business structure should I choose in New Jersey?

Most New Jersey founders land on an LLC for its liability protection and simple pass-through taxes, but a corporation makes sense if you plan to raise venture capital or issue stock. A sole proprietorship is simplest but leaves your personal assets exposed. The honest answer depends on your goals, so we lay out the LLC-versus-corporation trade-offs for New Jersey rather than pushing one.

Do I need a registered agent in New Jersey?

Yes. New Jersey requires every LLC and corporation to name a registered agent with a physical in-state address to receive legal and state notices. You can be your own, but then your address is public and you must be available during business hours. Most owners use a service to stay private and never miss a notice. We include agent service so this box is checked from day one.

How much does it cost to start an LLC in New Jersey?

The cost is the New Jersey state filing fee plus any service you use, and New Jersey also charges recurring fees such as an annual or biennial report. Our formation service itself is free, and we pass state fees through at cost with no markup. Because state figures change over time, current New Jersey amounts are on the pricing page rather than quoted here where they could go stale.

Do I need a business license in New Jersey?

Often yes, and it is usually layered. New Jersey may require a state-level license for certain activities, and your city or county frequently adds its own, plus industry permits. Very few businesses need nothing at all. We map every New Jersey license and permit your specific business needs so you open legally instead of guessing which ones apply.

What taxes will my New Jersey business pay?

It depends on your structure and activity, but expect some mix of federal income and self-employment tax, New Jersey state taxes where they apply, and sales tax if you sell taxable goods. Some states have no income tax while others add franchise or gross-receipts taxes. Once profits grow, an S-corp election can reduce self-employment tax. We flag which New Jersey taxes actually apply to you rather than listing every possibility.

Do I need an EIN for my New Jersey business?

Almost certainly. You need an EIN to open a business bank account, hire employees, or file most business taxes, and it keeps your Social Security number off company paperwork. It is free from the IRS, and our value is getting it right and fast, including for founders without an SSN. We obtain it as part of setting up your New Jersey entity so banking is not held up.

Can I form my business in another state instead of New Jersey?

You can, but if you operate in New Jersey it usually backfires. Forming in Delaware or Wyoming while doing business in New Jersey means registering in New Jersey as a foreign entity anyway and paying two states. The out-of-state advantage is real mainly for venture-backed or holding companies. For a business rooted in New Jersey, forming at home is almost always cheaper and simpler.

What are the ongoing compliance requirements in New Jersey?

After formation, New Jersey expects you to keep a registered agent, file the periodic annual or biennial report, pay any state fees, and renew licenses on schedule. Miss these and the state can revoke your good standing or dissolve the entity. We track your New Jersey deadlines in a compliance calendar and can file the reports for you so nothing lapses while you run the business.

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