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Business · Cost · King Lincoln, OH

How Much Does an LLC Cost in Ohio? (King Lincoln Guide)

Updated June 2026 · By Asal Multi Services · Columbus, OH

Forming an LLC is one of the most affordable ways for a King Lincoln, Ohio entrepreneur to protect personal assets. Here is the real cost breakdown for 2026.

Quick Answer

  • The required cost is the Ohio Secretary of State filing fee for Articles of Organization (about $99).
  • An EIN from the IRS is free.
  • Ohio has no annual report fee for LLCs.
  • Optional costs: name reservation, expedited processing, and a professional statutory agent.

The one required cost

The only fee you must pay to form an Ohio LLC is the Secretary of State filing fee for the Articles of Organization — around $99. That single filing legally creates your LLC. Confirm the current amount with the Ohio Secretary of State, as state fees can change.

What is free or optional

An EIN from the IRS is completely free — never pay a third party for one. Ohio does not charge an annual or biennial report fee for LLCs, which keeps ongoing costs low. Optional add-ons include a name reservation (about $39), expedited processing (about $100 extra), and a professional statutory agent service ($49–$125/year) if you want privacy.

Why Ohio is affordable

Compared with states like California or Massachusetts, Ohio’s $99 filing fee and lack of an annual report fee make it one of the cheaper states to form and maintain an LLC. There is no publication requirement either, which in some states can cost hundreds of dollars.

What this means for King Lincoln, Ohio

one of the largest Somali populations in the United States outside Minneapolis, with growing Bhutanese, Burmese, and Latino communities — and King Lincoln, with a population near 4,800, reflects that mix in its schools, workplaces, and houses of worship.

Columbus Metro entrepreneurs typically need LLC formation, EIN preparation, DBA registration, Ohio vendor licenses, and Workers' Compensation setup to start operating. Our Franklin County clients receive complete formation packets — Articles of Organization, EIN confirmation letter, operating agreement template, and the bank-ready document set.

King Lincoln sits in Columbus Metro, driven by financial services, insurance, healthcare, and the new wave of tech investment around the Intel campus and the Columbus Region Logistics Council corridor. Franklin County, where King Lincoln is located, is a small Ohio city where most clients drive to the county seat for vital records and to a regional metro for federal appointments.

The 6-mile drive from King Lincoln (~13 min) is short enough for a single formation visit that includes entity selection, name reservation, and registered-agent setup.

Verify current details: Fees, processing times, and rules change. Confirm the latest figures for your situation with Ohio Secretary of State before you file.

Need help in King Lincoln?

Asal Multi Services helps King Lincoln-area clients with ohio llc formation and more — at a fraction of typical lawyer fees. Walk in or call; we speak Somali, Arabic, and English.

Related

Ohio LLC Cost in nearby Ohio cities

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum cost to form an Ohio LLC?

About $99 — the Ohio Secretary of State filing fee for Articles of Organization. Everything else is optional or free.

Is there an annual fee?

No. Ohio does not require LLCs to file an annual report or pay an annual fee to the Secretary of State.

How much is an EIN?

Free. The IRS does not charge for EINs — apply directly at irs.gov and never pay a third party for the number itself.

Do I have to pay for a statutory agent?

No — you can be your own agent for free with an Ohio street address. Professional services cost roughly $49–$125/year if you want privacy.

Can Asal form an LLC for a King Lincoln business?

Yes. We prepare Articles of Organization, EIN, operating agreement, and statutory agent setup for King Lincoln-area businesses.

Asal Multi Services is a non-attorney document preparation service. This guide is general information, not legal advice. Verify current fees with the Ohio Secretary of State and the IRS.