Oregon LLC Cost
The minimum cost to start a Oregon LLC is $100 in state filing fees. Annual upkeep costs $100 per annual cycle, plus any franchise/privilege tax. Here is the full 2026 breakdown.
One-time formation costs
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Articles of Organization | $100 |
| Name reservation (optional) | typically $10–$50 |
| Certified copy of Articles (optional) | typically $5–$30 |
| Expedited processing (optional) | typically $50–$1,000 depending on tier |
Annual recurring costs
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Annual report | $100 per annual cycle |
| Franchise / privilege tax | Corporate Activity Tax (CAT) 0.57% on commercial activity > $1M |
| Registered agent service (optional) | $0–$300/year |
Optional professional services
- Formation service (Bizee, Northwest, LegalZoom): $0–$299 + state fee
- Operating agreement template: $0 (DIY) to $200 (attorney-drafted)
- EIN: $0 direct from IRS — never pay a third party for this
Year-1 minimum spend
If you DIY everything: $200 for state fees in the first year. Add federal taxes, sales tax registration, and any local licenses based on your activity.
Oregon-specific note
Oregon’s Corporate Activity Tax applies to most LLCs above $1M in Oregon-sourced commercial activity, separate from member-level state income tax.
Frequently asked questions
What is the cheapest way to start an LLC in Oregon?
File the Articles of Organization yourself online with the Oregon SoS for $100 and act as your own registered agent.
What does it cost to keep a Oregon LLC active each year?
Minimum $100 for the annual report, plus any franchise tax owed: Corporate Activity Tax (CAT) 0.57% on commercial activity > $1M.
Should I form in Oregon or a different state?
In general, you should form in the state where you actually operate. Forming elsewhere usually requires Foreign Qualification in your home state, which means paying both.
Sources & further reading
Disclaimer: Legal information, not legal advice. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed attorney or CPA in your state. See our full disclaimer.