A comparison the United States law of contracts with the law of contracts of the People's Republic of China.
A comparison the United States law of contracts with the law of contracts of the People's Republic of China.
All 50 states allow business owners to form an LLC, meaning you could technically file your LLC anywhere in the U.S. But if you have a small business that only operates in one state, your home state is usually the least expensive and least complicated option.
A foreign limited liability company may apply for authority to do business in the State of New York by filing an Application for Authority pursuant to Section 802 of the New York State Limited Liability Company Law.
The members of an LLC are required to adopt a written Operating Agreement. See Section 417 of the Limited Liability Company Law. The Operating Agreement may be entered into before, at the time of, or within 90 days after the filing of the Articles of Organization.
Occasional or sporadic sales activities do not usually amount to “doing business” in New York. New York courts do not typically consider factors like having customers in the state or making deliveries from an out-of-state factory as determinative. However, systematic merchandise sales may qualify as “doing business.”
The straightforward answer to the question “Can my LLC operate in another state?” is yes! A Limited Liability Company must only be registered in one state to operate in the US.
LLC Processing Time by State StateStandard Processing TimeExpedited Processing Time New York 2 - 3 weeks 4 - 6 days North Carolina 2 - 3 weeks 6 - 8 days North Dakota 2 - 3 weeks 8 - 10 days Ohio 2 - 3 weeks 6 - 8 days47 more rows
LLC and Corporation State Approval Times StateApproval Time NY Standard: 10-14 days TotalLegal Full Service: 1-3 business days OH Standard: 10-14 days TotalLegal Full Service: 2-5 business days OK Standard: 10-14 days TotalLegal Full Service: 1-3 business days OR Standard: 10-14 days TotalLegal Full Service: 1-3 business days46 more rows
Every LLC in New York must have a designated street address. This could be your company's office building, your home address (if you're running the company from your residence) or any physical address of your preference. The address can be outside the state of New York, but it cannot be a P.O. Box.