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Dissolution · District of Columbia

How to Dissolve an LLC or Corporation in District of Columbia: 2026 Complete Filing Guide

Dissolving an LLC or corporation in District of Columbia requires the Statement of Dissolution, a $220 filing fee, and tax clearance from the state. File.Business handles the entire process end-to-end.
State filing documents and dissolution paperwork for closing an entity in District of Columbia.
State filing documents and dissolution paperwork for closing an entity in District of Columbia.

What District of Columbia Dissolution Actually Means

Final filing documents and a fountain pen ready for signature.
Final filing documents and a fountain pen ready for signature.

Dissolving an LLC or corporation in District of Columbia is the formal legal process of closing the entity with the state. Filing the Statement of Dissolution with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection ends the entity's legal existence in District of Columbia. Until dissolution is filed and accepted, the entity continues to accrue compliance obligations, annual reports, franchise taxes where applicable, registered agent requirements, even if the business has ceased operations.

Tax clearance from DC Office of Tax and Revenue. This is one of the distinguishing features of District of Columbia's dissolution process. The filing fee is $220 and processing takes 10-15 business days once all requirements are met.

Voluntary vs Administrative Dissolution

Voluntary dissolution is when the owners formally choose to close the entity through the proper state filing. Administrative dissolution is when the state removes the entity's status for non-compliance (missed filings, unpaid taxes). This guide covers voluntary dissolution. If your entity has been administratively dissolved, you typically need to reinstate first OR proceed directly to formal closure depending on state rules.

When dissolution is the right choice

Voluntary dissolution makes sense when: the business has wound down operations and won't be revived, owners want to stop the accruing annual fees and compliance obligations, the entity's purpose has been completed (special-purpose entities), or owners are restructuring into a different entity. Until dissolution is formal, ongoing compliance costs continue accumulating in District of Columbia.

What's Actually Involved in Closing a District of Columbia Entity

District of Columbia Dissolution at a Glance

ItemValue
Form nameStatement of Dissolution
Filing fee$220
Tax clearanceYes, required first
Processing time10-15 business days
Filing agencyDC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection

Dissolving a District of Columbia entity is more than filling out a form. Four things make this filing more failure-prone than it appears, and they explain why most businesses use a managed service rather than attempting it themselves.

The internal authorization that has to be documented

Before the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection will accept the Statement of Dissolution, the entity's owners must formally authorize the dissolution. For LLCs: a written member resolution per the operating agreement (typically majority or unanimous consent depending on what the operating agreement requires). For corporations: a board resolution recommending dissolution plus a shareholder vote approving it. The state may not always ask for the documentation at filing, but you will need it during audit, tax close-out, and any future disputes between members or shareholders.

The tax clearance that often blocks the filing

Tax clearance requirement in District of Columbia: Yes, required before SOS will process the dissolution. When required, the tax clearance process is separate from the SOS filing and typically adds 2-6 weeks. File.Business handles the tax clearance preparation, submits the final returns required, requests the Tax Clearance Letter, and times the SOS dissolution filing for after clearance is granted.

The wind-down obligations after filing

Filing the Statement of Dissolution is not the end. After the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection accepts the dissolution, the wind-down continues: notify creditors and customers, settle remaining obligations, close bank accounts, cancel business licenses and permits, file the final federal tax return with the IRS (marked "final return"), cancel the EIN if no longer needed, and document the final distribution of any remaining assets. Skipping any of these creates personal liability exposure for former members or shareholders.

What File.Business does for your District of Columbia dissolution

File.Business handles District of Columbia dissolution end-to-end. We draft the internal authorization documents (member resolution or board/shareholder consent), coordinate the tax clearance process with the District of Columbia Department of Revenue (when applicable), file the Statement of Dissolution with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection along with the $220 filing fee, confirm acceptance, coordinate foreign-qualification withdrawal in any other states where your entity is registered, and provide final-return guidance for federal and state tax. Total District of Columbia filing time is 10-15 business days once tax clearance (if required) is complete.

Common District of Columbia Dissolution Mistakes

Four recurring mistakes delay or complicate dissolution in District of Columbia:

Mistake 1: Stopping operations without filing dissolution

Many District of Columbia owners stop operations but never file the formal dissolution. The entity continues accruing annual report fees, franchise tax, and compliance obligations in District of Columbia. After 12-36 months of accruing obligations, the entity may be administratively dissolved with substantial back fees owed. Always file the formal dissolution promptly when operations end.

Mistake 2: Skipping the tax clearance step

In District of Columbia, skipping the tax clearance step means the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection will reject the dissolution filing. The tax clearance process is separate from the SOS filing and adds 2-6 weeks. Coordinate the tax clearance before the SOS filing to avoid rejection.

Mistake 3: Forgetting foreign qualifications in other states

If your District of Columbia entity is foreign qualified in other states, dissolution in District of Columbia alone is not enough. Each state where the entity is foreign qualified requires a separate Certificate of Withdrawal or equivalent filing. Otherwise, the entity continues accruing obligations in those states even after District of Columbia dissolution is complete.

Mistake 4: Inadequate creditor notice

District of Columbia requires reasonable notice to known creditors before formal dissolution. Failure to notify creditors can expose former members or shareholders to personal liability for unresolved debts after dissolution. Document creditor notices and the time given to respond.

How File.Business Handles District of Columbia Dissolution

File.Business is your end-to-end District of Columbia dissolution service. We: (1) draft the internal authorization documents, (2) coordinate tax clearance with the District of Columbia revenue department when required, (3) file the Statement of Dissolution with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection and pay the $220 fee, (4) confirm acceptance and provide the filed certificate, (5) coordinate foreign-qualification withdrawal in any other states, (6) provide final federal and state tax-return guidance. Total District of Columbia filing portion completes in 10-15 business days, plus tax clearance time if required.

Common Questions

District of Columbia dissolution FAQ

How do I dissolve an LLC in District of Columbia?

File.Business handles District of Columbia dissolutions end-to-end. We draft the internal authorization, coordinate tax clearance (required in District of Columbia), file the Statement of Dissolution with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection, pay the $220 fee, and confirm acceptance. The District of Columbia filing portion processes in 10-15 business days.

How much does it cost to dissolve a business in District of Columbia?

The District of Columbia state filing fee is $220. Add tax-clearance preparation and any back-tax obligations (typically $0-$500 in CPA costs depending on complexity). File.Business handles the full process as a single managed service.

Do I need a tax clearance to dissolve in District of Columbia?

Yes. District of Columbia requires a Tax Clearance Letter from the state revenue department before dissolution can be processed. File.Business handles the tax clearance preparation, request, and SOS timing as a single workflow.

How long does District of Columbia dissolution take?

The DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection filing processes in 10-15 business days. Tax clearance adds 2-6 weeks separately. File.Business coordinates both phases to minimize total time.

What happens if I don't formally dissolve my District of Columbia entity?

The entity continues accruing annual report fees, franchise tax (where applicable), and compliance obligations. After 12-36 months of non-payment, District of Columbia may administratively dissolve the entity, which generates substantial back fees and penalties that must be paid to clear the record.

Can File.Business dissolve my District of Columbia entity?

Yes. File.Business handles District of Columbia dissolution end-to-end including internal authorization, tax clearance coordination (where required), filing the Statement of Dissolution with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection, and coordinating foreign-qualification withdrawal in other states. District of Columbia filing portion completes in 10-15 business days.

Ready to close

File.Business handles your District of Columbia dissolution end-to-end.

We draft the authorization documents, coordinate tax clearance (required in District of Columbia), file the Statement of Dissolution with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection, and confirm acceptance. Total District of Columbia filing time 10-15 business days.

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Written by

Michael Thompson

Writes about Delaware C-corps, franchise tax strategy, bylaws, corporate governance, and the formation choices that matter when companies prepare to raise capital. Previously a Big Four tax associate focused on entity-structure planning. Reach out: michael@file.business

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