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Annual Reports · Oregon

Oregon Annual Report 2026: Complete Filing Guide, Deadline, and Fee Schedule

The complete 2026 guide to Oregon's Annual Report: Anniversary date deadline, $100 LLC fee / $100 corp fee, online filing through the state filing system, and how to avoid the $100 late penalty.
State filing documents and business compliance materials for the Oregon annual report.
State filing documents and business compliance materials for the Oregon annual report.

What Oregon's Annual Report Filing Actually Is

Calendar with annual report deadline marked, illustrating state compliance timing.
Calendar with annual report deadline marked, illustrating state compliance timing.

Every active LLC and corporation registered to do business in Oregon must file the Annual Report with the Oregon Secretary of State. The filing maintains your entity's good standing on the state's public record and confirms key information (current address, registered agent, officers or members) remains accurate. Filing frequency is annual, with the deadline falling on Anniversary date.

Same $100 fee for all entity types. This is one of the distinguishing features of Oregon's annual report system compared to other states. The filing fee structure: flat $100 for both LLCs and corporations. Oregon processes online filings in 5-7 business days once all required information is submitted correctly.

Who must file in Oregon

Three categories of entities file the Oregon Annual Report: (1) domestic LLCs and corporations formed in Oregon, (2) foreign-qualified entities registered to do business in Oregon but formed in another state, and (3) certain other entity types (limited partnerships, professional corporations) that vary by Oregon's specific rules. Sole proprietorships, general partnerships, and federally tax-exempt non-profits typically follow separate filing rules.

What changes if you don't file

Failure to file the Oregon Annual Report by the Anniversary date deadline triggers a $100 late penalty. Continued non-compliance escalates: the Oregon Secretary of State may move your entity to delinquent or past-due status on the public record, then administratively dissolve the entity after approximately 24 months of non-compliance. Once dissolved, the entity loses its right to legally transact business, sue in Oregon courts, or maintain bank accounts in the state until formally reinstated.

What's Actually Involved in Filing Oregon's Annual Report

Oregon Annual Report at a Glance

ItemValue
Report nameAnnual Report
Filing frequencyannual
DeadlineAnniversary date
LLC filing fee$100
Corporation fee$100
Late penalty$100
Processing time5-7 business days
Filing agencyOregon Secretary of State

The Oregon Annual Report sounds simple. File the form, pay flat $100 for both LLCs, done. In practice, four things make this filing more failure-prone than it appears, and they explain why File.Business exists.

The data your filing has to match exactly

The Oregon Secretary of State validates submissions against its current record on file. Your filing must exactly match: your entity's legal name (punctuation, capitalization, designator), state file number, current principal address, current registered agent (name and physical address), and the officer/member information Oregon requires. Any inconsistency, even a comma difference, can cause rejection. The state does not warn you in advance which inconsistencies will reject; you find out only after submission.

The hidden updates that get caught at filing time

Most Oregon businesses discover during the annual filing that something has drifted out of date: the registered agent moved, an officer departed, the principal address changed when the business relocated. Catching this mid-filing creates a problem, some changes require a separate Articles of Amendment filing before the Annual Report can be submitted. Discovering this after starting the annual filing means starting over.

The penalty if anything goes wrong

Missing the Oregon deadline triggers the $100 late penalty immediately. A rejected filing that you resubmit a week later may push you past the deadline. Continued non-compliance escalates: the Oregon Secretary of State can administratively dissolve the entity after approximately 24 months of non-compliance, at which point your business loses the legal right to operate, sue, or maintain bank accounts until reinstated. The cost of a single missed annual filing compounds quickly.

What File.Business does for you

File.Business handles the entire Oregon Annual Report for you. We pull your current entity record from the Oregon Secretary of State (so your filing matches exactly), validate every field against the state's current data, surface any required pre-filings (amendments, registered agent updates) before they can cause rejection, file the Annual Report through the state filing system on or before the Anniversary date deadline, pay the flat $100 for both LLCs fee, and confirm acceptance. You receive the filed report and confirmation receipt; we handle everything between authorization and acceptance.

Oregon-Specific Mistakes That Cause Filing Rejections

Oregon filers consistently encounter four recurring mistakes that delay processing or trigger rejections.

Mistake 1: Outdated registered agent information

The Annual Report validates the registered agent listed on the public record. If your registered agent has moved, changed addresses, or is no longer providing service, the Oregon Secretary of State may flag the filing. Confirm the registered agent's current address before filing, and use a Change of Registered Agent filing if the agent has changed. File.Business serves as registered agent in Oregon with same-day digital scanning of all received documents.

Mistake 2: Missing the deadline by a day

Oregon's deadline is Anniversary date. The state does not extend the deadline for weekends, holidays, or filer error. Even a single day late triggers the $100 penalty. Best practice: file 2-4 weeks before the deadline to allow time for any unexpected issues (banking holds on credit card payments, portal outages, missing officer information).

Mistake 3: Inconsistent entity name or file number

Any small typo or formatting difference in your entity's legal name compared to the state's record can cause rejection. Oregon portals are strict about exact name matching. If your entity name has a comma, period, or other punctuation that differs from how it appears on the state's record, that mismatch alone can reject the filing.

Mistake 4: Failing to update officer/member information

Many Oregon businesses file the same annual report year after year without updating officer or member information that has changed. If an officer departed two years ago, the record still showing them as current creates a verification issue if a bank, lender, or counterparty queries the public record. Treat each annual report as an opportunity to refresh the entity's current information.

How to Build a Reliable Oregon Annual Report Process

For Oregon businesses operating long-term, three practices reduce the risk of missing filings or accumulating penalties.

Practice 1: Calendar the deadline 30 days in advance

Set a recurring calendar reminder for 30 days before Anniversary date. Use that 30-day window to: confirm current registered agent, update officer/member records, verify principal address, and gather any payment information. Filing in the first half of the window leaves room for the second half if any issue surfaces.

Practice 2: Use a managed compliance service for multi-state operations

If your business operates in Oregon plus other states, the Oregon Annual Report is one of many state-specific filings on different deadline cycles. A managed compliance service tracks all jurisdictions, files reports automatically before deadlines, and consolidates documentation. File.Business provides this for entities under our compliance service.

Practice 3: Maintain Oregon-current entity records

Keep an internal document with your Oregon entity's legal name, state file number, registered agent, principal address, and current officer/member list. Update this internal record whenever any of those facts change. When annual report time comes, you transfer the current internal record to the state filing; the Oregon portal verification then becomes trivial.

How File.Business Handles Oregon Annual Reports

File.Business files Oregon annual reports for entities under our compliance service. We track the Anniversary date deadline automatically, validate all entity information against Oregon's public record before submission, file the Annual Report through the state filing system, pay the flat $100 for both LLCs fee, and confirm acceptance. For entities operating in Oregon plus other states, we coordinate filings across all jurisdictions from one dashboard. The service includes Oregon registered agent service and ongoing good-standing monitoring with proactive alerts on any state-status risk.

Common Questions

Oregon annual report FAQ

When is the Oregon annual report due?

The Oregon Annual Report is due Anniversary date. The filing is annual. Late filings incur a $100 penalty and risk eventual administrative dissolution if non-compliance continues.

How much does the Oregon annual report cost?

The Oregon annual report filing fee is $100 for both LLCs and corporations. Payment is made through the online portal by credit card, debit card, or e-check at the time of filing.

Where do I file the Oregon annual report?

Online through the Oregon Secretary of State. Paper filing may be available but is significantly slower. Most filers complete the process in 5-15 minutes when entity records are current.

What happens if I miss the Oregon deadline?

A $100 late penalty applies immediately. Continued non-compliance results in the Oregon Secretary of State marking your entity as delinquent or past-due on the public record, then potentially administratively dissolving the entity. Reinstatement requires filing back annual reports, paying back fees, and a separate reinstatement application.

Do foreign LLCs need to file a Oregon annual report?

Yes. Any LLC or corporation foreign-qualified in Oregon must file the Oregon annual report on the same schedule as domestic Oregon entities. The home-state filing does not satisfy the Oregon requirement.

Can File.Business file my Oregon annual report?

Yes. File.Business manages Oregon annual report filings as part of our compliance service. We track the Anniversary date deadline, validate entity information, file through the state filing system, pay the fee, and confirm acceptance. The service includes Oregon registered agent at no additional charge for the first year of compliance.

Next step

Let File.Business file your Oregon annual report.

We track the Anniversary date Oregon deadline automatically, validate all entity info, file through the state filing system, pay the fee, and confirm acceptance. Same-day filing in most cases. First year of Oregon registered agent included.

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Written by

Sarah Whitfield

Writes about California, Oregon, Washington, and Nevada filing rules. Former paralegal at a San Francisco corporate firm. Covers LLC franchise tax, multi-state foreign qualification, and the operational quirks of West Coast formation. Reach out: sarah@file.business

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