Delaware Law: Yes, You Can Be Your Own Registered Agent
Delaware does not require your registered agent to be a third-party service. An individual — including an LLC member or manager — can serve as the registered agent, as long as they meet the following requirements:
Must have a physical street address in Delaware
Your registered agent address must be a physical street address in Delaware — not a P.O. box or mail forwarding address. This address is submitted to the Delaware Division of Corporations and appears in state records.
Must reside or be present in Delaware
The registered agent must be physically located in Delaware and available at the registered address during normal business hours to accept legal documents.
Address becomes public record
The registered agent's address is filed with the Delaware Division of Corporations and is publicly accessible. If you use your home or office address, it is permanently searchable in the state's business database.
Why Most Delaware LLCs Don't Serve as Their Own Registered Agent
Being legally allowed to act as your own registered agent is different from it being a good idea. Here are the two most significant practical problems:
Privacy Risk
Your registered agent address is recorded in Delaware's public corporate filings maintained by the Division of Corporations, one of the most referenced business registries in the United States. A home address listed here appears in the widely-searched Delaware entity database and can be accessed by attorneys, lenders, and the general public.
Availability Risk
Delaware requires your registered agent to maintain a physical office in the state and be available during business hours to receive service of process. Because Delaware is so frequently used for incorporations, legal notices are commonly served, making reliable availability critical.
Additional consideration: If you are served with legal papers at your registered address while clients, employees, or visitors are present, the lack of privacy extends beyond your home address — it affects how legal disputes are handled publicly.
When Being Your Own Registered Agent Makes Sense
In limited circumstances, serving as your own registered agent is a reasonable choice:
- You operate a low-risk business with a minimal chance of being served with lawsuits
- You have a dedicated commercial office in Delaware with staff present during business hours
- You don't work from home and the office address doesn't expose personal information
- You are comfortable with your business address being publicly listed in state records
For most solo operators, home-based businesses, and anyone who values privacy, a professional registered agent service addresses all of these concerns for a modest annual fee.
LLC Attorney Serves as Your Delaware Registered Agent
LLC Attorney provides Delaware registered agent service for all clients — keeping your personal address private, ensuring legal documents are handled properly, and alerting you immediately when service of process is received.
Being Your Own Registered Agent in Delaware — FAQs
Yes. Delaware law allows an individual — including a member or manager of the LLC — to serve as the registered agent, provided they have a physical street address in Delaware (no P.O. boxes) and are available at that address during normal business hours. However, most LLC owners use a professional service to avoid privacy and availability risks.
To serve as your own registered agent in Delaware you must: (1) have a physical street address in Delaware — not a P.O. box; (2) be available at that address during normal business hours to accept legal documents; and (3) understand that the address will appear in the Delaware Division of Corporations's public business records.
If you miss a service of process — a lawsuit summons, regulatory notice, or other legal document — the court may proceed without your participation and enter a default judgment against your LLC. This is one of the most significant risks of serving as your own registered agent, particularly if you travel frequently or work irregular hours.
Yes. Your registered agent address is filed with the Delaware Division of Corporations and is publicly accessible in the state's business records database. If you list your home address, it is permanently searchable. A professional registered agent service uses their own address in your place, keeping your personal address off the public record.
Professional registered agent services in Delaware typically cost between $49 and $299 per year. LLC Attorney provides registered agent service through its ongoing compliance subscription — contact LLC Attorney to add it to your account.
Yes. You can change your registered agent at any time by filing a Statement of Change of Registered Agent with the Delaware Division of Corporations. The process is straightforward and takes a few business days to process. LLC Attorney can handle the change filing and immediately take over as your Delaware registered agent.
