---
title: "Anonymous LLC in Oklahoma: How to Keep Your Name Private 2026 | LLC Attorney"
description: "Oklahoma is not a member-privacy state, but the Annual Certificate signature line exposes a name. A Wyoming holding LLC as member keeps yours off the record."
canonical: https://llcattorney.com/states/ok/anonymous-llc-oklahoma
image: https://llcattorney.com/images/share-cover.png
source_path: /states/ok/anonymous-llc-oklahoma
---

Key Takeaways

-   Oklahoma does not require member or manager names in the Articles of Organization in public LLC formation filings
-   Your registered agent's address — not yours — appears on the Oklahoma Secretary of State business entity search
-   $100 Articles of Organization filing fee; a $25 Annual Certificate due within the LLC's anniversary month each year (18 O.S. § 2055.2), with no franchise tax and a flat 4.75% income tax on pass-through earnings
-   Oklahoma provides exclusive-remedy charging order protection under 18 O.S. § 2034 — the charging order is the sole and exclusive remedy of a member's judgment creditor whether the LLC has one member or many, and it can never be converted into the membership interest through foreclosure
-   Federal obligation: the Corporate Transparency Act requires all beneficial owners to report to FinCEN regardless of state-level anonymity — state privacy does not eliminate this federal requirement
-   Same-day filing available through LLC Attorney at no markup on state fees

Oklahoma sits in the middle of the privacy spectrum. The good news is that its Articles of Organization (Form 0074, $100) require no member or manager names — only the management designation and a registered agent. The catch is the $25 Annual Certificate: under 18 O.S. § 2055.2 it must be signed by a member or manager each anniversary month and becomes a public record, so a name reaches the database every year unless you plan for it. The standard fix is a Wyoming holding LLC sitting as the member of your Oklahoma company, with a manager handling the annual signature. This guide walks through how that structure works, the exact formation steps, what Oklahoma anonymity does and does not cover, and the federal FinCEN obligations that apply no matter where you form — with same-day filing available through LLC Attorney starting at $49.

$100Articles of Organization filing fee

Names off ArticlesBut Annual Certificate needs a signer

§ 2034Exclusive-remedy charging order, single or multi-member

$49LLC Attorney formation starting price

## What Is an Anonymous LLC?

An anonymous LLC is a limited liability company structured so that the owner's name does not appear in publicly searchable state records. It is not a separate legal entity type — it is a standard LLC formed in a state whose filing requirements do not mandate member or manager disclosure.

In most states, the Articles of Organization requires you to list the names and addresses of members or managers. Those filings become part of the state's public business database, searchable by anyone. In Oklahoma, Oklahoma keeps member and manager names out of the Articles of Organization, but the Annual Certificate filed each year must carry the printed name and signature of a member or manager, so true ongoing anonymity depends on who signs that certificate.

The result: someone searching the Oklahoma Secretary of State business entity search for your LLC finds the entity name, the registered agent's address, and the formation date. Your name does not appear.

This structure is used by real estate investors who do not want tenants researching their ownership portfolio, business owners who prefer to separate their public persona from their holdings, high-net-worth individuals protecting assets from litigation research, and online entrepreneurs who operate under a business identity separate from their personal name.

## Why Oklahoma? How It Compares to Other Privacy States

Oklahoma is one of four states that does not require member or manager names in public LLC filings. The others most commonly used for anonymous formation are Wyoming, New Mexico, Delaware, and Nevada.

What makes Oklahoma stand out:

Oklahoma is a fine place to do business and an affordable one to keep an LLC in, but it is not a privacy state in the way Wyoming or New Mexico are. The formation filing leaves out member and manager names, which is a good start, yet the $25 Annual Certificate must be signed by a member or manager every year and becomes a public record under 18 O.S. § 2055.2 — so a name surfaces annually unless something stands between you and that filing. The practical fix used by privacy-minded Oklahoma owners is a Wyoming holding LLC: the Wyoming company becomes the member of the Oklahoma LLC, and a manager (your formation provider or attorney) handles the certificate, so the Oklahoma public record traces back only to the Wyoming entity, whose own filings disclose no names. You get Oklahoma's low cost and your home-state nexus, with Wyoming supplying the anonymity layer Oklahoma itself does not.

If you are a non-Oklahoma resident forming here purely for privacy, the service handles Oklahoma anonymous LLC formation from anywhere in the country. You do not need to travel to Oklahoma or have any prior connection to the state.

## Oklahoma's Registered Agent Privacy Mechanism

The core technical reason Oklahoma enables anonymity is the registered agent requirement. Every Oklahoma LLC must designate a registered agent with a physical Oklahoma street address. That address appears on the Oklahoma Secretary of State business entity search. Your address does not.

When you use a professional registered agent service, the registered agent's address — not your home or business address — is the only address on the public record. Your LLC exists in the state's database as an entity with a registered agent. Your name and address are nowhere in the filing.

LLC Attorney's Oklahoma registered agent service is $125/year. Your registered agent's address appears on the Oklahoma Secretary of State business entity search. LLC documents and legal notices are delivered to LLC Attorney's Oklahoma office and forwarded to you through your secure client portal.

The privacy limit to understand here: if you list yourself as the organizer on the Articles of Organization, your name may appear as organizer on the filing. In Oklahoma, the organizer who signs the Articles of Organization is named on the public filing under 18 O.S. § 2004, so letting LLC Attorney organize the entity keeps your own name off that signature line. If you use LLC Attorney to file, LLC Attorney serves as the organizer, and your name does not appear anywhere on the formation document.

## What State Anonymity Does NOT Cover — Federal FinCEN Reporting

This section is mandatory reading. State-level anonymity does not eliminate your federal disclosure obligation.

The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), effective January 1, 2024, requires virtually every LLC formed in the United States to report its beneficial owners to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), a bureau of the U.S. Treasury Department. This is a federal law that applies to every state, including Oklahoma.

What you must report to FinCEN:

-   Full legal name of each beneficial owner
-   Date of birth
-   Current residential street address
-   Identifying document number (driver's license or passport) and an image of that document

A "beneficial owner" is anyone who owns 25% or more of the company, or anyone who exercises substantial control over the company.

**Is the FinCEN report public?** No. Beneficial ownership reports go to FinCEN's secure database. They are not searchable by the public, tenants, business partners, or civil litigants. Law enforcement and certain financial institutions can access them under specific conditions.

**The practical picture:** your name does not appear in Oklahoma's public records. It does appear in FinCEN's non-public federal database. Oklahoma-level anonymity protects you from public search — not from federal law enforcement.

**Penalties for non-compliance:** willful failure to file a BOI report carries civil penalties of up to $500 per day and criminal penalties of up to $10,000 plus two years imprisonment.

The service's formation packages include guidance on FinCEN BOI filing. If your LLC qualifies for an exemption (most larger companies and regulated entities do), your attorney can confirm exemption status during the formation process.

## Oklahoma Anonymous LLC — Costs and Annual Obligations

Oklahoma is genuinely cheap to maintain: $100 to form, then a $25 Annual Certificate due within your LLC's anniversary month each year. There is no Oklahoma franchise tax on LLCs and no estate or inheritance tax; members simply report their share of profits at the state's flat 4.75% personal income rate. The privacy wrinkle is the Annual Certificate itself — under 18 O.S. § 2055.2 it must be signed by a member or manager, and once filed it becomes a public record. So while the dollar cost is among the lowest in the country, the annual filing is the recurring point where a name can land in the public database unless a manager or holding entity signs in your place.

## How to Form an Anonymous LLC in Oklahoma

### If You Do It Yourself

**Step 1 — Choose a business name that does not reveal your identity.**

Your LLC name must comply with Oklahoma's naming requirements — it must include "Limited Liability Company," "LLC," or "L.L.C." and be distinguishable from existing Oklahoma entities. Beyond the legal requirements, choose a name that does not connect back to your personal identity. Many anonymous LLC owners use a business-descriptive name (property address, investment theme, or project name) rather than a personal name-based name like "Johnson Holdings LLC."

Search the Oklahoma Secretary of State business entity search at sos.ok.gov to confirm availability. Your search is not a reservation — someone can register your name while you prepare paperwork.

Oklahoma name reservation is among the cheapest in the country at $10 for a 60-day hold, filed at sos.ok.gov — useful if you are coordinating the Wyoming holding entity and the Oklahoma filing and want to lock the Oklahoma name before the structure is in place.

**Step 2 — Reserve your name if you need time to prepare (optional).**

File a name reservation with the Oklahoma Secretary of State, $10 fee. This holds the name for 60 days. Without a reservation, the name can be taken between your search and your Articles of Organization submission.

**Step 3 — Select a professional registered agent — do not use your own address.**

This step is non-negotiable for anonymity. The registered agent's address is the only address on the public filing. If you list your home or office address, your address becomes publicly searchable. You need a professional registered agent with a physical Oklahoma street address.

Research registered agent providers carefully. The registered agent's address will be the permanent public record for this LLC. Switching registered agents later requires a filed amendment ($25 fee) and creates a public paper trail of the change.

**Step 4 — Decide whether to list yourself as organizer.**

The organizer is the person or entity submitting the Articles of Organization. In Oklahoma, at least one organizer must sign the Articles of Organization, and that signer's name becomes part of the public record at sos.ok.gov. If you do not want your name on the filing at all, you have two options: use an attorney or formation service as the organizer, or confirm whether Oklahomaallows organizers to be omitted after filing.

**Step 5 — Complete and file the Articles of Organization.**

Go to sos.ok.gov and complete the current version of the Articles of Organization (Form 0074 (online at sos.ok.gov)). Always use the current form directly from the Oklahoma Secretary of State — older versions are rejected at filing. Complete it with your LLC name exactly as chosen, your registered agent's full legal name and Oklahoma street address, your management structure (member-managed or manager-managed), and the organizer's name and signature.

**Privacy note on management structure:** in Oklahoma, the Articles of Organization ask you to state whether the company is member-managed or manager-managed, but Oklahoma does not require the names or addresses of those members or managers. If you choose manager-managed, Oklahoma does not list manager names in the Articles of Organization — only the member-managed or manager-managed designation appears, so a manager-managed structure run by a nominee keeps individual names out of the formation filing.

**Step 6 — File the Articles of Organization and pay the $100 fee.**

Submit online at sos.ok.gov or by mail to the Oklahoma Secretary of State office in Oklahoma City. Online filing processes in 1-3 business days for online filings. Mail-in takes significantly longer and has no tracking.

**Step 7 — Wait for your approved Articles of Organization.**

Your LLC does not legally exist until the Oklahoma Secretary of State approves the filing. Standard processing is 1-3 business days for online filings. Your approved Articles of Organization is your LLC's founding document — keep it. Every bank will require a copy.

**Step 8 — Draft your operating agreement — keep it private.**

Your operating agreement is an internal document. It is not filed with the Oklahoma Secretary of State and does not appear in any public database. This is where you document member ownership, management authority, and profit distribution. Unlike the Articles of Organization, the operating agreement can include your personal name without creating any public record.

Oklahoma treats the operating agreement as an internal record under the Oklahoma Limited Liability Company Act (18 O.S. § 2012) — it is never filed with the Secretary of State and never becomes a public document, though Oklahoma will enforce it as the governing contract among members. Keep the original with your company records. Give a copy to every member. A critical privacy caution: do not reference your operating agreement in any publicly filed document, and do not attach it to bank account applications where it could become a public or semi-public record without your knowledge.

**Step 9 — Apply for a federal EIN.**

Your LLC needs an EIN from the IRS. For single-member LLCs, the IRS defaults to using your Social Security Number as the responsible party identifier. This does not create a public record — EINs and their responsible party information are not publicly searchable — but it does create a federal connection between your SSN and your LLC. Apply at irs.gov/ein. Free, no government filing fee. Available Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Eastern. The 15-minute inactivity timeout is real — do not start the application unless you have all information ready.

**Step 10 — Open a business bank account.**

Most banks require your approved Articles of Organization, your EIN confirmation (IRS CP-575 letter), your operating agreement, and the personal ID of authorized signers. Your bank will know who owns the LLC — federal anti-money-laundering rules require banks to collect beneficial owner information internally. That information stays within the bank and is not published in any database. Some banks have more streamlined processes for anonymous LLCs; others are skeptical of privacy structures. Call ahead and ask what they require for an LLC with a professional registered agent address.

**Step 11 — File your FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Information report.**

This is a mandatory federal step. Within 90 days of formation (for LLCs formed in 2024 or later), you must file a BOI report at fincen.gov/boi. The report is free. It is not public. It goes to FinCEN's secure law enforcement database. Failure to file carries civil penalties up to $500/day and criminal penalties up to $10,000 plus imprisonment.

**Step 12 — Pay your annual Oklahoma obligations.**

Oklahoma requires a $25 Annual Certificate within the LLC's anniversary month each year, filed at sos.ok.gov under 18 O.S. § 2055.2. Two things matter for privacy here: the certificate is signed by a member or manager, and the completed filing is public. Have your manager or your holding-entity signatory complete it rather than signing personally, and calendar the anniversary-month deadline — a $50 late fee attaches when it is missed, and continued delinquency leads to administrative dissolution, which collapses the privacy structure you built.

If you would rather not manage the formation process, the FinCEN BOI filing, and the ongoing annual compliance yourself, the service handles Oklahoma anonymous LLC formation starting at $49.

Ready to Launch Your Business in Oklahoma?Follow our fast, easy process to get started right now.[Start My Business](https://app.llcattorney.com/formation?intake_type=formation)

### If LLC Attorney Does It for You

1.  Submit your information at llcattorney.com. Name preference, management structure, registered agent designation (LLC Attorney serves as your Oklahoma registered agent), and your FinCEN BOI responsible party information. No forms to find, no state portal to navigate, no organizer name disclosure.
2.  LLC Attorney files your Articles of Organization with the Oklahoma Secretary of State, serves as your registered agent and organizer (so your name does not appear on the public filing), drafts your operating agreement, and files your FinCEN BOI report. Same-day filing available if needed.
3.  Receive your approved Articles of Organization, EIN confirmation, operating agreement, and FinCEN BOI confirmation through your LLC Attorney client portal. Annual compliance reminders included so you never miss an obligation.

## Maintaining Your Oklahoma LLC's Anonymous Status

Forming anonymously is the first step. Maintaining anonymity requires ongoing discipline.

What breaks anonymity:

-   Signing contracts in your personal name on behalf of the LLC. Always sign as "Your Name, Member/Manager, \[LLC Name\]" — but consider whether you need to sign at all, or whether an authorized manager or attorney can sign instead.
-   Using your home address anywhere in connection with the LLC — bank correspondence, business licenses, tax registrations.
-   Publishing your name as the owner in marketing materials, press releases, or social media profiles linked to the LLC.
-   Filing a DBA (doing business as) registration in states that require public disclosure of the LLC owner's identity.
-   Using your personal email address in formation documents, registered agent correspondence, or banking applications where it could be discovered.

What does not break anonymity:

-   Your operating agreement listing your name. This is a private document not filed with any state agency.
-   Your FinCEN BOI report listing your name. This goes to a non-public federal database, not a public record.
-   Your bank account records. Banks collect beneficial owner information under federal anti-money-laundering law but do not publish it.

## Forming a Oklahoma Anonymous LLC as a Non-Resident

You do not need to live in Oklahoma or have any connection to the state to form a OklahomaLLC. Oklahoma allows non-residents to form LLCs and serves as one of the more commonly used states for out-of-state privacy formations.

What you need as a non-Oklahoma resident:

-   A Oklahoma registered agent with a physical Oklahoma street address (required regardless of residency)
-   A Oklahoma mailing address for state correspondence (your registered agent's address satisfies this)
-   Payment of the $100 filing fee and ongoing the $25 Annual Certificate due in the anniversary month

**The foreign registration question:** if your anonymous LLC operates in a state other than Oklahoma — meaning it has employees there, owns property there, or generates substantial revenue from customers there — that state may require you to register the LLC as a foreign entity. Foreign registration typically requires disclosing the LLC's principal address and registered agent in that state, and it may or may not require member/manager disclosure depending on the operating state's rules.

Oklahoma-level anonymity protects your name in Oklahoma's public records. If you do business in another state and register as a foreign LLC there, that state's public records will show your Oklahoma LLC's registration. Whether your name appears depends on that state's disclosure rules for foreign LLCs — not Oklahoma's. If you operate across multiple states and anonymity matters in each, an attorney consultation can map which states require foreign registration and what each discloses.

## When Should You Consult an Attorney for Your Oklahoma Anonymous LLC?

On-demand attorney consultations for a flat rate per 30-minute session — no retainer required. Anonymous LLC formation benefits from attorney guidance on several scenarios:

-   **Privacy structure design:** whether a single Oklahoma LLC is sufficient or a Wyoming holding company over your Oklahoma LLC better fits your privacy and asset-protection goals.
-   **Operating agreement drafting:** a template operating agreement may not include the language needed to preserve anonymity in banking, litigation, and business dealings.
-   **Multi-state operations:** if you will do business in multiple states, some will require foreign registration. An attorney can map what each state requires and what it discloses.
-   **FinCEN BOI exemptions:** most LLCs must file a BOI report, but certain regulated entities qualify for exemptions. An attorney can confirm your exemption status.
-   **Asset transfer mechanics:** if you are moving existing assets into an anonymous LLC, the transfer documents must be drafted correctly to avoid tax events and creditor notification requirements.
-   **Oklahoma-specific nuances:** Oklahoma's Annual Certificate (18 O.S. § 2055.2) must be signed by a member or manager and is public, so the choice of signer is a privacy decision; an attorney can confirm how to structure a Wyoming-member arrangement and manager signatory so your name stays off the recurring filing.

## When DIY Anonymity Breaks Down in Oklahoma, and Where It Can't Protect You

A Oklahoma anonymous LLC hides your name from the public business registry. It does not make you untraceable, and there are specific, predictable points where DIY anonymity falls apart:

-   **The IRS responsible-party field.** Getting an EIN typically requires naming a responsible party with an SSN or ITIN. Listing yourself here is the most common self-inflicted privacy leak, and it happens after the LLC is already filed, when people assume the hard part is done.
-   **Litigation and subpoenas.** State anonymity is not a liability shield. In a lawsuit, a court can compel disclosure of the beneficial owner. Anonymity protects you from casual searches, not from legal process.
-   **Banking, KYC, and real-estate closings.** Banks and title companies are required to identify the beneficial owner. Your name will appear in those private files even when it never touches the public record.
-   **When you actually need structuring, not just a filing.** Multi-state operations, a nominee arrangement, or a double-LLC privacy structure are easy to get wrong in ways that defeat the privacy you paid for. These are attorney decisions, not form-filling.

In Oklahoma specifically, the weak point is not the formation filing but the recurring one: the Annual Certificate has to be signed by a member or manager and goes onto the public record, so anonymity holds only if a manager or your Wyoming holding entity — not you personally — is the signer year after year.

You do not have to map these risks on your own. LLC Attorney's attorney-trained Business Success Advisors are free and can tell you which of these situations needs a licensed attorney, and flat-fee consultations (no retainer) are available when one does.

## What You Actually Get When You Form Your Oklahoma Anonymous LLC with LLC Attorney

Filing the Oklahoma LLC is the simple part. Keeping it private is harder here than in a true privacy state, because the exposure point repeats annually: every Annual Certificate needs a member or manager signature and lands in the public record. A bare filing service that forms the entity and disappears leaves you to sign that certificate yourself the following year — quietly undoing the privacy you set out to build.

Included with LLC Attorney anonymous LLC formation, starting at $100:

-   A Oklahoma filing structured to keep your name off the the Oklahoma Secretary of State business entity search, using the state's privacy mechanism correctly rather than by accident.
-   Registered agent service at $125/year, so a third-party address — not yours — sits on the public record.
-   An EIN obtained without exposing you as the responsible party where the structure allows, the single most common way owners accidentally de-anonymize themselves.
-   An operating agreement that keeps members and managers off the public record while still documenting ownership privately.
-   Ongoing privacy maintenance across annual filings, so a routine renewal does not quietly put your name back on the record.
-   Access to attorney-trained Business Success Advisors at no charge, plus optional flat-fee attorney consultations (no retainer) when your situation needs a licensed attorney.

Oklahoma's privacy does not come from the state withholding names — it comes from structuring the membership and the annual signature so your name never has to appear, which is exactly what is coordinated here.

## Starting Your Oklahoma Anonymous LLC with LLC Attorney

Oklahoma's privacy structure depends on a holding-entity layer rather than the state itself — because Oklahoma keeps names off the Articles but requires a member or manager to sign the public Annual Certificate every year, so the structure has to anticipate that recurring filing from day one. Getting the organizer, registered agent, operating agreement, and FinCEN filing right at formation establishes your privacy foundation. Shortcuts at any of these steps create exposure that is hard to reverse.

The service handles Oklahoma anonymous LLC formation starting at $49. It serves as your registered agent and organizer — your name does not appear on the public filing. Same-day filing is available at no markup on state fees. FinCEN BOI filing guidance is included. On-demand attorney consultations in 30-minute increments cover operating agreement drafting, privacy structure design, and multi-state operating questions. See our [full pricing](/pricing) for all service tiers.

Ready to Launch Your Business in Oklahoma?Follow our fast, easy process to get started right now.[Start My Business](https://app.llcattorney.com/formation?intake_type=formation)

## Frequently Asked Questions

Does forming an anonymous LLC in Oklahoma really keep my name private?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Partly, and the distinction matters. Oklahoma does not require member or manager names in the Articles of Organization, so your name does not appear when the LLC is formed. But Oklahoma is not a full anonymity state: the $25 Annual Certificate due each year (18 O.S. § 2055.2) must be signed by a member or manager and becomes a public record once filed. To keep your name out of that recurring filing, owners place a Wyoming holding LLC as the member of the Oklahoma company and let a manager sign the certificate. Your name still exists in two non-public places regardless — your operating agreement and your FinCEN beneficial ownership report — but the public Oklahoma record can be kept clean with the right structure.

What is the difference between a Oklahoma anonymous LLC and a regular LLC?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

The structure is identical — the difference is in Oklahoma's filing requirements. Oklahoma does not require member or manager names in the Articles of Organization. A standard LLC formed in a state like California would list member names publicly. A Oklahoma LLC lists only the registered agent's address. Otherwise, both structures provide the same liability protection, management flexibility, and pass-through taxation.

Do I still have to disclose my name somewhere if I form an anonymous LLC?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes — in two places. First, your operating agreement is a private internal document that typically names all members. Second, the Corporate Transparency Act requires a Beneficial Ownership Information report to FinCEN identifying all beneficial owners. Neither disclosure is public. FinCEN's database is accessible to law enforcement and certain financial institutions under specific conditions — not to the general public.

Can I open a bank account with an anonymous LLC?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes. Banks require your Articles of Organization, EIN, operating agreement, and the personal ID of authorized signers. Federal anti-money-laundering rules also require banks to collect beneficial owner information internally. Your bank will know who owns the LLC — but that information stays within the bank and is not published in any database.

Is an anonymous LLC legal?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes. Forming an LLC in a state that does not require member disclosure is fully legal. The structure is used by legitimate businesses, real estate investors, and privacy-conscious entrepreneurs nationwide. The only legal constraint is the federal FinCEN BOI reporting requirement, which applies to virtually every LLC regardless of where it is formed.

What happens to my anonymity if I get sued?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

A suit against your LLC does not by itself reveal you — the claim names the Oklahoma entity, and a public search typically surfaces the registered agent's address and whatever signed the most recent Annual Certificate. Where Oklahoma is genuinely strong is the personal-creditor side: under 18 O.S. § 2034 the charging order is the exclusive remedy even for a single-member LLC, and it cannot be foreclosed into ownership, so a creditor who does learn you own the company still cannot seize the interest. During litigation a court can compel discovery of ownership, so anonymity guards against casual searching, not a court order.

Can I convert my existing LLC into an anonymous LLC?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

You cannot convert an existing LLC formed in a disclosure state into an anonymous one — the public record already exists. The most common approach is to form a new Oklahoma LLC and transfer assets or business operations to it. An attorney consultation can walk through the transfer mechanics and tax implications.

What is the annual cost to maintain a Oklahoma anonymous LLC?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Oklahoma is one of the cheaper states to keep an LLC running. Formation is $100, and the recurring obligation is a $25 Annual Certificate due in your anniversary month each year. There is no Oklahoma franchise tax; members pay the flat 4.75% income tax on pass-through profits. Professional registered agent service adds roughly $100 to $300 per year depending on the provider. Budget for the privacy structure too: a Wyoming holding LLC to sit as the member of your Oklahoma company carries its own formation and annual costs.

## Learn More About Oklahoma

-   [Oklahoma LLC Formation](/states/ok/llc-formation-oklahoma)
-   [Oklahoma Registered Agent](/states/ok/registered-agent-oklahoma)
-   [Wyoming Anonymous LLC](/states/wy/anonymous-llc-wyoming)
-   [Oklahoma EIN Number](/states/ok/ein-number-oklahoma)