How to Dissolve a Delaware Corporation, LLC, Nonprofit, or Partnership

Sep 24, 2025Arnold L.

How to Dissolve a Delaware Corporation, LLC, Nonprofit, or Partnership

Closing a Delaware business is more than filing a final form. The dissolution process can involve tax clearances, final tax returns, franchise tax or annual tax obligations, internal approvals, winding up liabilities, and the correct filing for the specific entity type.

If you are ending a Delaware corporation, LLC, nonprofit, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, limited liability limited partnership, statutory trust, or partnership, the safest approach is to follow the state’s filing path carefully and make sure every required tax and compliance step is completed before the entity is closed.

What dissolution means in Delaware

Dissolution is the legal process that ends an entity’s existence in Delaware. For some businesses, that means filing a certificate of dissolution. For others, it means filing a certificate of cancellation or withdrawal.

The filing is only one part of the process. Before and after the filing, you may also need to:

  • settle debts and liabilities
  • notify creditors, customers, employees, and vendors
  • complete final federal, state, and local tax filings
  • pay any outstanding franchise tax, annual tax, or business license obligations
  • close bank accounts and cancel permits or registrations
  • distribute remaining assets according to the governing documents and applicable law

Match the filing to the entity type

Delaware uses different dissolution documents depending on the legal structure of the business.

Entity type Delaware filing Current state filing fee
Domestic corporation Certificate of Dissolution $224
Short-form corporation dissolution Short Form Dissolution $194
Domestic LLC Certificate of Cancellation $220
Foreign LLC Foreign Cancellation $200
Limited partnership Certificate of Cancellation $200
Limited liability partnership Statement of Cancellation $200
Limited liability limited partnership Statement of Cancellation $200
Partnership Certificate of Cancellation $200
Statutory trust Certificate of Cancellation $200
Foreign corporation Certificate of Withdrawal $175

Delaware’s fee schedule can change, so confirm the current filing cost before submission. Additional page, certified copy, or expedited service charges may also apply depending on the request.

Before you file: complete the winding-up work

A clean filing starts with winding up the business properly.

1. Approve the dissolution internally

Most entities need formal approval from the owners, members, managers, directors, or partners. Check the governing documents, operating agreement, bylaws, or partnership agreement for the required vote or consent process.

2. Pay or resolve all outstanding obligations

Before closing, make a final pass through:

  • vendor invoices
  • leases and utilities
  • payroll and employment obligations
  • customer refunds or deposits
  • loans and credit lines
  • state and federal taxes
  • annual reports and annual tax obligations

3. Close out state tax obligations

For Delaware corporations, the state requires more than just the dissolution filing. If the corporation conducted any business in Delaware, it must notify the Delaware Division of Revenue of the dissolution by marking the entity as out of business and listing the last day of business operations on the final withholding and/or business license gross receipt coupon, as well as the final corporate income tax return.

Delaware also notes that before a corporate dissolution certificate can be filed, all applicable annual franchise tax reports must be filed.

For LLCs, limited partnerships, and general partnerships, Delaware imposes an annual tax, and the state filing fee for cancellation is listed separately from the taxes that must be paid to close the entity.

4. Check whether a tax clearance is needed

A Delaware corporation may need a Certificate of Tax Clearance from the Division of Revenue depending on the closing facts and tax status. The state issues tax clearance certificates for corporate income tax matters, and the request requires the corporation’s name, federal identification number, state of incorporation, and filing fee.

This step is especially important when a corporation has operated in Delaware and needs to confirm that tax obligations are fully resolved before dissolution.

Delaware corporation dissolution: the key points

Delaware corporations use several dissolution paths depending on the stage and structure of the company.

Standard corporate dissolution

A standard Delaware corporation dissolution generally uses a Certificate of Dissolution. This is the normal path for an operating corporation that has decided to end its legal existence.

The corporation should confirm that:

  • any required shareholder or board approvals have been obtained
  • annual franchise tax reports are current
  • tax obligations are resolved
  • the correct dissolution section and form are used

Short-form dissolution

Some corporations can use a short-form dissolution. This is typically used in more limited situations, such as when a corporation is winding up under a simpler statutory path. The short-form filing has a different fee and should only be used when the statutory requirements are satisfied.

Before beginning of business or before issuance of shares

Delaware also provides special dissolution forms for corporations that have not yet started business or have not issued shares. These filings are designed for corporations that need to close early in their lifecycle and should be matched carefully to the facts of the entity.

Foreign corporations

A corporation formed outside Delaware but registered to do business in the state typically uses a withdrawal filing rather than a domestic dissolution filing.

Delaware LLC cancellation: the key points

For a Delaware LLC, the closing filing is generally a Certificate of Cancellation.

Before filing, confirm the following:

  • the LLC has completed its winding-up process
  • debts and liabilities are addressed
  • members or managers have approved the cancellation if required by the operating agreement
  • annual taxes are paid
  • any registered series issues are handled correctly

Delaware’s fee schedule lists the domestic LLC cancellation fee at $220 and the foreign LLC cancellation fee at $200.

If the LLC has registered series named in the certificate of cancellation, an additional fee may apply for each registered series.

Partnerships, LLPs, LLLPs, and statutory trusts

Delaware also allows cancellation filings for partnerships, limited liability partnerships, limited liability limited partnerships, and statutory trusts.

These entities should make sure they have:

  • followed the vote or consent requirements in the governing agreement
  • settled outstanding liabilities
  • resolved tax obligations
  • filed the correct cancellation document with the Division of Corporations

The current Delaware filing fee for cancellation for these entity types is generally $200.

Practical filing checklist

Before you submit the dissolution or cancellation, use this checklist:

  • confirm the entity type and exact filing form
  • obtain the required internal approval
  • pay remaining taxes and fees
  • file any final state returns
  • complete any Delaware tax clearance steps that apply
  • close payroll, sales, and business license accounts where needed
  • review whether expedited processing is necessary
  • keep copies of the filed document and final tax confirmations

Common mistakes to avoid

The most common filing errors are avoidable:

  • using the wrong dissolution form for the entity type
  • filing before tax obligations are resolved
  • forgetting to file final state returns
  • overlooking annual franchise tax or annual tax balances
  • assuming a state filing alone ends every obligation
  • neglecting registered series or foreign registration requirements

These mistakes can delay closure and leave the entity exposed to penalties, taxes, or administrative issues.

How Zenind helps with Delaware dissolution

If you want a cleaner, more organized closing process, Zenind can help you stay on track with the administrative work surrounding Delaware entity dissolution.

That can include:

  • preparing the correct closing filing
  • organizing entity compliance records
  • tracking required steps before submission
  • helping coordinate registered agent and compliance tasks during wind-up

For founders and operators, the value is simple: fewer missed steps, less back-and-forth, and a more reliable path to closing the business correctly.

Final takeaway

Dissolving a Delaware entity is a compliance process, not just a form filing. The right filing depends on whether you are closing a corporation, LLC, nonprofit, partnership, or foreign entity, and the state may require additional tax and clearance steps before the entity is fully terminated.

If you are preparing to close a Delaware business, start with the correct entity-specific form, finish the tax and wind-up work first, and confirm that the filing matches your company’s legal status.

Disclaimer: The content presented in this article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness of the information provided, Zenind and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions. Readers should consult with appropriate legal or professional advisors before making any decisions or taking any actions based on the information contained in this article. Any reliance on the information provided herein is at the reader's own risk.

This article is available in English (United States) .

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