How to File an Alabama LLC Amendment with the Secretary of State

Aug 29, 2025Arnold L.

How to File an Alabama LLC Amendment with the Secretary of State

When an Alabama LLC changes, the public record should change with it. If your company name, formation details, or other recorded information no longer matches your business, the Alabama Secretary of State expects you to update the filing record using the correct amendment process.

For a domestic Alabama LLC, the state uses the Domestic LLC Amendment to Formation/Organization form. The current form instructions show that the amendment may be filed online or by mail, the form must be typed, and the filing requires a $100 processing fee. If the amendment changes the LLC name, a new name reservation certificate must be attached.

What an Alabama LLC amendment is for

An amendment updates the information on file for a domestic Alabama LLC. In practical terms, that means changing the state record so it reflects your LLC as it exists today rather than the way it appeared when the Certificate of Formation was first filed.

Common reasons to amend an Alabama LLC record include:

  • Changing the LLC name
  • Updating formation details that are no longer accurate
  • Correcting information that was entered incorrectly
  • Making other authorized changes to the LLC record

If you only need to change the registered agent or registered office, use the separate registered agent change filing instead of the LLC amendment form. Alabama treats that as a different filing.

Amendment vs. amended and restated formation

Not every update has to be handled the same way.

Use a standard amendment when you are changing one or a few specific items on the existing record.

Consider an amended and restated formation when you want to rewrite the formation document in a cleaner, consolidated format. That can be useful if you are making multiple changes at once and want one organized document instead of a series of separate amendments.

If the LLC is foreign rather than domestic, use the foreign LLC amendment filing instead. Alabama uses different forms for domestic and foreign entities.

What the Alabama LLC amendment form requires

The current Alabama amendment form asks for the key identifying information for the LLC and for the change being made. Before you start, gather:

  • The LLC’s current recorded name
  • The date the Certificate of Formation was filed
  • The Alabama entity ID number
  • The name and full address of the person preparing the filing
  • The exact amendment being adopted
  • The date the amendment was adopted
  • The signature, printed name, and title or capacity of the authorized signer

If you are changing the LLC name, reserve the new name first and attach the reservation certificate to the filing.

If you are amending existing information, be very specific. The state form itself tells filers to spell out exactly what must be changed.

How to file an Alabama LLC amendment

You can file the Domestic LLC Amendment to Formation/Organization online or by mail.

Option 1: File online

Alabama’s Business Services portal allows online filing for the amendment. Online filing is usually the most efficient option when your change is straightforward and you have all of your information ready.

Before submitting online, confirm that:

  • The amendment is for a domestic Alabama LLC
  • The information on the form matches the current state record
  • Any required attachments are ready, especially a new name reservation certificate if the LLC name is changing
  • The signatory is authorized to approve the amendment

Option 2: File by mail

If you file by mail, send two completed copies of the amendment form along with a self-addressed, stamped envelope to:

Secretary of State
Business Services
P.O. Box 5616
Montgomery, AL 36103

The official form instructions also say the filing should be typed and should not be submitted by email.

Filing fee and payment basics

The current Alabama amendment form lists a $100 processing fee.

If you are filing by mail, the instructions allow payment by check, money order, or credit card payment. Always confirm the latest payment instructions before sending a filing, especially if your transaction is time-sensitive.

Step-by-step checklist

Use this checklist to reduce filing errors:

  1. Confirm that you need an amendment, not a registered agent change or a restated formation.
  2. Pull the LLC’s exact current legal name from the state record.
  3. Locate the Alabama entity ID number.
  4. Prepare the amendment language in clear, specific terms.
  5. Reserve the new LLC name first if the filing changes the name.
  6. Type the form and make sure all dates are complete.
  7. Sign in the correct capacity.
  8. Attach any required supporting documents.
  9. Pay the filing fee.
  10. Submit online or mail two copies to the Secretary of State.
  11. Keep a copy of the filed document with your company records.

Common mistakes to avoid

A filing can be delayed or rejected for small but preventable reasons.

1. Using the wrong form

An amendment is not the same as a registered agent change, and a domestic LLC filing is not the same as a foreign LLC filing. Start with the correct form before you fill anything in.

2. Forgetting the name reservation certificate

If you are changing the LLC name, Alabama requires a new name reservation certificate to be attached.

3. Being vague about the change

The amendment should clearly state what is being changed. A vague note such as “update company info” is not enough.

4. Leaving out the entity ID number

The Alabama entity ID number helps the Secretary of State match your filing to the right LLC.

5. Handwriting a mailed filing

The current amendment form must be typed. Handwritten filings can create avoidable processing problems.

6. Sending the filing by email

The official instructions do not allow the amendment to be filed by email.

When a restated filing makes more sense

If your LLC has undergone several changes since formation, an amended and restated certificate can be easier to manage than multiple stand-alone amendments. This is especially helpful when the business wants a single, updated governing record that reflects the company’s current structure.

The best choice depends on how much is changing and how you want the public record to read after the filing is accepted.

After you file

After the amendment is submitted, keep a clean internal record of the update. That should include:

  • The filed amendment
  • Any supporting attachments
  • Proof of payment
  • The date the change became effective, if shown on the filing

You should also update related business records that depend on the LLC’s legal name or formation details, such as banking documents, contracts, licenses, website disclosures, and internal operating records.

If the change affects compliance items, make sure your ongoing business records are updated at the same time. A state filing is only one part of maintaining an accurate company record.

How Zenind can help

Zenind helps business owners stay organized when company details change. If you are updating an Alabama LLC, Zenind can support your compliance workflow by helping you track filing steps, manage business records, and stay on top of state requirements as your company grows.

For owners who want a cleaner process, that kind of support can reduce missed details and make state updates easier to handle.

Final takeaway

Filing an Alabama LLC amendment is straightforward when you use the right form, list the change precisely, and include any required attachments. For a domestic Alabama LLC, the key points are simple: use the Domestic LLC Amendment to Formation/Organization form, type the filing, attach a new name reservation certificate if the LLC name changes, and submit it online or by mail with the current fee.

Keeping the Secretary of State record current is one of the easiest ways to protect your LLC from avoidable compliance problems as it evolves.

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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