How to Reinstate a Virginia LLC, Corporation, or Nonprofit

Feb 21, 2026Arnold L.

How to Reinstate a Virginia LLC, Corporation, or Nonprofit

When a Virginia business falls out of good standing, reinstatement is often the fastest path back to normal operations. For corporations, limited liability companies, and nonprofit corporations, the Virginia State Corporation Commission (SCC) provides a process to restore an inactive entity so it can resume business activity legally and credibly.

This guide explains why an entity becomes inactive, what the SCC requires, how reinstatement works, and what to do if too much time has passed.

What reinstatement means

Reinstatement is the process of bringing an inactive Virginia entity back into active status with the SCC. In practical terms, it is the state’s way of allowing a dissolved, canceled, revoked, or otherwise inactive business to recover its authority to operate.

If your business is inactive, it may have lost access to banking, licensing, contracting, or other important business functions. Reinstatement can help repair those issues, but it usually requires catching up on missing filings, paying overdue fees, and correcting the underlying compliance problem.

Why a Virginia entity can become inactive

A Virginia company can fall out of good standing for several reasons. Common causes include:

  • unpaid registration or filing fees
  • failure to file an annual report when required
  • failure to maintain a registered agent and registered office
  • administrative cancellation, termination, or revocation by the SCC

The SCC also flags businesses as pending inactive when a compliance issue is developing but not yet final. That status is important because it gives you a window to act before the entity is formally terminated or canceled.

The 5-year reinstatement window

Virginia gives most inactive entities a five-year period to reinstate. If the business has been terminated, revoked, or canceled for more than five years, the SCC does not have authority to reinstate it.

That deadline matters. If your entity is close to the five-year mark, you should move quickly and confirm the filing requirements before time runs out.

Reinstatement fees by entity type

The SCC fee depends on the type of entity:

  • Virginia stock corporation: $100 plus unpaid fees
  • Virginia LLC: $100 plus unpaid fees
  • Virginia nonprofit corporation: $10 plus unpaid fees

Other entity types may have different restoration or reinstatement procedures, so it is important to verify the exact classification of your business before filing.

How to reinstate a Virginia business

The SCC says online reinstatement is the most efficient method. Paper packets are available, but online filing is usually faster and reduces processing delays.

1. Confirm the entity status

Start by checking the business entity search in the SCC’s online system. Look for the current status and the reason for inactivity. That will tell you whether reinstatement is available and what issues need to be corrected.

2. Identify the compliance issue

The status reason often points to the problem that caused the inactivity. You may need to:

  • pay overdue fees
  • file a missed annual report
  • update a registered agent
  • correct an administrative issue tied to the entity record

3. Gather the required information

Before filing, collect the entity name, SCC ID number, and any supporting details needed to complete the reinstatement. If the SCC requires overdue filings or fee payments, have those ready as well.

4. File online through the SCC

Virginia’s online filing system is the preferred route for reinstatement. The SCC’s process is designed to restore the entity once the required forms and fees have been submitted and processed.

5. Wait for the SCC to process the filing

Reinstatement is not complete the moment you submit the form. The SCC must receive, review, and process the filing. Once approved, the entity is restored to active status.

When a paper packet may be needed

If you do not file online, you can request a reinstatement packet from the Office of the Clerk. The packet is sent by mail and includes the forms and instructions needed for paper filing.

Paper filing can work, but it is usually slower and gives you less visibility into the status of the submission. For time-sensitive matters, online filing is the better option whenever it is available.

What happens after reinstatement

Once your entity is restored, you should not treat the filing as the end of the process. Reinstatement fixes the current inactive status, but it does not eliminate future compliance obligations.

After reinstatement, make sure you:

  • confirm the entity is listed as active
  • update calendar reminders for annual reports and other recurring filings
  • verify the registered agent and registered office are current
  • review any state or tax notices that may still need attention

If your business fell out of good standing once, it can happen again unless you build a stronger compliance routine.

What if your entity is beyond the reinstatement deadline?

If the entity has been inactive for more than five years, the SCC cannot reinstate it. In that situation, the usual path is to form a new entity rather than attempt to revive the old one.

Before taking that step, review whether the business name is still available and whether the new entity should be formed as an LLC, corporation, or nonprofit structure. The right choice depends on your business goals, liability concerns, and operational needs.

How to avoid falling out of good standing again

The best reinstatement strategy is not needing one twice. A few practical habits can prevent future problems:

  • keep the registered agent and registered office up to date
  • track annual report and fee deadlines on a compliance calendar
  • review all notices from the SCC immediately
  • maintain accurate internal records for ownership, management, and addresses
  • respond quickly to any pending inactive status before it becomes final

For many small businesses, the issue is not intent but timing. A reminder system can prevent a missed filing from turning into an expensive administrative problem.

How Zenind can help

Zenind helps business owners stay organized with formation and compliance support built for U.S. entities. For Virginia businesses, that can mean clearer filing support, better deadline tracking, and a more manageable path to maintaining good standing.

If your company is already inactive, Zenind can also help you stay focused on the next required step instead of sorting through state procedures alone. That is especially useful when multiple filings, overdue fees, or agent updates are involved.

Final takeaway

A Virginia LLC, corporation, or nonprofit can usually be reinstated within five years of becoming inactive, but the process becomes harder the longer you wait. The SCC’s online filing system is the fastest route, and the required fee depends on the entity type.

If your business has lost good standing, act quickly, confirm the status reason, and file the needed reinstatement before the deadline closes the door on revival.

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) .

Zenind provides an easy-to-use and affordable online platform for you to incorporate your company in the United States. Join us today and get started with your new business venture.

Frequently Asked Questions

No questions available. Please check back later.