How to Reinstate or Revive a Colorado LLC: Delinquency, Reinstatement, and Filing Steps
Jul 27, 2025Arnold L.
How to Reinstate or Revive a Colorado LLC: Delinquency, Reinstatement, and Filing Steps
If your Colorado LLC is no longer in good standing, you may still be able to bring it back. The exact filing you need depends on your entity’s status. In Colorado, a delinquent LLC generally cures its status by filing a Statement Curing Delinquency, while a voluntarily dissolved LLC may need to file Articles of Reinstatement.
This guide explains the difference between those two paths, what the Colorado Secretary of State requires, and how to avoid common mistakes when restoring your business.
What it means when a Colorado LLC is delinquent or dissolved
A Colorado LLC can lose good standing for different reasons:
- missing a periodic report
- failing to maintain a registered agent
- not paying required fees or penalties
- choosing to dissolve voluntarily
These statuses are not the same, and they do not use the same filing to restore the company. Before you file anything, confirm your LLC’s current status on the Colorado Secretary of State business search page.
Colorado LLC revival vs. reinstatement
In practical terms, business owners often use the words “revive,” “reinstate,” and “restore” interchangeably. Colorado filings, however, are specific:
- Delinquent LLC: usually cured with a Statement Curing Delinquency
- Voluntarily dissolved LLC: usually restored with Articles of Reinstatement
Choosing the wrong filing can delay your return to good standing, so start with the status shown in the state record.
How to revive a delinquent Colorado LLC
If your LLC is delinquent, the Colorado Secretary of State requires a Statement Curing Delinquency to return the entity to good standing.
Why Colorado LLCs become delinquent
According to the Colorado Secretary of State, an entity can become delinquent if it:
- fails to file its periodic report
- fails to appoint a new registered agent after the current agent resigns
For many LLCs, the process starts with noncompliance and then moves to delinquent status if the issue is not fixed by the applicable deadlines.
What to file
A delinquent Colorado LLC generally needs:
- Statement Curing Delinquency
- $100 filing fee
- any outstanding fees or penalties owed to the state
If the LLC has been delinquent for 5 years or longer, Colorado now requires additional documents with the filing, including:
- an affidavit confirming the filer has authority to act for the entity
- a government-issued photo ID for the person submitting the filing and affidavit
The Secretary of State reviews these submissions and may accept or reject them.
Information the Statement Curing Delinquency asks for
The form typically asks for basic entity details such as:
- Colorado Secretary of State ID number
- entity name
- jurisdiction where formed
- registered agent name and address
- principal office address
Much of this information may already be prefilled from state records, but the filing still needs to reflect the current and correct information.
Step-by-step: curing delinquency in Colorado
- Look up your LLC in the Colorado business search.
- Confirm the status is delinquent.
- Review whether any annual report, registered agent issue, or fee problem needs to be corrected.
- Prepare the Statement Curing Delinquency.
- Add any required supporting documents if the LLC has been delinquent for 5 years or more.
- File online with the Colorado Secretary of State.
- Pay the filing fee and any additional amounts owed.
- Confirm the business returns to good standing after acceptance.
What if your Colorado LLC name is no longer available?
Colorado holds a delinquent entity’s name for 400 days from the date of delinquency. After that period, the original name may become available to another entity.
If the name is no longer available, you may need to choose a different name when restoring the company. Colorado also allows name changes through separate amendment filings after the entity is back in good standing.
How to reinstate a voluntarily dissolved Colorado LLC
If your Colorado LLC was voluntarily dissolved, the usual restoration filing is Articles of Reinstatement.
This is a different process from curing delinquency. It is designed for entities that were intentionally dissolved and now want to resume business.
What the reinstatement filing typically requires
The Colorado Secretary of State’s instructions indicate that Articles of Reinstatement generally ask for:
- Colorado Secretary of State ID number
- entity name
- entity name following reinstatement
- registered agent information
- principal office address
- date of formation
- date of dissolution, if known
- governing Colorado statute
- statement that the required conditions for reinstatement have been satisfied
Name rules for reinstatement
If the original name is still distinguishable and available under Colorado naming rules, the LLC may be able to use it again. If not, the state may require the word “Reinstated” and the reinstated date to be appended to the name.
After reinstatement, the entity can usually file a separate document later if it wants to change the name again.
Step-by-step: reinstating a voluntarily dissolved Colorado LLC
- Verify the LLC’s status in the Colorado business search.
- Confirm that the entity was voluntarily dissolved, not merely delinquent.
- Gather the entity ID, formation date, dissolution date, and registered agent details.
- Review the name availability and naming requirements.
- Prepare the Articles of Reinstatement.
- File online with the Colorado Secretary of State.
- Pay the required filing fee.
- Confirm the entity is restored and update any internal records, banks, licenses, and tax accounts.
Registered agent requirements matter
For both delinquency cures and reinstatements, Colorado expects the business to maintain a proper registered agent in the state. The registered agent must consent to the appointment and must have a Colorado street address suitable for service of process.
If your registered agent resigned or your current agent information is outdated, fix that as part of the restoration process.
How much does it cost to revive a Colorado LLC?
Colorado’s current business fee schedule lists:
- Statement Curing Delinquency: $100 online
- Reinstatement: $100 online
Fees can change, so it is smart to confirm the current amount on the Colorado Secretary of State fee schedule before filing.
How long does Colorado take to process the filing?
Colorado’s online business filings are typically processed immediately or reviewed as part of the online filing workflow, depending on the form and any extra documents required.
For a delinquent LLC that needs supporting affidavit and ID documents, the state reviews the submission before accepting or rejecting it. If the filing is rejected, you generally must resubmit the materials and pay again.
Common mistakes to avoid
The most common problems with Colorado LLC revival and reinstatement are avoidable:
- filing the wrong form for the entity’s status
- forgetting to fix the underlying delinquency issue
- using a registered agent who has not consented
- entering a non-Colorado address for the registered agent
- assuming the original LLC name is still available
- overlooking extra documents required for long-delinquent entities
- failing to update banks, tax agencies, and license records after restoration
What to do after your LLC is restored
Once your Colorado LLC is back in good standing, do not stop at the filing. Review the rest of your business setup:
- confirm the registered agent record is correct
- file future periodic reports on time
- update your operating agreement if ownership or management changed
- notify your bank, tax advisor, and licensing agencies
- bring business records back into alignment with the state filing
How Zenind can help
Zenind helps business owners keep formation and compliance tasks organized. For Colorado LLC owners, that can mean staying on top of registered agent service, reminders, and ongoing filing obligations so you are less likely to fall behind again.
If your LLC is already delinquent or dissolved, having a clear compliance process in place can make the restoration smoother and reduce the chance of repeat problems later.
Final thoughts
To revive a Colorado LLC, start by checking the entity’s status. A delinquent LLC usually cures its status with a Statement Curing Delinquency, while a voluntarily dissolved LLC generally needs Articles of Reinstatement. The right filing, the right supporting documents, and the right registered agent details are the keys to getting back to good standing.
If you want a cleaner path after restoration, make compliance part of your ongoing business routine rather than a one-time fix.
No questions available. Please check back later.