Michigan Fictitious Name Registration and Renewal: A DBA Filing Guide for Businesses

Dec 11, 2025Arnold L.

Michigan Fictitious Name Registration and Renewal: A DBA Filing Guide for Businesses

A fictitious name, often called a DBA, assumed name, or trade name, lets a business operate under a name that is different from its legal name. In Michigan, the filing process depends on how the business is organized. Some businesses file at the county level, while others file with the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA).

Understanding the difference matters. Filing the wrong form, filing in the wrong office, or missing a renewal deadline can create avoidable compliance problems. This guide explains how Michigan fictitious name registration works, who files where, what the current state filing fee is, and how to keep an assumed name in good standing.

What a fictitious name means in Michigan

A fictitious name is not a separate legal entity. It is simply the name a business uses in the marketplace when that name is different from the name on the entity’s formation documents or the owner’s legal name.

Examples include:

  • A corporation using a brand name instead of its corporate name
  • An LLC operating under a different public-facing name
  • A sole proprietor doing business under a name other than the owner’s personal name
  • A partnership using a name that does not match the partners’ names

A DBA can help a business present a cleaner brand, match a product line, or use a name that is easier for customers to remember. It does not, by itself, create a trademark or give exclusive rights to the name.

Who files in Michigan and where

Michigan does not use one single filing path for every business type. The filing office depends on the structure of the business.

Business type Typical filing office Michigan filing note
Corporation LARA Corporations Division File a Certificate of Assumed Name if operating under another name
LLC LARA Corporations Division File a Certificate of Assumed Name if operating under another name
Limited partnership LARA Corporations Division File a Certificate of Assumed Name if operating under another name
Nonprofit corporation LARA Corporations Division File a Certificate of Assumed Name if operating under another name
Sole proprietorship County clerk File with the county clerk in each county where business is transacted
General partnership / copartnership County clerk File with the county clerk in each county where business is transacted
LLP County clerk Assumed-name filings are made with the counties where the partnership transacts business

For corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, and nonprofit corporations, Michigan uses the Certificate of Assumed Name, form CSCL/CD 541. For sole proprietorships and general partnerships, the filing is handled through the county clerk system.

State-level assumed name filing for Michigan entities

If a corporation, LLC, limited partnership, or nonprofit wants to use a name other than its legal name, Michigan requires a Certificate of Assumed Name to be filed with LARA.

Key points for the state filing:

  • The assumed name must be distinguishable from active limited partnerships, corporations, or LLCs on record
  • The filing is made on form CSCL/CD 541
  • The current state fee shown on Michigan’s filing fee schedules is $10
  • The certificate is effective on the filing date unless a later effective date is selected within the form’s allowed window
  • The assumed name expires on December 31 of the fifth full calendar year following the year in which it was filed
  • A preprinted renewal form is mailed to the registered office address about 90 days before expiration

That expiration rule is important. A DBA in Michigan does not stay active indefinitely. Businesses should track the expiration year the moment the filing is accepted.

County-level assumed name filing for sole proprietors and partnerships

Michigan still uses county clerk filings for certain business types. If you are a sole proprietor or a general partnership and you are operating under a name other than the owner’s or partners’ legal names, you generally file with the county clerk.

Important county-level points include:

  • The filing is made in each county where the business is transacted
  • If the business later changes its name or address, those changes are filed with the county clerk where the original document was filed
  • If you conduct business in more than one county, you may need filings in each county involved

County procedures can vary, so businesses should confirm the local clerk’s requirements before filing or renewing.

How to register a Michigan DBA the right way

A clean filing process usually follows the same basic sequence.

1. Confirm your business structure

Start by identifying whether the business is a corporation, LLC, nonprofit, limited partnership, sole proprietorship, general partnership, or LLP. That determines the correct filing office.

2. Check whether the name is available

For state filings, Michigan requires the assumed name to be distinguishable from active records. Before printing marketing materials or opening under the new name, search Michigan’s business records and make sure the name is available for use.

Do not assume a name is clear just because it looks different on the surface. Small spelling changes often do not solve a conflict.

3. Prepare the filing information

For a state assumed name filing, the business will need the legal entity name, entity identification number, and the assumed name it intends to use. For county filings, the clerk may require different information depending on the county.

4. File with the correct office

File the Certificate of Assumed Name with LARA for corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, and nonprofits. File with the county clerk for sole proprietorships, general partnerships, and the county-based filings required for those business forms.

5. Track expiration and renewal

Do not treat the DBA as a one-time task. The assumed name must be monitored just like any other recurring compliance item. Build a renewal calendar when the filing is submitted and keep the deadline with the business records.

Renewal rules and compliance timing

For state-filed Michigan assumed names, the expiration date is fixed by statute and form instruction: December 31 of the fifth full calendar year after the year of filing.

For example:

  • Filed in 2026
  • Fifth full calendar year after filing: 2031
  • Expiration date: December 31, 2031

A renewal reminder is mailed to the registered office address before expiration, but businesses should not rely on mail alone. Address changes, mail delays, and internal turnover can all cause missed renewals.

Best practice is to set three reminders:

  • One when the filing is accepted
  • One 12 months before expiration
  • One 90 days before expiration

That gives the business enough time to review whether the name is still in use and whether any entity information has changed.

Common mistakes businesses make

Michigan fictitious name filings are straightforward, but several mistakes come up repeatedly.

Filing under the wrong office

One of the most common errors is assuming every DBA goes to the state. In Michigan, sole proprietors and general partnerships still use the county clerk system, while corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, and nonprofits file with LARA.

Confusing a DBA with a trademark

A DBA is a business registration tool. It does not automatically create trademark rights or stop another business from using a similar name in a different context.

Ignoring distinguishability

The assumed name must be distinguishable from active records on file. A minor change in punctuation or wording may not be enough.

Missing the renewal deadline

A DBA can lapse if renewal is not handled on time. Once that happens, the business may need to refile and recheck name availability.

Launching branding too early

Businesses sometimes print signs, purchase packaging, or publish marketing before the filing is accepted. That can create avoidable costs if the name is rejected or conflicts with another record.

Special situations to watch

Some business structures need extra attention.

  • A limited liability partnership that uses another name must file the assumed-name paperwork with the relevant counties
  • If multiple entities use the same assumed name, each participant may need its own filing under Michigan’s instructions
  • Foreign entities that are authorized to do business in Michigan should confirm whether the assumed name must match the authority record or whether a separate filing is required

When a business has a complex structure, it is better to review the filing path before opening under the new name.

How Zenind helps with formation and compliance

Zenind helps founders and business owners keep entity filings, compliance reminders, and recurring deadlines organized. For entrepreneurs forming a Michigan LLC or corporation, that can mean a cleaner launch and fewer missed filing dates later.

For fictitious-name work, the biggest value is operational: keeping the legal entity name, assumed name, renewal timing, and state or county filing requirements in one compliance workflow instead of scattered across separate reminders.

Final takeaways

Michigan fictitious name registration depends on the type of business you run.

  • Corporations, LLCs, nonprofits, and limited partnerships generally file a Certificate of Assumed Name with LARA
  • Sole proprietorships and general partnerships generally file with the county clerk
  • The current state filing fee for form CSCL/CD 541 is $10
  • State-filed assumed names expire on December 31 of the fifth full calendar year following the filing year
  • A DBA does not replace a trademark or create name ownership by itself

If you plan to use a brand name in Michigan, the safest approach is to confirm the correct filing office, submit the filing before launch, and track renewal from day one.

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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