New Mexico Articles of Organization: The Document That Creates Your LLC

What the Articles of Organization include

  • Your LLC name (must be available and end in "LLC" or "Limited Liability Company").
  • Your registered agent name and New Mexico physical address, with consent.
  • The LLC's duration (perpetual is standard) and organizer signature (Bastion can act as organizer).
  • Notice what's not required: New Mexico does not ask you to name the members or managers on the public filing. That single design choice is what keeps owners off the public record.

Step by step (what Bastion does for you)

  1. Confirm your chosen name is available with the state.
  2. Attach your New Mexico registered agent and consent.
  3. Complete the Articles with your details β€” without exposing ownership.
  4. File with the Secretary of State and pay the $50 fee.
  5. Send you the state-approved Articles for your records and your bank.

Fees and timing

The headline here is the second row: after this single $50 filing, there is no recurring state report fee. You will not file Articles again unless you choose to amend them.

After it's approved

Once approved, your LLC legally exists. Next: get your EIN, sign your operating agreement, and request a Certificate of Good Standing if your bank asks for one.

New Mexico Articles of Organization form approved by the Secretary of State, with no members listed for anonymity

Related guides

We prepare and file your Articles of Organization \u2014 from $199 + $50 state fee, with no annual report afterward

Frequently asked questions

How much are New Mexico Articles of Organization?
The state fee is $50, paid once. New Mexico requires no annual report afterward, so there is no recurring state report fee.
Are LLC owners named on the New Mexico Articles of Organization?
No. New Mexico does not require members or managers to be listed on the public formation record, which keeps ownership anonymous.
Can a non-resident file New Mexico Articles of Organization?
Yes. There is no residency requirement. You need a New Mexico registered agent, but the owners can live anywhere in the world.
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