1. Does Hawaii Require an LLC Annual Report?
Yes. For most LLCs, Hawaii requires an annual business report (commonly called the “annual report”). This filing is managed through the Hawaii Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) , Business Registration Division (BREG). Filing on time helps keep your entity in good standing.
2. What Hawaii LLCs Must File Each Year
Hawaii yearly compliance for many LLCs is straightforward. Most founders should plan for:
Annual compliance checklist
- Hawaii Annual Report (Annual Business Report): filed with DCCA BREG to keep your entity active and in good standing
- Registered Agent upkeep: keep a valid agent + address to receive legal and state notices
- Business address updates: update the state if your principal address changes
- Federal tax return (IRS): depends on your LLC tax classification ( IRS LLC rules )
- Bookkeeping + records: keep clean records for banks, payments, and future verifications
3. How Hawaii’s Annual Report System Works (Filing Quarter)
Hawaii’s annual report filing period is related to your business entity’s registration date, as defined by state filing rules . You generally file your annual report during the quarter in which it is due.
What “filing quarter” means
- Instead of one universal due date, Hawaii uses a quarter-based filing window
- Your due quarter is linked to when your entity was originally registered
- You can typically file at any time during your due quarter
- Filing on time helps maintain good standing for contracts, loans, and verification checks
- If you are delinquent, you may need to catch up and late fees can apply
If you only remember one thing: Hawaii annual report due dates are quarter-based and tied to your LLC’s registration date.
4. Hawaii LLC Due Dates (Quarter-by-Quarter)
Hawaii’s filing quarters are commonly described as: Q1 (Jan–Mar), Q2 (Apr–Jun), Q3 (Jul–Sep), and Q4 (Oct–Dec). Your LLC’s registration date determines which quarter your annual report is due, as outlined by Hawaii BREG guidance .
Quarter reminders (easy)
- Q1: January – March
- Q2: April – June
- Q3: July – September
- Q4: October – December
What can change your timing?
- Your LLC registration date (this decides your due quarter)
- Delinquent filings (you may need to file past years)
- Entity status changes (reinstatement, conversion, etc.)
- Address / registered agent changes that require updates
STAY COMPLIANT
Click the button below and our team will guide you through Hawaii’s annual report filing—fast and correctly.
Get Compliance Help5. Where to File + What You’ll Need
Hawaii annual reports are commonly filed online through the state’s annual report system ( Hawaii Business Express ). Before you file, prepare your details so you can submit without delays.
What you should keep ready
- Legal LLC name (exactly as registered)
- Hawaii entity number (Business Registration Number) issued by Hawaii Business Express
- Principal office address
- Registered agent name + address
- Manager/member info (as required by the form)
- A payment method for the filing fee
Why founders use a compliance service
- Avoid missing the correct quarter and getting late fees
- Reduce rejections due to incorrect addresses or agent details
- Keep clean records for banking and payment processor verification
| Feature | FormLLC | Provider A | Provider B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Built for non-US founders | ✅ Deep non-resident focus | ➖ Limited support | ➖ Generic templates |
| End-to-end compliance guidance | ✅ State + federal clarity | ➖ Partial | ➖ DIY-heavy |
| Transparent pricing | ✅ No surprise upsells | ⚠️ Hidden add-ons | ⚠️ Tiered upsells |
| Human support (WhatsApp / email) | ✅ Dedicated support | ➖ Ticket-based | ➖ Slow response |
*Sample stats for illustration. Add your real numbers and link to verified reviews.
The #1 mistake is missing the correct quarter. Save a reminder every year, file early in the quarter, and keep your entity in good standing to avoid problems with banks, payment gateways, and vendor onboarding.
6. How to File Hawaii LLC Annual Report (Step-by-Step)
Step 1: Find your business in the online annual report system
Go to the Hawaii annual report filing system and search your LLC by name or entity number. Confirm you are selecting the correct entity (matching name and entity number).
Step 2: Review and update your company details
Carefully confirm your principal address, mailing address, and registered agent information. If anything changed during the year, update it before submitting.
Step 3: Submit the annual report during your due quarter
File your annual report during the quarter it’s due. Filing earlier in the quarter is safer than filing on the last day.
Step 4: Pay the filing fee and save proof
Pay the online filing fee and save your confirmation, as recommended by Hawaii BREG . (receipt + submitted report copy). Keep these in a “Compliance Folder” for banking and verification requests.
Step 5: If you are delinquent, catch up promptly
If your LLC missed a prior year, you may need to file overdue reports and pay late fees. Fixing delinquency quickly helps restore/maintain good standing.
7. Tips to Stay Compliant
- Set a yearly reminder for your due quarter ( official filing schedule )
- File early in the quarter (don’t wait for the last day)
- Keep your registered agent and addresses current
- Save your filing confirmation and report copy in a compliance folder
8. Fees, Late Penalties & Good Standing
- Online filing fee (LLCs): commonly listed as $12.50 ( official fee schedule )
- Paper filing fee (fee schedules): commonly listed as $15
- Late fee if delinquent: late fees can be assessed per year of delinquency
- Good standing impact: affects contracts, loans, and banking per SBA compliance guidance
| Compliance Item | Typical Timing | Fee |
|---|---|---|
| Hawaii Annual Report | Annually (during your due quarter) | $12.50 online / $15 paper (typical) |
| Late fee (delinquent years) | When overdue reports are filed | Varies (can be assessed per year) |
| Registered Agent Renewal (if using a service) | Annually | $100–$300 |
| Federal Income Tax Return | Annually | Varies |
9. Federal Compliance That Still Matters
1. Federal tax return (IRS)
Your Hawaii LLC’s federal tax filing depends on classification: single-member LLCs often report on the owner’s return, partnerships file an informational return, and S-corp elections follow IRS S-Corp rules .
2. EIN (Employer Identification Number)
Most LLCs use an EIN (Employer Identification Number) for banking, payroll, and payment processors. Keep your EIN confirmation and IRS notices in your compliance folder.
3. BOI updates (Corporate Transparency)
If your ownership or key company information changes, you may need to update Beneficial Ownership Information (BOI) (where applicable). This is separate from Hawaii annual reports but often comes up during yearly compliance reviews.
4. Other recurring federal obligations
- Payroll filings if the LLC has employees
- Information returns (such as 1099 forms) when required
- Bookkeeping for audits, banking, and compliance checks
10. Conclusion
The biggest takeaway: Hawaii LLCs typically must file an annual report, and the due period is based on your company’s registration-date quarter. File on time, keep proof, and keep your registered agent and addresses updated.
With FormLLC, you can stay compliant without confusion—our team helps you follow the right schedule, file correctly, and keep your business in good standing.
11. Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Hawaii LLCs typically must file an annual business report (annual report) with DCCA BREG to keep the entity in good standing.
Hawaii annual report due dates are based on your LLC’s registration date and are filed during the quarter it’s due (Q1, Q2, Q3, or Q4).
Many businesses file online via the Hawaii Business Express annual report system (Annual Reports / Annual Business Filings).
Online filing fees for LLC annual reports are commonly listed as $12.50. Fee schedules often list a paper annual report fee of $15. Late fees can apply if you are delinquent.
Missing the annual report can lead to late fees and can affect your LLC’s good standing. Good-standing issues can later cause problems with banks, payment processors, vendor onboarding, and contracts.
Often, yes. You may be able to file past-due annual reports online and pay any required late fees per delinquent year. It’s best to fix delinquency as soon as possible.
No. The Hawaii annual report is a state entity compliance filing. Federal tax filing depends on your LLC’s tax classification and is filed separately with the IRS.