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Home » Business » Why Your CPA Should NOT Be Your Registered Agent — And What You Should Do Instead

Business

Why Your CPA Should NOT Be Your Registered Agent — And What You Should Do Instead

Smith
Last updated: April 27, 2026 4:06 am
Smith - Editor in Chief
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Why Your CPA Should NOT Be Your Registered Agent — And What You Should Do Instead
Why Your CPA Should NOT Be Your Registered Agent — And What You Should Do Instead
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Choosing the wrong registered agent can create hidden risks for your business.

Using your CPA may seem convenient—but it can lead to missed filings and confusion.

Here’s why owners should either hire a professional or take responsibility themselves.


The Registered Agent Role: Simple on Paper, Critical in Reality

ST. LOUIS, MO (STL.News) Every LLC or corporation in the United States must designate a registered agent. This role exists to ensure your business can reliably receive:

Contents
Choosing the wrong registered agent can create hidden risks for your business.Using your CPA may seem convenient—but it can lead to missed filings and confusion.Here’s why owners should either hire a professional or take responsibility themselves.The Registered Agent Role: Simple on Paper, Critical in RealityThe Most Important Truth: Responsibility Never Leaves the OwnerWhy Using a CPA as Your Registered Agent Is a Problem1. Lack of Transparency and Blurred Responsibility2. Missed Filings Are More Common Than You Think3. CPAs Are Not Structured for Registered Agent Duties4. Availability Is Not GuaranteedThe Two Smart Options for Business OwnersOption 1: Be Your Own Registered AgentWhy It WorksWhat You Must DoOption 2: Hire a Professional Registered AgentWhy It WorksWhat You Still Must DoThe Real Issue: AccountabilityCost vs. ConsequencesFinal ThoughtsBottom Line
  • Legal documents (lawsuits, subpoenas)
  • State compliance notices
  • Annual report reminders
  • Tax-related correspondence

The registered agent must have a physical address in the state and be available during standard business hours. If documents are missed, ignored, or delayed, the consequences can escalate quickly—from late fees to the loss of your company’s legal standing.


The Most Important Truth: Responsibility Never Leaves the Owner

Before discussing options, it’s critical to understand one fact:

No matter who you assign as your registered agent, the business owner is ultimately responsible for compliance.

  • The registered agent receives documents
  • The business owner must act on them

There is no legal or practical scenario where responsibility shifts away from the owner. And misunderstanding this is one of the most common—and costly—mistakes in business operations.


Why Using a CPA as Your Registered Agent Is a Problem

At first glance, using your accountant or CPA might feel like a logical decision. They already know your business, handle your taxes, and are someone you trust.

But this is exactly where problems begin—not because CPAs are unqualified, but because the role is fundamentally misaligned with their responsibilities. They commonly miss filing deadlines, and many will hide it to protect themselves from liability and embarrassment.


1. Lack of Transparency and Blurred Responsibility

When a CPA is your registered agent, a dangerous gray area can develop:

  • The CPA assumes you are handling compliance
  • You assume the CPA is monitoring deadlines

This lack of clarity creates a transparency problem.

When something goes wrong—like a missed filing—there is confusion about who was responsible. By the time it’s discovered, penalties may already be in place.

Clear responsibility is critical in compliance. Using your CPA often muddies that clarity.


2. Missed Filings Are More Common Than You Think

State filings—such as annual reports—are not optional. Missing them can lead to:

  • Late fees and penalties
  • Loss of good standing
  • Administrative dissolution of your company

CPAs are heavily focused on:

  • Tax deadlines
  • Financial reporting
  • Client workload (especially during tax season)

State compliance notices can easily be:

  • Overlooked
  • Delayed
  • Misprioritized

This is not rare—it happens far more often than business owners realize.


3. CPAs Are Not Structured for Registered Agent Duties

A CPA’s role is financial. A registered agent’s role is operational compliance.

A professional registered agent service is built to:

  • Receive documents consistently
  • Track deadlines
  • Notify clients immediately
  • Maintain compliance systems

A CPA’s office is not typically designed for:

  • Continuous document intake monitoring
  • Compliance tracking systems
  • Redundant processes to prevent missed notices

This creates unnecessary risk.


4. Availability Is Not Guaranteed

Registered agents must be available every business day during standard hours.

CPAs:

  • Take time off
  • Attend meetings
  • Work remotely
  • Experience seasonal overload

If a legal document is delivered and no one is available to receive it, your business may never receive it in time.


The Two Smart Options for Business Owners

Instead of creating risk by using a CPA, business owners should choose one of two clear and effective paths.


Option 1: Be Your Own Registered Agent

Why It Works

  • You maintain full transparency
  • You receive all documents directly
  • There is no confusion about responsibility
  • You save money

What You Must Do

  • Be available during business hours
  • Monitor all state correspondence
  • Track and complete filings on time

This option works best if you are organized, disciplined, and operate from a stable location.


Option 2: Hire a Professional Registered Agent

Why It Works

  • Provides consistent availability
  • Offers compliance reminders
  • Protects your privacy
  • Reduces the risk of missed documents

Professional services are tailored specifically for this role, eliminating the ambiguity and gaps that can arise when working with a CPA.


What You Still Must Do

Even with a professional service:

  • You must review notifications
  • You must complete filings
  • You must stay engaged in compliance

Again, the responsibility remains yours.


The Real Issue: Accountability

This entire decision comes down to one word—accountability.

  • When you are your own agent? Accountability is clear
  • When you hire a professional? Accountability is structured and supported
  • When you use a CPA? Accountability is often unclear

And in business compliance, unclear accountability is where problems begin.


Cost vs. Consequences

Trying to save money by using a CPA may seem reasonable—but consider the potential cost of mistakes:

  • Late filing penalties
  • Reinstatement fees
  • Legal exposure
  • Loss of liability protection
  • Disruption to business operations

Compared to a professional registered agent service (typically $50–$300/year), the risk is not worth it.


Final Thoughts

Your CPA is a critical part of your business—but they are not the right fit for every role.

Using them as your registered agent introduces:

  • Lack of transparency
  • Blurred responsibility
  • Increased risk of missed filings

Instead, business owners should take a clear and deliberate approach:

  • Either handle the role themselves with discipline
  • Or hire a professional service built for the job

Both options maintain clarity, accountability, and control.


Bottom Line

Do not rely on your CPA to act as your registered agent.

Choose one of two paths:

  • Be your own registered agent and take full responsibility
  • Or hire a professional service for consistency and protection

Either way, remember this:
You are always responsible for your business compliance—no exceptions.

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© 2026 St. Louis Media, LLC d.b.a. STL.News. All rights reserved. No content may be copied, republished, distributed, or used in any form without prior written permission. Unauthorized use may result in legal action. Some content may be created with AI assistance and is reviewed by our editorial team. For official updates, visit STL.News.

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By Smith Editor in Chief
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Martin Smith is the founder and Editor in Chief of STL.News, STL.Directory, St. Louis Restaurant Review, STLPress.News, and USPress.News.  Smith is responsible for selecting content to be published with the help of a publishing team located around the globe.  The publishing is made possible because Smith built a proprietary network of aggregated websites to import and manage thousands of press releases via RSS feeds to create the content library used to filter and publish news articles on STL.News.  Since its beginning in February 2016, STL.News has published more than 250,000 news articles.  He is a member of the United States Press Agency (Reg. # 31659) and a Certified member of the US Press Association (Reg. # 802085479).
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