Using a Virtual Address for an LLC in North Carolina
A Commercial Mail Receiving Agency (CMRA) or private mailbox (PMB) address can generally serve as the principal or business address for an North Carolina LLC, though this should be verified against the state's current filing requirements before submission. North Carolina's Secretary of State office maintains the authoritative rules on what address formats are acceptable for LLC formation and ongoing compliance, so applicants are advised to confirm the state's specific guidance on their official filing page.
However, a CMRA or PMB address cannot serve as the registered agent address for an LLC in North Carolina. Registered agents under uniform state law must maintain a physical, staffed street address within the state where legal process can be personally served during business hours. This requirement is consistent across jurisdictions and is separate from where the business itself is located. Applicants should designate a separate registered agent with a qualifying in-state address.
| Detail | As the rule stands |
|---|---|
| Virtual address as LLC business address | Generally yes — verify |
| Virtual address as registered agent | No (a PMB cannot be your registered agent) |
| State note | Verify on the official source |
| Governing citation | N.C.G.S. §10B-134 et seq.; USPS DMM 508.1.8 |
Full Form-1583 & RON rules for North Carolina → · Choosing a provider →
Compiled from the USPS federal baseline (DMM 508 / 39 CFR) and the state notary/RON statute, and verified June 2026. Always confirm the current rule on the official state Secretary of State / notary page before you rely on it — RON law is still moving. This state's RON status is currently medium-confidence (the exact statute section is not yet pinned), so treat the online-notarization detail as a starting point and confirm it on the official page. How we compile this. Informational only, not legal advice.