If you own an LLC or corporation, there’s a very good chance your home address is public right now and you don’t even know it. That means anyone can find it. And I don’t mean just the IRS or the state. I mean tenants, customers, marketers, scammers, or anyone that decides to look you up online. So let’s walk through how it actually happens and what you can do to clean it up.
When you set up an LLC or corporation, the state asks you for specific information to get that entity registered. That includes your registered agent, your company address, and in a lot of states, the name and address of the manager or owner.
So what do most people do? They just use their home address. It’s sitting right there, it’s easy, and it feels harmless in the moment. But what you’re really doing is creating a public record. That filing doesn’t just sit in a drawer somewhere. It gets uploaded into a database that anyone can search. Now your business name and your home address are connected permanently unless you go back and fix it.
And most people don’t even realize it until something happens. They start getting strange mail, more solicitations, or someone references their address in a way that makes them pause. That’s usually when it clicks.
There are two different addresses involved in your entity, and if you don’t handle both correctly, your information is still exposed.
Your registered agent has to have a physical street address in the state where your LLC is formed. This is where lawsuits and official notices are delivered.
If you use your home address here, that becomes the location tied to legal service. That means if something goes sideways, someone could literally show up at your house with paperwork. I’ve seen it happen, and it’s not something you want tied to your personal residence.
Using a third-party registered agent takes you out of that equation. Their address is listed instead of yours, and they’re responsible for receiving those documents and getting them to you. It’s a simple change, but it removes a major point of exposure.
Now here’s where people undo everything they just fixed. They set up a registered agent, check that box, and then turn around and list their home address as the business address or manager address. That goes right back into the public record.
This is the address people actually see when they search your business. It’s the one tenants, customers, or anyone doing a quick lookup is going to find first. It’s also how multiple entities get tied together if you’ve used the same home address across all of them.
To really solve the problem, you need both:
If you only fix one of those, your home address is still out there.
Some people hear this and think it’s not a big deal. It is.
Once your address is public, it creates a level of exposure that most business owners never intended. You’ll start to see more mail, more solicitations, and more unwanted attention. Your information becomes easier to connect across different platforms and databases. And in some cases, it goes beyond that.
I’ve seen situations where someone looks up an LLC, finds the address, and decides to show up. That might be a tenant with a complaint, a customer with an issue, or someone trying to track you down for a dispute. If you own real estate or have multiple entities, the risk increases.
When all of your LLCs point back to the same address, it doesn’t take much to map out what you own. Now someone has a clearer picture of your assets and knows exactly where you live. That’s not a great combination.
One of the biggest misconceptions is that once your address is out there, you’re stuck with it. That’s not how it works.
You can go back and update your registered agent. You can change your business address. When you do, those updates begin to replace your old information in public-facing records over time. It doesn’t erase everything instantly, but it dramatically reduces how easy it is to find your personal address going forward. The longer you leave it untouched, the more exposure you carry.
This doesn’t require a complicated legal strategy. There are a few straightforward steps that solve most of the problem.
Start with the basics:
Once those are in place, take a step back and look at your entity names. A lot of business owners use their full personal name in their LLC. That makes it even easier to connect you directly to the business.
You don’t need to overthink it. Even switching to initials or a more neutral name creates a layer of separation. These are small changes individually, but together they make it significantly harder for someone to connect the dots.
This is where people need to zoom out a bit. Privacy isn’t separate from asset protection. It’s part of the same strategy. If your information is easy to find, you’re easier to target. If it takes more effort to track you down, you reduce the likelihood of someone even starting that process.
Think of privacy as limiting visibility and asset protection as handling what happens if something gets through. You want both working together.
Not everyone needs to take this to the same level. For some business owners, simply removing their home address from public filings is enough. For others, especially if you own multiple properties or have several entities, it’s worth looking into how everything connects. The key is being intentional. Don’t just go with whatever was easiest when you set things up. Take a few minutes to look at what’s actually public and decide if you’re comfortable with it.
If you’ve got an LLC, take a few minutes to see what address is actually listed on your filings. If it’s your home, now you know what that means and what it opens up. The good news is this is fixable.
It doesn’t require a complete overhaul, but it does require action. If your home address is tied to your LLC right now, that’s exposure you’re choosing to keep. Our team at Main Street Business Services can help you replace it with a registered agent and business address so your personal information is no longer sitting in public records.
The mistake is waiting until something forces you to deal with it. By then, you’re reacting instead of deciding.