A registered agent is a person or entity legally designated to receive state and legal documents for your LLC. A virtual address is a real street address that receives your general business mail. They are different services with different legal functions — most Texas LLCs need both.
What a Registered Agent Is (and Is Not)
Every Texas LLC is required by law to maintain a registered agent in the state of Texas at all times. This is not optional. The Texas Business Organizations Code mandates it as a condition of doing business as an LLC in the state.
Your registered agent is the official point of contact for:
- Service of process: Lawsuit summons, subpoenas, and court notices are legally served to your registered agent
- Official state correspondence: Annual report reminders, compliance notices, and Secretary of State communications
- BOI and regulatory notices: Federal beneficial ownership information filings and FinCEN communications
What the registered agent is not: a mailbox for your regular business mail. Your registered agent address is a legal disclosure that goes on public record. It is not intended for invoices, packages, or customer correspondence.
The registered agent must have a Texas street address (not a PO Box), must be physically present during normal business hours to receive documents, and must be available year-round. You can serve as your own registered agent only if you have a real Texas address where you are present during business hours — which creates privacy problems for home-based businesses.
What a Virtual Address Is
A virtual address is a real street address at a licensed USPS Commercial Mail Receiving Agency (CMRA). It is your business mailing address — where you send clients, vendors, and partners to reach you, where you list on your website, and where you receive packages, checks, invoices, and general correspondence.
The CMRA receives your mail, logs it, and handles it per your instructions: scan it, forward it, hold it for pickup, or shred it.
A virtual address is not a registered agent service. It receives your ordinary business mail — not your legal documents or state correspondence. If someone tries to serve legal process to your virtual address mail box, that is not valid service in Texas; legal documents must be served to your registered agent.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Aspect | Registered Agent | Virtual Address |
|---|---|---|
| Legal requirement? | Yes — Texas BOC mandates it | No — practical choice |
| What it receives | Legal documents, state notices, process | General business mail, packages, invoices |
| Goes on public record? | Yes — SOS database | Yes — if used as principal office on LLC filing |
| Must be in Texas? | Yes — Texas address required | Recommended, but not legally required for mail |
| Business-hours presence required? | Yes | No |
| USPS Form 1583 required? | No | Yes — for any CMRA mailbox |
| What fails without it | LLC loses good standing; can be dissolved | No business address for banks, IRS, clients |
| Typical cost (annual) | $99–$250/yr | $10–$30/mo |
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Can the Same Address Serve Both Purposes?
Yes — and this is what a bundled service like Get Business Address provides. We serve as your registered agent (using our own Texas address for that legal designation) and provide you with a separate virtual address for your general business mail. Both are at our DeSoto, TX location, but they function in two different legal capacities.
This is common and fully appropriate. Your registered agent address and your principal place of business address can be the same physical location — they just serve different functions in how they are disclosed and used.
When You Need Only a Registered Agent (No Virtual Address)
If you already have a real physical office in Texas — a space you lease or own where you can receive business mail — you may only need a registered agent. Your office address handles your mail; you need a registered agent to handle legal documents during business hours if you are not always there, or to keep your office address off public legal-service records.
This is our Agent Only plan: $99/yr, no address service included. Appropriate for businesses that already have a Texas physical location.
When You Need Both (Most Common Case)
If you operate your business remotely, from home, or from a location that is not a stable Texas business address, you need both services:
- A registered agent to satisfy the Texas BOC requirement and receive legal documents
- A virtual address to give your business a professional mailing address for banks, clients, and official filings
Our Establish Bundle includes both, along with LLC formation and EIN, for clients who are starting from scratch. Our Agent + Address plans cover existing LLCs that need to add or switch services.
When You Need Only a Virtual Address (No Registered Agent)
If you are not forming a Texas LLC — for example, you are a sole proprietor, a foreign national with a US address need but no US LLC, or you operate under a different state's formation — you may need a virtual address for mail and business credibility without needing a Texas registered agent. Our Address plan ($15/mo) handles this.
The Mistake to Avoid
The most common error is treating a virtual address as a replacement for a registered agent. It is not. If you use only a virtual address and list it as your registered agent on your LLC filing, you have not satisfied the registered agent requirement — and the CMRA is not authorized to receive legal service on your behalf unless they are specifically contracted to do so as a registered agent.
Conversely, some founders think their registered agent service gives them a mailing address for business mail. It does not. Legal documents served to your registered agent are logged and forwarded to you; your registered agent's address is not appropriate for printing on business cards or listing on your website.
Both services solve real, different problems. Most growing Texas businesses need both. Our onboarding guide walks through exactly how we set both up for you in one process.
Last updated: July 9, 2026