How to Get a Business License in Wyoming

Analic Mata-Murray
Written & reviewed by
Managing Editor · Communications & Journalism degree, PR and media specialist with 11 years of experience making complex information clear

Wyoming business license guide

Last checked: April 26, 2026

Wyoming does not use one simple license path for every business. Most owners need to check several layers: the Wyoming Secretary of State, the Wyoming Department of Revenue, the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services, any state licensing board for the business type, and the city or county where the business will operate.

This guide explains those layers in plain English so you know what to check first.

The short answer

For most businesses, there is no one Wyoming statewide general business license application that every business files. Instead, Wyoming separates the process by purpose.

You may need a Secretary of State filing if you form an LLC, corporation, limited partnership, or other registered entity. You may need a Wyoming sales tax license if you sell taxable goods or services. You may need Department of Workforce Services registration if you hire workers or perform work in Wyoming. You may also need a city, town, county, zoning, food, alcohol, child care, electrical, professional, or other industry license.

The first practical step is to identify your exact city or county, business activity, location type, and sales activity before you apply for anything.

Quick start: what to check first in Wyoming

  1. Write down where the business will operate. Include the city, county, physical address, job site, home location, mobile route, or online-only setup.
  2. Decide whether you are forming an entity. If you want an LLC, corporation, nonprofit, limited partnership, or foreign registration, start with the Wyoming Secretary of State Start a Business page and WyoBiz.
  3. Check your business name. If you use a public name that is not your legal name, review Wyoming trade name rules before you advertise under that name.
  4. Check sales tax before collecting it. The Wyoming Department of Revenue says simply creating a Wyoming LLC does not automatically mean you need a Wyoming sales tax license. What matters is what you sell and your connection to Wyoming.
  5. Check employer registration before hiring or performing work. The Department of Workforce Services says a business that performs work in Wyoming or hires a Wyoming resident must register so DWS can determine workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance duties.
  6. Contact the city or county. Wyoming Business Council guidance points business owners to the city or county where the work or business will be located for necessary local permits and licenses.
  7. Check industry rules. Food, alcohol, child care, electrical work, health professions, cosmetology, real estate, and other regulated work may need a state or local license before opening.

Wyoming facts box

ItemWhat Wyoming calls it or where to checkWhat to know
State business entity filingWyoBiz and the Wyoming Secretary of State Business DivisionWyoming LLCs, profit corporations, nonprofit corporations, and limited partnerships can be filed online. Some other filings use paper forms.
Registered agentWyoming registered agentAll business entities filed in Wyoming must have and continuously maintain a registered agent with a physical Wyoming address that is not a P.O. box, drop box, mail forwarding service, or UPS store.
Typical entity filing feeSecretary of State Business Division filing fee scheduleThe official fee schedule lists $100 for LLC Articles of Organization and profit corporation Articles of Incorporation, $50 for nonprofit Articles of Incorporation, and other fees by filing type.
Annual report and license taxWyoming annual report and annual license taxFor many entities, the annual report is due on the first day of the anniversary month. The annual license tax is generally $60 or two-tenths of one mill on Wyoming assets, whichever is greater.
DBA-style nameTrade nameA Wyoming trade name must already be in use before registration. The trade name application is filed with the Secretary of State and must be signed and notarized.
Sales tax registrationWyoming sales tax license; Sales/Use/Lodging Tax registration; WYIFSThe Department of Revenue uses the Wyoming Internet Filing System for Business, called WYIFS, for sales and use tax registration and filing.
Employer registrationWyoming Department of Workforce Services; WYUIDWS uses a joint business registration to determine unemployment insurance and workers’ compensation coverage.
Local permitsCity, town, or county license, zoning, building, fire, health, or clerk officeWyoming local rules vary. Cheyenne, Casper, Laramie, Jackson, Rock Springs, Evanston, and other cities use their own licensing or permit systems.

Do not mix up the license layers

A Wyoming business can be legal at one layer and still need approval at another layer. Use this table to keep the pieces separate.

Government layerCommon Wyoming-related itemsWhere to start
FederalEIN, federal employment taxes, federal industry rules, FinCEN BOI rules when applicableUse the IRS EIN page. For BOI, check the current FinCEN BOI page before relying on old guidance.
State of WyomingEntity filing, trade name, sales tax license, workers’ compensation, unemployment insurance, state professional or industry licensesStart with the Wyoming Secretary of State, Department of Revenue, Department of Workforce Services, and the correct licensing board.
CountyCounty planning, building, health, liquor, fireworks, or unincorporated-area permitsCheck the county where the business location or job site is located, especially outside city limits.
City or townBusiness license, home occupation approval, zoning, sign permit, building permit, fire inspection, mobile vending, taxi, alcohol, local contractor licenseContact the city clerk, finance office, planning and zoning office, or building department.
Private platformsMarketplace seller rules, delivery app rules, payment processor rules, insurance requirementsThese are not government licenses, but they can still affect whether you may sell through that platform.

Important: Filing an LLC in Wyoming is not the same thing as getting every license or permit you need. An LLC filing creates or registers a legal entity. It does not replace sales tax registration, zoning approval, food licensing, child care licensing, electrical licensing, or city permits.

Wyoming Secretary of State filings

The Wyoming Secretary of State Business Division handles business entity filings, trade names, trademarks, registered agent filings, annual reports, good standing certificates, and related business records.

When you may need a Secretary of State filing

  • You are forming a Wyoming LLC, corporation, nonprofit corporation, limited partnership, or another registered entity.
  • Your out-of-state entity will do business in Wyoming and needs to qualify with a Certificate of Authority.
  • You want to register a trade name used by the business.
  • You need to file an annual report or keep the entity in good standing.

WyoBiz and filing method

The Secretary of State says domestic profit corporations, nonprofit corporations, domestic LLCs, and domestic limited partnerships may file online. Other entity types, foreign qualifications, domestications, and continuances may require paper filing. Use the official Start a Business page and WyoBiz rather than a paid look-alike site.

Fees and timing to verify

The Secretary of State’s “How to Create a Wyoming Company” guide says most formations are $100, nonprofits are $50, and statutory foundations are $250. Online filings are active when the online filing process is complete. Paper filings are processed in the order received and are not expedited under the guidance shown on the Secretary of State form.

Always confirm the current fee on the official filing fee schedule before mailing or submitting anything.

Annual reports and annual license tax

Wyoming registered business entities generally must file an annual report to remain in good standing. The Secretary of State FAQ says the due date is based on the anniversary month of formation or qualification for most registered entities. For example, an entity registered on January 15 has an annual report due date of January 1 each year.

For domestic and foreign profit corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, and registered limited liability partnerships, the annual license tax is $60 or two-tenths of one mill on the dollar based on assets located and employed in Wyoming, whichever is greater. Online filing may include a payment processor convenience fee.

Practical tip: Put the annual report month in your calendar as soon as your Wyoming entity is approved. Missing it can lead to delinquency and administrative dissolution or revocation.

Trade names in Wyoming

Wyoming uses the term trade name. This is similar to what many people call a DBA.

A trade name may be needed when the public-facing name of the business is different from the owner’s legal name or the legal entity name. For example, if “High Plains Coffee LLC” operates as “Prairie Cup,” the business should check Wyoming trade name rules.

Wyoming trade name pointWhat the official form says
Use before registrationThe trade name must be in use before registration.
Entity good standingIf the applicant is a business entity, it must be registered and in good standing with the Wyoming Secretary of State before applying.
SignatureThe application must be signed and notarized.
Fee shown on official formThe trade name registration filing fee shown on the official form is $100.
ApplicationUse the Secretary of State Application for Registration of Trade Name.

Do not assume a trade name creates an LLC. A trade name is a name filing. It is not a business entity, tax account, sales tax license, city license, trademark, or professional license.

Wyoming sales tax license and WYIFS

The Wyoming Department of Revenue Excise Tax Division handles sales, use, and lodging tax. Its registration page includes applications for regular vendors, direct pay permits, occasional sales for non-licensed vendors, and voluntary disclosure.

Wyoming commonly uses the wording sales tax license, sales/use/lodging registration, and WYIFS. WYIFS stands for Wyoming Internet Filing System for Business.

Do you need a Wyoming sales tax license?

It depends. The Department of Revenue FAQ says simply creating a Wyoming LLC does not automatically mean the company needs a Wyoming sales tax license. The answer depends on what the business sells and whether it has a Wyoming physical connection or meets economic thresholds.

The same FAQ says that if a business has a physical storefront in Wyoming and sells tangible personal property, the answer is yes. For services and other unclear sales, the Department tells businesses to contact the Education and Taxability team for a written determination.

How the online process works

The Department of Revenue says applying online is a two-step process. First, apply for an online WYIFS account. After that is approved, use the same platform to apply for the Wyoming sales tax license and manage the account. The Department says the electronic process generally takes about two weeks.

Resale certificate confusion

Wyoming’s Department of Revenue says licensed vendors may use the Streamlined Sales Tax Agreement exemption certificate to claim a resale exemption. It also says unlicensed vendors would not have the ability to properly claim a resale exemption using Wyoming information.

Do this before collecting tax

  • Confirm whether your product or service is taxable in Wyoming.
  • Confirm whether you need a Wyoming sales tax license.
  • Use WYIFS or the official Department of Revenue registration page.
  • Ask the Department of Revenue for written taxability guidance if your service or product is unclear.
  • Keep your Wyoming revenue identification number and account correspondence in one place.

Employer setup in Wyoming

If you will hire employees, work in Wyoming, or hire a Wyoming resident, check employer registration before work begins.

Federal EIN

An EIN is a federal tax ID number from the IRS. The IRS says you need an EIN if you have employees and in several other situations. If you create a legal entity, the IRS tells you to form the entity with the state before applying for the EIN. Apply through the official IRS EIN page.

Wyoming Department of Workforce Services

The Wyoming Department of Workforce Services says a business that performs work in Wyoming or hires a Wyoming resident must register with DWS. Registration lets DWS determine required coverage for workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance.

DWS says all employers, including Wyoming-based and out-of-state employers, must complete joint business registration first. This includes owners, sole proprietors, and contractors who need an exemption letter from the Division.

Workers’ compensation

DWS says businesses in extra-hazardous industries must have workers’ compensation coverage through DWS before work begins in Wyoming. If coverage is optional for your business, DWS says you may still choose coverage.

Unemployment insurance

Wyoming unemployment insurance is handled through DWS. The WYUI portal lets employers file and amend quarterly reports, pay taxes or print vouchers, view correspondence, update account information, and manage related account tasks.

State industry licenses and permits

Some Wyoming businesses need a specific license because of what they do. These are not the same as forming an LLC or registering a trade name.

Business typeWyoming agency or starting pointWhat to check
Restaurants, grocery, mobile food, food processing, meat, dairy, and some food salesWyoming Department of Agriculture Consumer Health ServicesFood establishment licensing, plan review, inspections, mobile unit rules, temporary food stand rules, and food safety requirements.
Homemade food sold directly to consumersWyoming Food Freedom Act and Department of Agriculture guidanceWhether your product, sale method, labeling, location, and customer type fit the Food Freedom Act. Do not assume every food product qualifies.
Alcohol, liquor, malt beverages, wine, direct shipping, representatives, or related activityWyoming Liquor Division and local licensing authorityState alcohol rules, local authority approval, license type, public hearing or renewal steps, and sales tax or dispensing requirements.
Child careWyoming Department of Family Services Child Care LicensingFacility type, licensing rules, inspections, background checks, training, and local fire, zoning, and home occupation requirements.
Electrical workWyoming State Fire Marshal Electrical LicensingApprentice, journeyman, master, technician, contractor, low voltage, wiring permit, and inspection rules.
Health, design, geology, veterinary, psychology, therapy, hearing aid, and similar regulated professionsWyoming Professional Licensing BoardsThe specific board for your profession, individual license rules, business or firm registration, renewals, and discipline records.
Cosmetology, barbering, salon, mobile salon, and independent contractor salon workWyoming Board of Cosmetology applications and formsIndividual license, facility license, salon renewal, mobile salon, change of ownership, and temporary location rules.
Real estate brokerage, sales, appraisal, and related servicesWyoming Real Estate CommissionIndividual license, broker requirements, appraiser permit, renewal, education, and complaint rules.

Contractor note: Wyoming has state-level rules for electrical licensing and some safety-related matters. Many general contractor, building, and trade permit issues are local. Check the city or county where the job is located before bidding or starting work.

City and county licenses in Wyoming

The local layer matters a lot in Wyoming. The Wyoming Business Council FAQ says necessary permits and licenses are issued by the city or county where the work or business will be located, and tells owners to reach out to local government for help.

That means a business in Cheyenne may have a different local path than a business in Casper, Laramie, Jackson, Gillette, Rock Springs, Evanston, Sheridan, or an unincorporated county area.

Local approvals that may apply

  • City business license or local registration
  • Home occupation permit
  • Zoning approval or permitted-use confirmation
  • Certificate of occupancy or building permit
  • Fire inspection or fire permit
  • Sign permit
  • Mobile vending, food truck, or temporary vendor permit
  • Local contractor registration or building trade license
  • Liquor license handled through a local authority with state review
  • County permit if the business is outside city limits

Local rules can be narrow. Some Wyoming cities do not license every business in the same way. They may license certain activities, such as mobile vending, taxis, massage, food wagons, short-term sales, pawnbrokers, secondhand dealers, alcohol, or specific contractor work. Always ask the local office whether your activity is covered.

Home-based businesses in Wyoming

A home business can still need approval. The exact answer depends on the city or county, the type of work, whether customers come to the home, signs, parking, employees, deliveries, storage, noise, food handling, child care, and whether the home is inside city limits.

Check these before you start from home

  • City or county zoning rules for home occupations
  • Whether your lease, HOA, or mortgage rules restrict business use
  • Whether customers, students, patients, or clients will come to the home
  • Whether signs, inventory, vehicles, noise, or deliveries are allowed
  • Whether food, child care, salon, repair, or health-related work triggers extra rules
  • Whether you need a Wyoming trade name
  • Whether you need sales tax registration for taxable sales

Ask before you spend money. If your business depends on using a garage, kitchen, spare room, yard, outbuilding, or driveway, confirm local zoning before buying equipment or signing a lease.

Common mistakes to avoid in Wyoming

  • Thinking WyoBiz is the whole license process. WyoBiz is important for entity filings, but it does not replace tax, employer, industry, zoning, or city permits.
  • Registering a trade name too early. Wyoming’s trade name form says the trade name must already be in use before registration.
  • Collecting Wyoming sales tax before checking registration. Ask the Department of Revenue whether your sales are taxable and whether you need a Wyoming sales tax license.
  • Assuming a marketplace handles everything. A marketplace may collect tax on platform sales, but that does not answer local licensing, direct sales, trade name, food, or professional licensing questions.
  • Ignoring the city or county. Local offices may handle business licenses, zoning, building, fire, mobile vending, signs, local contractor rules, or home occupation permits.
  • Hiring without DWS registration. If you perform work in Wyoming or hire a Wyoming resident, register with the Department of Workforce Services so it can determine workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance duties.
  • Missing the annual report due date. Wyoming entities must keep up with annual reports and the annual license tax to remain in good standing.
  • Using non-official paid sites by mistake. Use official .gov or wyo.gov agency pages when applying for EINs, WyoBiz filings, DOR accounts, and DWS accounts.

What to ask when you contact the agency

Before calling or emailing, write down your business type, city, county, physical address or general location, whether the business is home-based, mobile, online, storefront, or job-site based, what you sell, whether customers visit the location, and whether you will hire workers.

Phone or email script

Hello. I am planning to operate a [business type] in [city], [county], Wyoming. The business will be [home-based / mobile / storefront / online / job-site based] at [address or general location]. I will sell or provide [products or services]. Customers will [visit / not visit] the location, and I [will / will not] have employees. Can you confirm whether I need a local business license, zoning approval, home occupation permit, certificate of occupancy, building or fire approval, health permit, sales tax registration, employer registration, or a state professional or industry license before I start? If your office does not handle this, which office should I contact next?

If you are contacting the Wyoming Department of Revenue about sales tax, ask for a written determination when taxability is unclear.

  • Write down the agency name and staff member or department you spoke with.
  • Write down the date and time of the call or email.
  • Ask for the exact license, permit, registration, or approval name.
  • Ask whether the rule is state, county, city, or federal.
  • Ask for the official application link and fee page.
  • Ask whether zoning or inspection approval is needed before applying.
  • Ask whether renewals, reports, or tax filings are required after approval.

Official Wyoming agency directory

NeedOfficial agencyStart here
Entity filing, annual report, registered agent, trade nameWyoming Secretary of State Business DivisionBusiness and UCC Center
Online entity filing and business record searchWyoming Secretary of StateWyoBiz
Sales, use, lodging, contractor, nicotine, and excise tax registrationWyoming Department of Revenue Excise Tax DivisionExcise Tax Division
WYIFS account and tax filingWyoming Department of RevenueWYIFS instructions
Workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance registrationWyoming Department of Workforce ServicesDWS new employers
Food establishment, mobile food, retail food, meat, dairy, and food safetyWyoming Department of Agriculture Consumer Health ServicesFood safety
Alcohol and liquor licensingWyoming Liquor Division and local licensing authorityWyoming Liquor Division
Child care licensingWyoming Department of Family ServicesChild Care Licensing
Electrical licensing and wiring permitsWyoming State Fire MarshalElectrical Safety
Professional licensing boardsWyoming Department of Administration and Information / boardsProfessional Licensing Boards
Business help and local permit questionsWyoming Business Council and Wyoming SBDC NetworkWyoming Business Council start resources
Federal EINInternal Revenue ServiceIRS EIN page
Federal BOI reporting when applicableFinCENFinCEN BOI page

What to do next

  1. Pick your location first. If you do not have an address yet, ask the city or county how to confirm zoning before signing a lease.
  2. Choose your legal structure. Decide whether you will operate as a sole proprietor, partnership, LLC, corporation, nonprofit, or another entity. Get legal or tax advice if you are unsure.
  3. Search the name. Check WyoBiz for entity names and review trade name rules if you will use a public name that differs from the legal name.
  4. File with the Secretary of State if needed. Use WyoBiz or the correct official paper form.
  5. Get an EIN if needed. Use the IRS directly.
  6. Ask the Department of Revenue about sales tax. Do this before collecting tax or claiming resale exemption.
  7. Register with DWS if you will work in Wyoming or hire workers. Let DWS determine workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance duties.
  8. Check industry licenses. Food, alcohol, child care, electrical, cosmetology, real estate, and professional services have separate rules.
  9. Confirm city or county requirements. Ask about business licensing, zoning, home occupation, building, fire, signage, and inspections.
  10. Keep proof in one folder. Save entity filings, trade name filings, EIN confirmation, DOR letters, DWS registration, city permits, inspection approvals, renewal dates, and fee receipts.

Official sources used and where to verify

Review note

This page was last checked against official Wyoming and federal sources on April 26, 2026. Licensing, tax, zoning, fees, portals, and renewal rules can change. Always confirm important details with the official agency before applying, paying, opening, hiring, or collecting tax.

FAQ

Does Wyoming have a statewide general business license?

No single Wyoming statewide general business license was found in the official sources checked for this guide. Wyoming splits the process across entity filings, tax licensing, employer registration, industry licensing, and local city or county permits. A local license or zoning approval may still be required.

Do I need to form an LLC before getting a Wyoming business license?

Not always. A sole proprietor may be able to operate without forming an LLC, but may still need tax registration, a trade name registration, a local permit, or an industry license. If you form an LLC or corporation, file with the Wyoming Secretary of State through WyoBiz or the proper paper form before using that entity.

What is a Wyoming trade name?

A Wyoming trade name is a name a business uses in public that is different from its legal name. The Wyoming Secretary of State says the trade name must already be in use before registration. If the applicant is a business entity, the entity must be registered and in good standing before applying for the trade name.

Do online sellers need a Wyoming sales tax license?

It depends on what you sell and your connection to Wyoming. The Department of Revenue says simply creating a Wyoming LLC does not automatically mean you need a Wyoming sales tax license. If you sell taxable goods or services and have a Wyoming physical connection or meet economic thresholds, check the Department of Revenue before collecting tax.

Do home-based businesses in Wyoming need local approval?

Often, yes. A home-based business may need zoning review, a home occupation permit, a business license, parking or sign approval, or health and safety permits. Check the city or county where the home is located before you open.

Who should I contact first if I am not sure what I need?

Start with the city or county where the business will operate. Then check the Wyoming Secretary of State for entity and trade name filings, the Department of Revenue for sales/use/lodging tax, and the Department of Workforce Services if you will hire employees or perform work in Wyoming.

Disclaimer

This guide is for general information only. It is not legal, tax, financial, insurance, employment, safety, immigration, or professional advice. Rules, fees, portals, forms, and agency policies can change. Confirm important details with the official agency or a qualified professional before you act.


Analic Mata-Murray, Managing Editor at businesslicenseguide.com
About the author
Analic Mata-Murray
Managing Editor, businesslicenseguide.com
🎓 BA Communications & Journalism 📋 11+ years in benefits navigation 🌎 Bilingual English / Spanish 🤝 Salvation Army volunteer translator

Analic Mata-Murray holds a Communications degree with a focus in Journalism and Advertising from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. For over 11 years, she volunteered as a translator for The Salvation Army — sitting across the table from Spanish-speaking families trying to access government programs, emergency housing, and poverty relief when they needed it most.

What she learned in that work shapes everything on this site: most people who don't get help don't miss out because they don't qualify. They miss out because nobody bothered to explain the system in plain English.

As Managing Editor of Business License Guide, Analic oversees every guide published here. Her job is simple — If a guide is vague, jargon-heavy, or out of date, it doesn't go live.