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Registered Agent Solutions
RASi delivers nationwide registered agent and UCC compliance services and joined Wolters Kluwer in March 2025.
Registered Agent Solutions
Founded in 2002, Registered Agent Solutions (RASi) built its business on the repeatable, high-volume task of accepting service of process and managing annual-report filings for US entities. Founders and early leadership are not publicly named, suggesting the firm grew as an operationally driven services platform rather than a personality-led professional firm. From an initial base in Austin, it expanded reach to cover all fifty states, becoming a recognizable name among corporate paralegals and general counsels who outsource registered agent and UCC search work. RASi's core service lines are registered agent representation, entity management, and Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) services — three legs of a single compliance stool. The firm does not invest balance-sheet capital; it sells recurring annual service subscriptions priced per entity per jurisdiction. Clients include law firms managing multi-state corporate portfolios and middle-market companies that need consistent statutory representation without building an in-house compliance department. The firm also developed a proprietary software interface called Corpliance that gives clients a dashboard for entity status, filing calendars, and jurisdictional updates. Geographic coverage is explicitly nationwide, with no international offices or non-US registered agent services disclosed. Scale metrics such as number of entities under representation or total professionals are not publicly reported. The dominant structural event is the March 2025 acquisition by Wolters Kluwer, the Dutch-listed professional services and technology conglomerate. Wolters Kluwer already owns CT Corporation, the largest registered agent and business-formation services provider in the United States. The combination folds RASi into CT's existing platform while allowing Wolters Kluwer to consolidate market share in US corporate-compliance outsourcing. The transaction also links RASi's Corpliance tooling to Wolters Kluwer's broader legal and regulatory content ecosystem — a pairing that hints at deeper technology integration across registered agent workflows going forward. RASi stands apart from most firms profiled by Altss because it is not an asset manager or a family office at all — it is a regulated corporate-services provider that has no investment mandate, no capital deployment, and no wealth-management function. What makes its architecture distinct is its position as a recently acquired subsidiary inside a public company, where its value is measured not in investment returns but in recurring subscription revenue and client retention rates. For institutional allocators, the firm is relevant mainly as an operating subsidiary of Wolters Kluwer (ticker: WKL), representing a pure-play bet on US business-formation activity and the regulatory fee structure that underpins it.
General information
Firm type
other
Year founded
2002
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Austin
Corporate office
Austin, TX, United States
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at RASi?
RASi is not an investment firm. It is a corporate-services provider that acts as a registered agent and handles compliance filings. There is no investment committee and no capital deployment team. The firm sells annual service subscriptions, and strategic decisions now sit with Wolters Kluwer's Financial & Corporate Compliance division leadership.
How is RASi related to CT Corporation and Wolters Kluwer?
In March 2025, Wolters Kluwer acquired RASi and placed it alongside CT Corporation inside the same compliance division. CT Corporation is the largest US registered agent, while RASi had been an independent competitor since 2002. The combination gives Wolters Kluwer a larger share of the outsourced business-entity-compliance market.
Does RASi participate in fund commitments or direct deals?
No. RASi is a corporate-compliance services company, not an investor. It acts as a registered agent, files annual reports, manages entity records, and handles UCC searches for business clients. It neither commits capital to funds nor makes direct investments.
What investment stages does RASi typically target?
This question misreads RASi's business model. RASi serves corporate legal departments and law firms that need registered agent coverage across US states. Its clients range from newly formed LLCs to established mid-market companies, but the firm itself never targets investment stages or takes equity stakes.
Where does RASi generate revenue?
RASi generates revenue through subscription-based registered agent services, entity-management filings, UCC search requests, and related corporate-compliance work. The firm also offers its Corpliance software platform, which provides clients a single dashboard for entity status and jurisdictional alerts, though pricing is not publicly disclosed.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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