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Key takeaways

  • LLCs have no limit on owners and managers and offer a more simplified tax calculation
  • Corporations are complex entities owned by shareholders and often subject to double taxation
  • Both LLCs and corporations have liability protections for owners

Many businesses that start as a sole proprietorship reach a point where it makes sense to graduate to a more complex business structure. Registering your business as its own legal entity can also protect the owner from certain legal liabilities. Two options that you can choose from are LLCs and corporations.

Corporations are more complex business structures, but they allow you to scale a business with virtually no limit. Meanwhile, an LLC provides more structure than a sole proprietorship but has no risk of double taxation. Learn more about these two types of business structures to determine which is right for your business.

LLCs and corporations are both legal entities that business owners can use to formalize their company’s legal status. Corporations are generally more complex and better suited to larger entities, while LLCs are simpler.

Generally, forming an LLC is cheaper and easier than forming a corporation. To start an LLC, you’ll choose a name and registered agent (you can usually be your own agent), fill out your state’s article of organization and submit them. Then, all you need to do is meet the annual filing and reporting requirements, which can vary from about $50 to a few hundred dollars.

For tax purposes, LLCs are largely pass-through entities like sole proprietorships. You won’t face corporate taxation.

Forming a corporation is typically more expensive and takes more work. You need to appoint directors, file articles of incorporation, write corporate bylaws, draft a shareholder agreement, hold initial meetings, issue stock and register your company with your state and IRS. Filing requirements can be complex, so you may need a lawyer.

Corporations are separate entities that must file taxes. The corporation’s owners also file taxes, meaning corporations have far more complex tax filing procedures. They may also be subject to double taxation.

LLC Corporation
Ownership Can be owned by one or multiple members Owned by shareholders
Paperwork Annual business filings can be handled by the business owner or manager Complicated registration filings and bylaw requirements that often benefit from the help of an attorney
Taxes Can be treated as a pass-through entity where taxes are paid through the owner No double taxation Taxed as a separate entity from owners, directors and managers Owners may be taxed twice

A limited liability company (LLC) is a business entity that helps to protect the business owner from the liabilities incurred by the company they own.

As a sole proprietor, you and your business are one and the same. Your business’s debts are your debts, and you have to pay them if your company can’t. If someone sues your company, they’re suing you.

With an LLC, your personal assets are shielded and kept separate from your company’s. But they still offer relatively simple tax filings, with all of the company’s profits or losses passed through to your personal income tax return.

Personal guarantee

While LLCs offer protection of your personal assets, it’s possible to lose that protection. If you don’t properly keep personal and company money separate, for example, you can lose LLC protection.

Another way to lose that protection is by signing a personal guarantee. If an LLC small business loan requires a personal guarantee, you promise to pay for the loan out of your own money if the business can’t. That means you’re forgoing that protection.

If you don’t want to sign a personal guarantee, you’ll need to look for LLC loan alternatives.

Bankrate insight

Not all small business loans require personal guarantees, so you’ll want to review all your options before signing a loan agreement. Even so, if you have subprime credit or a lender considers you a higher risk, it’s more likely you’ll be required to sign a personal guarantee.

Membership

The owners of an LLC are called members. LLCs can be single-member entities or multiple-member entities. In many states, members can be individuals, corporations, foreign entities or even other LLCs.

A corporation is a distinct legal entity that is separate from its owners. Like LLCs, corporations offer a variety of liability protections. But they can be far more complex and come in multiple forms.

C corporation

C corporations are typically large, legally complex entities that offer strong liability protections to their owners. Owners of C corporations own shares in the company, with those shares giving owners control over the business.

C corporations have significant bookkeeping and accounting requirements and must file taxes separately from their owners. That means that the owners of a C corporation may deal with double taxation as the corporation pays taxes and they pay individual taxes.

With a C corporation, shareholders can sell shares, and the company can continue operating. With an LLC, one member leaving can require a complete business restructuring.

S corporation

An S corporation is a special form of corporation designed for smaller companies. They can only have a maximum of 100 shareholders.

Like other corporations, S corps have detailed accounting and bookkeeping requirements. However, S corps can pass much of their profit and losses to their owner’s personal taxes. That vastly simplifies tax filing and helps S corporations avoid corporate taxes.

In some cases, LLCs can elect to be taxed as S corporations, which can offer tax benefits.

B corporation

B corporations, also called benefit corporations, are for-profit entities that aim to work for the public good. They pay taxes and deal with bookkeeping like other corporations but may have to submit regular reports regarding how they’ve used their money to achieve their mission of benefiting some public cause.

Membership

Ownership in a corporation is conferred through shares. Shareholders exert control over the business based on the number of shares they own. They can also sell shares to other people. Even as shareholders change, the corporation can operate without being significantly impacted.

Bankrate insight

Corporations may be eligible for term loans, lines of credit, and other types of debt financing that can assist with purchasing things like inventory and equipment.

Choosing the right business entity is essential because it can greatly affect how your company operates and manages its finances.

In general, LLCs are far more flexible in dealing with the IRS. An LLC might be the better choice if you’re working alone or have one or two partners, given their flexibility and simpler filing requirements.

Corporations are generally best for larger, more complex entities. If you ever plan to go public, raise money selling shares or want the freedom to keep operating without major impacts should one owner choose to sell out of the business, a corporation is the way to go.

Keep in mind that you may be able to change your business structure as time passes. Check with a local attorney to learn more about your options.

Bottom line

LLCs and corporations both offer liability protections to their owners, but they function quite differently when it comes to filing requirements and taxes. Consider the pros and cons of each before deciding which one to form.

  • LLCs and C corps both have benefits, but LLCs beat C corps in terms of simplicity, being easier to form and being less expensive to form.

  • LLCs protect their owners from liability, but you could lose those protections if you fail to keep business and personal money separate or sign a personal guarantee on an LLC loan.
  • If you run an LLC, you often have to pay self-employment taxes on the money you earn, which can mean paying more taxes. Their profits also immediately pass through to your tax return, making it harder to manage your income for tax efficiency.

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