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Business Structures Explained
When you start a business, you choose a legal structure. This decision affects:
- Personal liability protection (can they sue you personally?)
- Taxes (how much you owe and when)
- Paperwork and compliance (fees, filings, complexity)
Three main options:
- Sole proprietorship
- LLC (Limited Liability Company)
- S-Corporation
Each has pros and cons.
Sole Proprietorship: Simplest, Most Risky
What it is: You and your business are legally the same entity. No paperwork required; you're automatically a sole proprietor when you start working.
Taxes:
- Business income = personal income
- Report on Schedule C (attachment to Form 1040)
- Pay income tax + self-employment tax (15.3% on net earnings)
- Example: $50,000 business income
- Income tax: $12,000 (24% bracket)
- Self-employment tax: $7,065
- Total: $19,065 (38% effective rate)
Liability:
- No protection; creditors can sue you personally
- Clients injured at your work location? They can sue your personal assets
- Breach of contract? Personal liability
- This is dangerous if you have assets to protect
Paperwork:
- Minimal; just file your personal tax return with Schedule C
- No business licenses required (varies by state; some require business registration)
- No payroll withholding (you pay quarterly estimated taxes)
Cost:
- $0 to start (just file Schedule C with personal tax return)
Best for:
- Freelancers with low risk (consultant, writer, designer)
- No employees
- No significant assets to protect
- Want simplicity
Example: Freelance writer as sole proprietor
- Charges clients $100/hour
- Year 1: $60,000 revenue
- Expenses (software, office): $10,000
- Net income: $50,000
- Owes: $12,000 income tax + $7,065 SE tax = $19,065
- Client files lawsuit for $100,000 (claims you missed deadline, caused loss)
- You have $30,000 saved; court can seize it to pay judgment
- Personal liability exposed
LLC: Best for Most Small Businesses
What it is: A legal entity separate from you. Limited Liability Company provides liability protection while maintaining simple taxation.
Formation:
- File Articles of Organization with your state ($50–$300)
- Create an operating agreement (can DIY or hire lawyer $200–$500)
- Get EIN (federal employer identification number) from IRS (free)
- Total startup cost: $100–$800 depending on state and whether you hire lawyer
Taxes:
- Pass-through taxation: Profits flow to personal return
- Report on Schedule C or Form 1040-SE
- Pay same self-employment tax as sole proprietor
- OR: Elect to be taxed as S-Corp (see below)
- Example: $50,000 business income
- Same as sole proprietor: $19,065 in taxes
- UNLESS you elect S-Corp taxation (see below)
Liability:
- Personal asset protection: Creditors can't sue you personally for business debts
- Business sued? Only the business assets are at risk
- Example: Client sues LLC for $100,000
- Business has $5,000 in assets; those are at risk
- Your personal $30,000 savings? Protected
- Judgment is against the LLC, not you
- This is the main advantage of LLC
Paperwork:
- Annual state filing ("franchise tax" or "annual report"): $0–$100/year
- Separate bank account required
- Keep business records separate from personal
- File personal tax return + business Schedule C
- Not significantly more paperwork than sole proprietor
Cost:
- Startup: $100–$800
- Annual maintenance: $0–$100
Best for:
- Most small business owners
- Service providers (consultant, accountant, coach)
- Freelancers with significant assets to protect
- Solo businesses or small partnerships
Tax optimization:
- LLC can elect S-Corp taxation (file Form 2553 with IRS)
- If profitable, this saves self-employment taxes
- See S-Corp section below
Example: Freelance writer as LLC
- Same revenue/expenses as before: $50,000 net
- Owes: $19,065 in taxes (same as sole proprietor, unless S-Corp)
- Client sues for $100,000
- Personal assets protected; LLC structure shields you
S-Corporation: Best for Profitable Businesses
What it is: A legal structure that provides liability protection AND tax savings (self-employment tax savings).
Formation:
- Create LLC first (or C-Corp)
- File Form 2553 with IRS to elect S-Corp taxation
- Cost: $0–$100 (just IRS filing fee)
Taxes: The game-changer S-Corps save self-employment tax on profit.
How it works: You pay yourself a "reasonable salary" (subject to self-employment tax), then take the remainder as distributions (not subject to SE tax).
Example: $80,000 profitable business
As sole proprietor or LLC (default):
- Net profit: $80,000
- Self-employment tax: $80,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = $11,304
- Income tax: $80,000 × 0.24 = $19,200
- Total taxes: $30,504 (38% rate)
As S-Corp:
- You pay yourself salary: $60,000 (reasonable for your work)
- Self-employment tax on salary: $60,000 × 0.9235 × 0.153 = $8,478
- Remaining profit: $20,000 (taken as distribution)
- No self-employment tax on distribution
- Income tax: $80,000 × 0.24 = $19,200
- Total taxes: $27,678
- Savings: $30,504 - $27,678 = $2,826/year
Over 10 years: $28,260 saved
This is significant.
Requirements for S-Corp:
- Must have profit to benefit (if you break even, no savings)
- Salary must be "reasonable" (can't pay yourself $10,000 and take $70,000 distribution; IRS audits this)
- Must run payroll (pay yourself via payroll system; costs $500–$1,500/year)
- Quarterly accounting/bookkeeping (costs $100–$300/month)
- More tax forms (Form 1120-S instead of Schedule C)
Cost:
- Startup: $100–$500 (LLC formation + IRS election)
- Annual: $1,200–$3,600 (payroll processing + accounting)
Breakeven point: Only worth it if you save more in SE taxes than you spend on payroll/accounting.
Example calculation: If you have $80,000 profit, save $2,826 in taxes. Annual accounting cost: $2,000. Net savings: $826/year. Worth it.
If you have $40,000 profit, save $1,413 in taxes. Annual accounting cost: $2,000. Net loss: -$587/year. Not worth it.
S-Corp is worth it if:
- Profit >$60,000/year
- Can afford accounting/payroll costs
- Want to maximize after-tax profit
Best for:
- Profitable service businesses (consultant, accountant, designer)
- Freelancers earning $75,000+
- Small business owners who can afford accounting support
Liability protection: Same as LLC—personal assets protected.
Example: Consultant as S-Corp
- Profit: $100,000
- Salary: $70,000
- Distribution: $30,000
- SE tax savings: $4,239/year
- Accounting cost: $2,000/year
- Net benefit: $2,239/year
- 10-year savings: $22,390
Comparison Table
| Feature | Sole Proprietor | LLC | S-Corp |
|---|---|---|---|
| Startup cost | $0 | $100–$800 | $100–$500 |
| Annual cost | $0 | $0–$100 | $1,200–$3,600 |
| Liability protection | None | Yes | Yes |
| Paperwork | Minimal | Low-moderate | Moderate-high |
| SE tax savings | None | None (unless S-Corp) | Yes |
| Best profit level | <$50k | <$60k or liability concern | >$60k |
| Complexity | Simple | Simple-moderate | Moderate |
Real-World Decision Tree
1. Are you starting a business?
- Might sue or get sued? Form an LLC
- Solo low-risk work? Sole proprietor is fine
2. Is your LLC profitable?
$60,000/year profit and can afford accounting? Elect S-Corp
- <$60,000/year? Stay as LLC (easier)
3. Need employees?
- Yes? You'll have payroll regardless; S-Corp or LLC
- No? Sole proprietor or LLC
4. Concerned about personal liability?
- Yes (product liability, client lawsuits)? LLC or S-Corp
- No (low-risk consulting)? Sole proprietor or LLC
Common Mistakes
1. Staying sole proprietor too long Once profitable and you have assets to protect, form an LLC. Liability protection is worth $300.
2. Electing S-Corp too early If profit is $30,000, you'll pay $2,000 in accounting costs and save $750 in taxes. Not worth it. Wait until >$60,000 profit.
3. Mixing personal and business finances As LLC or S-Corp, keep separate bank accounts and records. This protects your liability shield; if you mix finances, courts may "pierce the corporate veil" and hold you personally liable.
4. Not paying yourself as S-Corp You must pay yourself a "reasonable salary" for your work. If you take all profit as distributions, IRS will reclassify it as salary and charge back taxes + penalties.
Action Items: Choose Your Structure
- Assess liability risk: Could someone sue you? If yes, at least form an LLC
- Project profitability: Will you make >$60,000/year? If yes, plan to elect S-Corp once profitable
- Form an LLC if needed: $100–$800 setup cost, saves you from personal liability
- Once profitable, consult CPA: Decide if S-Corp election makes sense
- Keep separate records: Business bank account, expense tracking—required for all structures
- Review annually: As profit changes, re-evaluate structure
Business structure affects taxes and liability protection significantly. Choose correctly, and you save money and protect your personal assets.





