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Business Structure: How to Choose the Right One
Choosing a business structure depends on your tolerance for risking your personal assets among other factors.
Andrew is a former content strategist and small-business writer for NerdWallet. He has worked at news organizations such as the Chicago Tribune, where he covered crime and breaking news, and Crain's Chicago Business, where he reported on the healthcare industry.
Sally Lauckner is an editor on NerdWallet's small-business team. She has more than a decade of experience in online and print journalism. Before joining NerdWallet in 2020, Sally was the editorial director at Fundera, where she built and led a team focused on small-business content and specializing in business financing. Her prior experience includes two years as a senior editor at SmartAsset, where she edited a wide range of personal finance content, and five years at the AOL Huffington Post Media Group, where she held a variety of editorial roles. She is based in New York City.
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Careful consideration of which structure is right for your new business is crucial because it will have implications for how the IRS taxes your business profits. It’ll also determine whether your personal property is protected when others demand money from your business. Other considerations, including the management of the new business and your long-term plans for it, come into play as well.
Below, we’ve outlined types of business structures and what to consider before choosing one.
A hybrid business structure that limits the personal liability of its owners (called members).
Allows the profits to be taxed on either a member level or the corporate level.
S corporation
An S corporation has one class of stock and no more than 100 shareholders, none of whom can be another for-profit business or a person without a green card who doesn’t meet IRS residency requirements.
Profits are taxed on shareholders’ tax returns, and shareholders have limited liability.
C corporation
A corporation whose profit is taxed once on the business level and a second time on an individual basis when earnings are distributed to shareholders, who have limited liability for the business’s debts.
C corporations can have multiple classes of stock and an unlimited number of shareholders.
Switching business structures is possible, but it's best to decide early on which one you'll need for the next few years. It can get complicated — not to mention pricey, in terms of legal fees — to change structures, and the effort could distract from running your business.
What to consider when choosing your business structure
What’s your tolerance for risk to personal assets?
In a sole proprietorship, if your business is sued and loses, your personal assets — real estate, cars, bank accounts — can be targets for the parties seeking to collect damages. The same can be said, in some cases, if you default on a business loan and you signed a personal guarantee, or the lender placed a lien on your assets. The lender can attempt to recover its investment from your personal property.
In a general partnership, creditors can go after any of the partners’ personal assets to recoup the whole debt. It’s different in a limited partnership, where only the general partners are personally liable for the debts of the business, while limited partners are liable for the business’s debts only up to the amount of their investment.
More common among lawyers are limited liability partnerships, which limit partners’ liability for the firm’s debts but still hold them individually liable for their professional activities. There are also limited liability limited partnerships, a sort of limited partnership that extends limited liability to general partners, not just limited partners.
LLCs and corporations limit their members’ or shareholders’ liability, so personal assets are protected.
How do you want the IRS to tax your business profits?
Sole proprietorships, partnerships and S corporations are pass-through entities, as are some LLCs. In a pass-through entity, profits are passed directly to the owners of the business. Come tax time, it is reported on the owners’ individual returns.
By default, the IRS views LLCs as pass-through entities unless they opt to be taxed as a corporation.
C corporations are separate entities from their owners, so their profits are taxed at the corporate level. If a corporation pays out dividends, which come out of its after-tax income, shareholders also must pay taxes on their proceeds.
How formal do you want your management structure to be?
If multiple owners are involved, structuring the business can be more complicated.
Partnerships are typically governed by agreements that specify how profits from the business are divided among parties and what happens when a partner retires, becomes disabled, declares bankruptcy or dies.
An S corporation or C corporation is required by law to have a board of directors to oversee the company’s direction on behalf of the shareholders.
An LLC structure generally allows the choice between being managed by members or overseen by a management team, which can include members or nonmembers. LLCs typically draw up an operating agreement that specifies roles.
How much administrative complexity can you handle?
For noncorporation business structures, initial paperwork and fees are relatively light, and are simple enough for owners to handle without special expertise (although it’s a good idea to consult a lawyer or an accountant for help). Ongoing requirements usually come on an annual basis.
For S and C corporations, the administrative complexity increases, and you will almost certainly need a lawyer and accountant. In every state, there are tax and legal hoops to jump through for corporations to become and remain compliant. Failure to meet deadlines, pay certain fees and file the proper forms can result in penalties.
What are your long-term goals for the business?
The right structure doesn’t just depend on the state of your business today; it also depends on where you would like to be in three to five years, or even longer.
If you’re looking for fast growth, which takes cash, C corporations allow for multiple classes of stock and don’t restrict the number or type of shareholders. They’re the best fit if you’re seeking investments from venture capitalists, or if you plan on becoming a publicly traded company, rather than a privately owned one, in the near- or mid-term.
Another consideration is what happens when you or another owner dies, goes bankrupt or withdraws. Corporations live on after these events, but generally the other types of business structure dissolve unless specified otherwise beforehand.