LLC Setup

LLC vs. Sole Proprietorship: Which Is Right for Your Business?

Many small business owners start as sole proprietors and wonder if they should form an LLC. Here's a direct comparison to help you decide.

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The Gap ProAdvisors
2 min read
LLC vs. Sole Proprietorship: Which Is Right for Your Business?

Starting a business is exciting. One of the first decisions you'll face is whether to operate as a sole proprietor or form an LLC. Here's a direct comparison.

Sole Proprietorship

A sole proprietorship is the default structure when you start a business without forming a legal entity. There's nothing to file — you're just doing business in your own name (or under a DBA).

Pros:

  • Zero setup cost or paperwork
  • Simple taxes (Schedule C)
  • No ongoing compliance requirements

Cons:

  • No liability protection — your personal assets are at risk
  • Less credibility with clients and banks
  • Harder to separate business and personal finances
  • No tax flexibility (can't elect S-Corp status)

LLC (Limited Liability Company)

An LLC is a separate legal entity that provides liability protection while maintaining tax flexibility.

Pros:

  • Personal liability protection
  • Tax flexibility (default sole prop taxation, or elect S-Corp)
  • More credibility and professionalism
  • Easier to open business bank accounts
  • Can have multiple members (partners)

Cons:

  • State filing fee ($300 in Texas)
  • Annual report requirement in most states
  • Slightly more administrative overhead

When to Stay a Sole Proprietor

If you're just testing a business idea, have very low revenue, and face minimal liability risk, starting as a sole proprietor is fine. You can always form an LLC later.

When to Form an LLC

Form an LLC when:

  • You're generating consistent revenue
  • You have clients who could potentially sue you
  • You want to open a business bank account
  • You're considering an S-Corp election for tax savings
  • You want to bring on a business partner

The Bottom Line

For most serious small business owners, the liability protection and tax flexibility of an LLC are worth the $300 filing fee and minimal ongoing requirements. The question isn't really "should I form an LLC?" — it's "when?"

Ready to form your LLC? The Gap ProAdvisors handles the entire process — state filing, EIN, and optional S-Corp election — for a flat $700. Pay now or contact us.

Explore Topics

#LLC#Sole Proprietor#Business Formation
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The Gap ProAdvisors

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