|
|
Description |
Income taxation |
Liability |
Advantages |
Disadvantages |
|
Sole proprietorship |
Business that
is owned and operated by one person. |
Income is
taxed at the individual's personal income tax rate and is reported on
Schedule C or Schedule C-EZ. |
The owner is
not protected from liability. |
Easy,
inexpensive to create; owner keeps all income; flexible. |
Owners have
unlimited liability and are responsible for company debts; may be hard to
obtain financing; some employee benefits not fully deductible. |
|
Partnerships |
Business is owned by two or more people who share profit and liability. |
Income is
taxed on the partners' individual tax forms. |
Partners are
not protected from liability unless a limited partnership is created, where
specific partners are not liable. |
Easy,
inexpensive to create; profits go to partners' income tax returns; could be
easier to raise funds; good employees may be attracted to firm with
partnership as an incentive. |
Profits must
be shared; partners can be held liable for others' mistakes; some employee
benefits are not deductible. |
|
C Corporation |
Business is set up as an entity that has its own rights, privileges and liabilities.
Corporations are often run without direct owner involvement. |
Corporations
are taxed at a different tax rate. Shareholders are taxed on their individual
tax returns for any dividends they receive. |
Owners are
generally protected from liability. |
Can raise
money by selling stock; shareholders' liability is limited to their
investment (other than officers); employee benefits costs are deductible;
easier to raise capital. |
Expensive and
time-consuming to form; more regulations. |
|
S Corporation |
An S
Corporation provides the liability protection of a corporation but the
taxation benefits of a partnership. The tax status is only available for
companies with fewer than 100 shareholders. |
Income from
the company goes to each shareholder's individual tax return, based on his or
her share in the company. |
Owners are
generally protected from liability. |
Protection of
limited liability without paying corporate taxes; minimize self-employment
and FICA taxes; easier to raise capital as a corporation. |
S Corporations
are applicable to many regulations and restrictions, including number of
shareholders; expensive to set up; scrutiny of IRS of employee shareholders,
who must receive "normal" wages before receiving nonwage distributions. |
|
Limited liability company (LLC or LLP) |
Business is
set up as a separate entity. Its structure is more flexible than a
corporation. |
Income is
treated as a separate entity and has its own tax forms. |
Owners are
generally protected from liability. |
Limited
liability with taxation benefits of a partnerships; no loss of power to a
board of directors. |
Formation is
more complex and expensive than a proprietorship or partnership (although
less so than a corporation); LLCs are treated
differently among states. |