Business, Small Business, Home Business ...
There are a number of legally recognized ways
to structure your business.
The type of business entity you form
influences how you pay taxes, whether or not
you can be held personally liable for
business debts, the degree of flexibility you
can enjoy in operating your business, and the
requirements you must abide by under local,
state and federal law. Following are nine
different kinds of legally recognized
business entities.
|
In 1954, Howard Hughes became the
first sole owner of a major motion
picture company, RKO Pictures, which
he bought for $23.5 million dollars. |
Sole Proprietorship: a business owned
and managed by one person (or, for tax
purposes, a husband and wife). For IRS
purposes, a sole proprietor and her business
are one tax entity.
This means that business profits are reported
and taxed on the owner's personal tax return.
Once a fictitious name statement (assuming
you don't use your own name) has been filed
and any required basic tax permits and
business licenses obtained, a sole proprietor
will be in business. As opposed to the
creation of other business entities, a sole
proprietorship does not require legal
formation documents to be filed with any
governmental agency. Under the law, a sole
proprietor is personally and directly
responsible for all business debts.
This type of business structure is best when:
-
Your business is owned and managed by one
person - you!
-
You want a structure that is simple and
inexpensive to create and operate.
-
You want to report profit or loss
directly on your own taxes.
-
You don't want to deal with governmental
filings and rules.
-
All you want to have to file is your DBA
and your personal tax return.
-
You are not concerned with raising
outside capital or with personal
liability for the obligations of your
business.
General Partnership: a
business owned by two or more people (called
partners or general partners). To form a
partnership, each partner normally
contributes money, valuable property or labor
in exchange for a partnership share, which
reflects the amount contributed.
Although not legally required, many partners
prepare a written partnership agreement to
define items such as ownership percentages,
how profits and losses will be divided, and
what happens if a partner dies or becomes
disabled. General partners usually have equal
management rights, unless they agree
otherwise.
Like a sole proprietorship, general
partnerships are easy to form since no
registration is required with any
governmental agency to create a partnership
(although tax registration, business permits
and licenses, filing fictitious name
statements and other basic business
requirements may still apply).
This is not true if the general partnership
owns real estate, in which case certain
filings are required. Under the law, general
partners are held personally responsible for
all business debts. General partnerships
themselves do not pay federal or state income
taxes; rather, profits are passed through to
partners who report and pay income taxes on
their personal returns.
You should
consider forming a general partnership when:
-
Your business is owned and managed by
more than one person.
-
All you want to file is your Partnership
Agreement in your desk drawer and with
local agencies if there is any real
estate held by the partnership.
-
You want a structure that is simple and
inexpensive to create and operate.
-
You and your partners want to report
profit/loss on your own taxes.
-
You and your partners are not concerned
with raising outside capital.
-
You and your partners are not concerned
about personal liability for the
obligations of your business.
|