Module 03 of 10
Choosing a legal structure
For businesses with a physical presence, this decision carries more weight than it does for an online business. A retailer whose customer slips on a wet floor, a contractor whose crew damages a client's property, a food vendor whose product makes someone ill — all of these are realistic scenarios where your legal structure determines whether you personally lose your home and savings, or just your business.
Why this matters more for physical businesses
Physical businesses interact with the public in ways that create real liability exposure every single day. Customers walk through your door, workers operate on client property, products are consumed — each of these creates a risk that an online business simply doesn't face at the same level. The legal structure you choose is your first line of defense when something goes wrong.
THE PHYSICAL BUSINESS REALITY
A sole proprietor retailer whose customer is injured in-store can lose their personal savings, home, and assets to a judgment. An LLC owner in the same situation keeps those personal assets protected. The filing fee to form an LLC — typically $50–$500 depending on your state — is the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy. A corporation offers the same form of protection.
The three main structures
Click each to see the details — with specific considerations for physical and trades businesses.
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No separation between you and the business. Fine for very low-risk situations only.
LIABILITY PROTECTION: None — your personal and business assets are legally the same.
HOW IT’S TAXED — Business income flows to your personal return via Schedule C.
SETUP COMPLEXITY — None required — automatic if you do business as an individual.
FOR PHYSICAL BUSINESSES — Not recommended for any physical business with public-facing liability. Fine only for very low-risk solo service work with no employees and no customer-premises exposure.
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Separate legal entity. Protects personal assets. The right choice for nearly every physical business.
LIABILITY PROTECTION — Strong — personal assets are protected from most business debts and lawsuits.
HOW IT’S TAXED — Pass-through by default — income flows to your personal return. Can elect S-Corp tax treatment later.
SETUP COMPLEXITY — File Articles of Organization with your state ($50–$500). Create an Operating Agreement. Get your EIN.
FOR PHYSICAL BUSINESSES — The right choice for nearly every physical business — retail, service, market vendor, or trades. Required by most landlords and many commercial clients before they will work with you.
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Tax election on top of an LLC. Saves money once you're consistently profitable at higher income levels.
LIABILITY PROTECTION — Strong — same protection as an LLC.
HOW IT’S TAXED — Pay yourself a reasonable salary; remaining profits taken as distributions avoid self-employment tax.
SETUP COMPLEXITY — File Articles of Incorporporation with your state ($50-$500) first, get your EIN, then file IRS Form 2553 to elect S-Corp tax status. May require running payroll.
FOR PHYSICAL BUSINESSES — Consider once your business nets $80K+ consistently. The self-employment tax savings outweigh the added payroll complexity at that income level. Talk to a CPA before electing — timing matters.
What’s right for your type of business
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Retail and storefront businesses → LLC or S-Corp from day one
If customers enter your space, you need an LLC or S-Corp. Slip-and-fall claims are the most common lawsuit against small retailers — a customer trips on a rug, a display falls, someone is injured in your parking lot. Without an LLC or S-Corp, that lawsuit reaches your personal finances directly. Form the LLC or S-Corp before you sign your lease — your landlord will likely require it anyway.
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Physical service businesses → LLC or S-Corp, consider professional liability too
Salons, gyms, auto shops, childcare centers — all have regular liability exposure from customer interactions. An LLC or S-Corp is essential. Additionally, some service businesses need professional liability (E&O) insurance on top of general liability. The LLC or S-Corp protects your personal assets; the insurance pays the legal costs when a claim arises against the business.
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Market and pop-up vendors → LLC or S-Corp strongly recommended, especially for food
Many market vendors start as sole proprietors because the setup seems temporary. But if you're selling food, body products, or anything consumable — and especially if you have a commercial kitchen or prep facility — the product liability exposure is real. A contamination claim, an allergic reaction, or a product injury can be significant. Form the LLC or S-Corp before your first market day, not after.
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Trades and contractors → LLC or S-Corp is non-negotiable
Of all the business types on this site, trades businesses have the highest and most varied liability exposure. You're operating heavy equipment, working on client property, employing workers in physical environments, and often handling materials that can cause damage if installed incorrectly. A landscaper whose crew damages a sprinkler system, a fence installer whose post damages an underground utility, a contractor whose work has a defect — all of these are real claims that happen regularly. Many commercial clients and general contractors also require vendors to carry insurance and operate as an LLC or S-Corp before they'll hire them. Form the LLC or S-Corp first.
Trades-specific note:
In many states, your contractor's license can only be held by a legal entity — not an individual. This means forming an LLC (or corporation) isn't just recommended for liability purposes — it may be legally required to obtain your license.
In this Module
Why this matters more
The three structures
By business type
Real-world examples
Related Modules
Registering your business
Business insurance
Licenses & permits
Real-world examples
Maria — boutique clothing shop
Retail, storefront
Maria's landlord required proof of an LLC before signing her lease. She filed her Articles of Organization online for $150, got her EIN in 10 minutes, and had her operating agreement drafted by a local attorney for $350. Six months after opening, a customer reported a minor injury from a clothing rack. Maria's general liability insurance handled the claim — the LLC meant her personal savings were never at risk.
LLC required by landlord — protected her when a claim arrived
Ray — residential landscaping and lawn care
Trades, sole operator growing to crew
Ray started mowing lawns as a sole proprietor his first summer. A neighbor introduced him to a property management company that wanted to hire him for six accounts — but required proof of LLC and insurance before signing a contract. Ray formed his LLC in a week ($75 state fee), got a general liability policy, and won the contract. The LLC also let him open a business bank account and separate his income from his personal finances for the first time.
Client requirement forced the right decision at the right time
Sandra — farmers market jam and preserves vendor
Market vendor, food product
Sandra sold at markets for two seasons as a sole proprietor before a fellow vendor mentioned that her homeowner's insurance almost certainly didn't cover a product liability claim. She checked — it didn't. She formed an LLC the following month and added a product liability policy for $480/year. Her market manager also required proof of coverage for the upcoming season, so the timing worked out.
Two seasons unprotected — a common and avoidable situation for food vendors