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WHEN AND HOW TO INCORPORATE
If you've been in business for a while as a sole proprietor, you may be wondering whether it would be a good idea to incorporate. To help you make that decision, we'll give you some of the reasons why people incorporate, explain how a corporation is structured and tell you how your tax treatment will change if you become a corporation. Reasons for Incorporating Picture this: You started a small landscaping business a few years ago as a sole proprietorship with three employees. Demand was so great for your services that you kept hiring more people and taking on debt to purchase more equipment, and the number of customers has soared. But lately you've started to wonder: What happens if business slows and you can't pay back all the debt? What if a disgruntled employee or unhappy customer sues you? As a sole proprietor you're personally liable for any bad debts and legal judgments against your business, meaning that your home and other personal assets are at risk. As a small business grows, concern about personal liability is a key reason why its owner may decide to form a corporation. When you incorporate, you're creating a completely separate legal entity, one that shoulders the liability burden you had been carrying yourself (or, if you are a partnership, the burden you and the other partners were carrying). As a shareholder of your corporation, your losses would be limited to your investment in the company. Forming a corporation also allows you to:
But you'll have to weigh some disadvantages as well:
Corporate Structure Each corporation has a three-tiered structure, consisting of:
Steps to Becoming a Corporation To get your corporation started, you'll need to draw up articles of incorporation in the state where your business is headquartered. The articles declare basic facts about the company, including its name, purpose and the number of shares authorized. You file this document with the appropriate state office (usually the secretary of state or department of commerce) and pay a filing fee, which can run several hundred dollars. You may want to hire an attorney to handle the process. The state will process your filing and send you a certificate of incorporation. With your certificate in hand, you can take the next steps, including appointing directors and holding your first directors' meeting. You'll need to draw up bylaws, which detail the rights of the shareholders, directors and officers. You also must issue stock. It doesn't have to be widely held, but must be distributed to everyone who is an owner of the corporation. Tax Issues for Corporations Once you have incorporated, you'll notice a big difference in how your company is treated for tax purposes. You'll no longer file Schedule C and report your net profit or loss on your 1040. Instead, the corporation files a business tax return, Form 1120, and pays tax on its corporate profits. If you're a small corporation, you may be eligible to file the short form, 1120-A. To do so, you must meet a long list of eligibility requirements, but the key point is that your company's gross receipts, total income and assets each must be less than $500,000. Many owners of new, small corporations may get a pleasant surprise at tax time. Sole proprietors can't deduct any salaries they pay themselves, but after incorporating they become employees, and their compensation can be written off by the corporate entity. Once those and other deductions are taken, there may be little corporate profit left to tax. But shareholders do have to pay tax as individuals on any dividends they receive from the corporation. Self-employed business owners get another important tax break when they incorporate: They no longer have to pay the self-employment tax. As a sole proprietor, you pay your full Social Security and Medicare tax liability, which in 2007 is 15.3% on the first $97,500 of your net earnings from self-employment. For earnings above that, you pay Medicare tax of 2.9%. As an employee of your corporation, the firm withholds half of your employment tax from your paycheck and pays the other half for you.
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The Wachovia Securities Tax Center site is designed to provide accurate, authoritative information regarding the subject matter covered. It is made available with the understanding that Wachovia Corporation and/or its affiliates are not engaged in rendering legal, accounting or tax advice. If legal, accounting, or tax assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought. The hiring of a professional is an important decision and should not be based upon advertising. Ask for written information stating qualifications, experience and firm association before making a decision.
Wachovia Securities is the trade name used by two separate, registered broker-dealers and non-bank affiliates of Wachovia Corporation providing certain retail securities brokerage services: Wachovia Securities, LLC, Member NYSE/SIPC, and Wachovia Securities Financial Network, LLC, Member FINRA /SIPC. Content provided by The Kiplinger Washington Editors courtesy of TurboTax, a registered trademark of Intuit Inc. Wachovia Corporation and/or its affiliates did not assist in the preparation of this material, and its accuracy and completeness are not guaranteed. The opinions expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and are not necessarily those of Wachovia Corporation and/or its affiliates. The material has been prepared or is distributed solely for information purposes and is not a solicitation or an offer to buy any security or instrument or to participate in any trading strategy. Personal Finance Login
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