Entity Structures &
Business Registrations
A comprehensive fact sheet covering every legal entity structure available to United States businesses, the registrations a high-revenue company is required and advised to maintain, and the resources that exist to support your compliance journey. Limitless Ideas Consulting can advise, consult, or coach you through every layer of this process.
Choosing the right entity structure is the single most important legal decision a business owner makes. It determines how you are taxed, how you are protected, how investors view you, and how your business survives beyond you. Limitless Ideas Consulting advises clients through this decision as part of the Entity Structure Services engagement.
Sole Proprietorship
The owner and the business are legally one and the same. All income reports on the individual’s personal tax return using Schedule C. No formal registration is required beyond necessary licenses or permits. Full personal liability — business debts are personal debts.
- No setup cost or formal filing required
- Complete owner control
- All profits flow directly to owner
- Ideal steppingstone before incorporating
General Partnership
Two or more individuals share ownership, management duties, profits, losses, and full personal liability. Income passes through to each partner’s personal tax return. No corporate taxation. Relies heavily on a written partnership agreement to define responsibilities and exit strategies.
- Shared financial responsibility and resources
- Simple to form — no state filing required
- Flow-through taxation with no corporate tax layer
- Combined skills strengthen the business
Limited Partnership
At least one general partner manages operations and bears full liability. Limited partners invest capital but do not participate in daily management and enjoy liability protection up to the amount invested. A powerful vehicle for raising capital from multiple sources while keeping control centralized.
- Limited liability for passive investors
- Attracts capital from outside investors
- Tax pass-through structure maintained
- Clear legal separation between managers and investors
Limited Liability Partnership
Similar to a general partnership but each partner is protected from personal liability for the professional negligence of other partners. Must be registered with the state and is subject to annual reporting. Enables shared brand identity and resource pooling while maintaining personal autonomy.
- Protects partners from each other’s mistakes or negligence
- Pass-through taxation maintained
- Flexible management and profit-sharing arrangements
Limited Liability Company
The most widely used structure for entrepreneurs. Combines the limited liability of a corporation with the tax flexibility of a partnership. Owners (called members) are protected from personal responsibility for business debts and lawsuits. Can be taxed as a sole proprietorship, partnership, or corporation. Recognized in all 50 states.
- Limited personal liability for all members
- Flexible management and ownership structure
- Multiple taxation options available
- Straightforward to form and maintain
Series Limited Liability Company
An advanced variation of the traditional Limited Liability Company that allows one parent company to form multiple child series under a single filing. Each series operates independently with its own assets, liabilities, and members. Debts from one series cannot affect another — creating financial insulation across assets.
- Liability isolation between each series
- Simplified administrative costs versus forming multiple entities
- Centralized management across all series
- Efficient for multi-asset enterprises
C-Corporation
A separate legal entity owned by shareholders, managed by a board of directors, and run by officers. Can issue multiple classes of stock and raise significant capital from investors. Profits are taxed at both the corporate and shareholder levels — known as double taxation. The preferred structure for companies planning to scale nationally or go public.
- Limited liability for all shareholders
- Perpetual existence regardless of ownership changes
- Ability to raise capital through stock issuance
- Tax-deductible employee benefits and stock option incentives
S-Corporation
Not a separate entity type but a federal tax designation that allows income, losses, deductions, and credits to pass through to shareholders — avoiding the double taxation of a C-Corporation. To qualify, the company must be a United States-based corporation with no more than 100 shareholders, all of whom must be individuals or certain trusts. Stricter compliance rules apply.
- Avoids double taxation entirely
- Limited liability protection maintained
- Enhanced credibility with investors and customers
- Tax savings on self-employment income for owners
Benefit Corporation
A for-profit corporation legally obligated to consider the interests of stakeholders — not just shareholders — in all decision-making. Balances business growth with social and environmental missions. Many voluntarily pursue certification through the nonprofit B Lab for additional credibility. Attracts socially conscious investors and customers.
- Legal protection for pursuing social and environmental goals
- Attracts conscious investors and mission-aligned employees
- Transparency and accountability through annual impact reports
Close Corporation
Designed for small groups of shareholders — often family members or close associates. Operates without many formalities required of publicly traded corporations. Shares are not publicly traded and are often restricted from sale to outsiders. Provides corporate liability protection with management flexibility similar to a partnership.
- Limited liability protection for all shareholders
- Less regulatory complexity than public corporations
- Flexible internal management structure
Professional Corporation
Allows licensed professionals such as doctors, dentists, attorneys, or accountants to provide services under a corporate framework while limiting liability for business debts. Individuals remain responsible for their own professional malpractice. Often a prerequisite for obtaining malpractice insurance under group policies.
- Limits personal liability for business debts
- Allows ownership exclusively among licensed peers
- Enhanced professional credibility and institutional trust
Nonprofit Corporation
Exists to serve the public interest rather than generate profit for owners. Once approved under Internal Revenue Service Section 501(c)(3), it becomes exempt from federal income tax and may qualify for grants, donations, and government funding. Operates with a board of directors, bylaws, and a mission statement ensuring accountability and transparency.
- Federal tax exemption under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3)
- Eligibility for private and government grants and donations
- Limited liability protection for board members
Cooperative
A business owned and operated by the same people who use its services. Each member contributes to decision-making. Profits are distributed based on participation rather than investment. Emphasizes democratic governance with one member, one vote. Often gains tax advantages and government support for community-based initiatives.
- Democratic member control over all decisions
- Shared profits distributed among members
- Community-based focus and shared ownership
Joint Venture
A temporary or long-term agreement between two or more entities to collaborate on a specific project or business goal. Each party contributes resources such as capital, expertise, or property and shares in profits, losses, and control according to a joint venture agreement. Once the project concludes, the joint venture can be dissolved or evolve into a formal partnership or corporation.
- Shared risk and cost between all parties
- Access to combined expertise and resources
- Flexible structure — temporary or project-based
Holding Company
Exists primarily to own other companies’ stock, assets, or intellectual property. Does not produce goods or services directly but manages and controls subsidiaries that operate independently. Isolates risk and simplifies asset management across multiple businesses. The structure of choice for legacy planning and strategic diversification. Companies such as Berkshire Hathaway and Alphabet operate on this model.
- Limits liability exposure across all subsidiaries
- Centralized control and oversight over multiple businesses
- Strategic tax planning and asset protection
- Excellent for long-term legacy planning
A company generating five million dollars or more in annual revenue is no longer just a startup. At that revenue threshold, the registration landscape changes significantly. More regulators are watching. More compliance layers are active. More penalties are at stake. What a small business could overlook without consequence becomes a material risk for a company operating at scale. The following registrations are organized by layer and urgency. Georgia is used as the example state throughout — requirements in your state may differ substantially.
| # | Registration | Authority | Status | Why It Matters at Scale |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01 | Employer Identification Number | IRS.gov | Required | Your federal tax identity. Required for all bank accounts, payroll, taxes, and entity filings. Every structure except sole proprietorships typically needs one. |
| 02 | Federal Income Tax Registration | Internal Revenue Service | Required | Filing Form 1120 (C-Corporation), 1120-S (S-Corporation), 1065 (Partnership), or Schedule C. At five million in revenue, the complexity and stakes of this filing increase substantially. |
| 03 | Federal Payroll Tax Accounts — Form 941 | Internal Revenue Service | Required if employees exist | Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return. Deposits federal income tax withholding, Social Security, and Medicare taxes. Failure triggers significant penalties. |
| 04 | Federal Unemployment Tax — Form 940 | Internal Revenue Service | Required if employees exist | Annual filing covering six percent on the first seven thousand dollars in wages per employee. Credit available for state unemployment insurance paid. |
| 05 | SAM.gov Registration — Unique Entity Identifier | General Services Administration | Strongly Recommended | Required for all federal government contracts and grants. Replaced the DUNS number in 2022. Free to register. Must renew annually. Never pay a third party to do this registration. |
| 06 | NAICS Code Assignment | United States Census Bureau | Required with SAM registration | North American Industry Classification System code that identifies your primary business activity. Determines your Small Business Administration size standard. Select up to five codes. |
| 07 | CAGE Code | Defense Logistics Agency | Auto-Issued with SAM | Commercial and Government Entity Code. Automatically assigned when your SAM registration activates. Required for Department of Defense contracts. |
| 08 | Federal Trademark Registration | United States Patent and Trademark Office | Strongly Recommended | Protects your brand name, logo, and tagline at the national level. A five million dollar company with an unprotected brand is a company with a vulnerable asset. Search the TESS database before filing. |
| 09 | Federal Copyright Registration | United States Copyright Office | Recommended | Protects original works, courses, content, training materials, and frameworks. Registration is required to sue for statutory damages in federal court. |
| 10 | Federal Patent Registration | United States Patent and Trademark Office | If Applicable | Protects novel inventions and unique processes. If your business has developed a proprietary system, method, or product — a patent creates a legally defensible competitive moat. |
| 11 | Beneficial Ownership Information Report | Financial Crimes Enforcement Network | Verify Exemption Status | As of March 26, 2025, all domestic United States entities are exempt. Foreign entities still must report. Monitor fincen.gov for updates to the 2026 final rule. Companies with over five million in revenue and twenty or more employees and a physical office may qualify for the large operating company exemption even if the general exemption changes. |
| 12 | DMCA Agent Registration | United States Copyright Office | Required for Websites with User Content | Required for websites hosting user-generated content. Provides copyright safe harbor protection under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Renewed every three years. |
| # | Registration | Georgia Authority | Status | Georgia-Specific Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 | Articles of Organization or Incorporation | Georgia Secretary of State — Corporations Division | Required | Files your entity into legal existence. In Georgia, online filing is available at ecorp.sos.ga.gov. This is the foundation of your entire legal structure. Must be completed before obtaining an Employer Identification Number. |
| 14 | Registered Agent Appointment | Georgia Secretary of State | Required — Ongoing | Every Georgia entity must maintain a registered agent with a physical street address in Georgia. The agent receives all legal and official government documents. Many high-revenue companies use a professional registered agent service for privacy and reliability. |
| 15 | Annual Registration | Georgia Secretary of State | Required — Every Year | Georgia requires all active entities to file between January 1 and April 1 every year. Missing this deadline triggers a late fee. Failure to file by July 1 results in administrative dissolution — which strips your legal protections and ability to contract. Georgia allows filing up to three years in advance. |
| 16 | State Tax Registration | Georgia Department of Revenue — Georgia Tax Center | Required | Register at gtc.dor.ga.gov before your first taxable sale or payroll. The Georgia Tax Center issues your state tax account numbers for sales tax, withholding tax, and other state taxes within fifteen minutes of online registration. |
| 17 | State Income Tax — Corporate | Georgia Department of Revenue | Required | Georgia imposes a corporate income tax on all corporations doing business in the state. The rate applies to net income allocated to Georgia. Annual returns must be filed with all supporting schedules. |
| 18 | State Withholding Tax Account | Georgia Department of Revenue | Required Before First Payroll | Register at Georgia Tax Center before issuing your first paycheck. Account is issued in approximately fifteen minutes. Required to legally withhold and remit state income tax from employee wages. |
| 19 | State Unemployment Insurance | Georgia Department of Labor | Required Before First Hire | Georgia’s unemployment insurance rate for new employers is 2.7 percent on the first nine thousand five hundred dollars in wages per employee for the first three years. Register through the Georgia Department of Labor employer portal. |
| 20 | Workers Compensation Insurance | Private Insurer — State Regulated | Required — 3 or More Employees | Georgia law requires workers compensation coverage once a business has three or more regular employees — including part-time workers. A five million dollar company with a workforce almost certainly exceeds this threshold. Coverage must be obtained before the third employee begins work. |
| 21 | Electronic Employment Verification — E-Verify | United States Department of Homeland Security | Required in Georgia Before First Hire | Georgia law requires all employers to use E-Verify to confirm the work authorization of every new employee. This is a Georgia-specific requirement — not all states mandate E-Verify for private employers. Enrollment and use are free. |
| 22 | SAVE Affidavit | Local Government — Notarized | Required with Local Business License in Georgia | Must be notarized and filed with the Occupational Tax Certificate application. Confirms that the applicant is lawfully present in the United States. This is a Georgia-specific requirement. |
| 23 | New Hire Reporting | Georgia Department of Revenue | Required Within 10 Days of Each New Hire | Federal law requires all employers to report new hires to the state within ten to twenty days of the hire date. In Georgia, this is handled through the Georgia New Hire Reporting Center. Failure to report can trigger federal penalties. |
| 24 | Foreign Qualification — Other States | Secretary of State in Each Applicable State | Required When Operating in Other States | A five million dollar company with employees in multiple states, physical locations across state lines, or significant revenue generated in other states must register as a foreign entity in each of those states. This requires a Certificate of Authority, a registered agent in each state, and ongoing annual compliance in each jurisdiction. Ignoring foreign qualification obligations can result in inability to enforce contracts in those states, back taxes, penalties, and interest. |
| # | Registration | Authority | Status | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | Occupational Tax Certificate — Business License | City or County Government | Required Before Operating | In Georgia, this is the primary local business license. Every city and county may have its own certificate requirement. Georgia has a statewide portal that allows applications across multiple counties from one location. Annual renewal required. A high-revenue company may need certificates in multiple jurisdictions if it operates across counties. |
| 26 | DBA — Doing Business As / Trade Name Registration | County Clerk or Secretary of State | Required if Operating Under a Trade Name | Required if your operating name differs from your legal entity name. In Georgia, a DBA may be registered at the county level. Essential for brand protection and banking under your operating name. |
| 27 | Zoning Permit | City or County Planning Department | Required for Physical Locations | Confirms that your business activity is permitted at your physical address under local zoning ordinances. A five million dollar company with office space, warehouse operations, or retail locations must verify zoning compliance for each location before signing a lease. |
| 28 | Local Tax Identification Number | City Revenue Department | Varies by City | Some cities — including Atlanta — require a separate local tax account for businesses operating within city limits. Verify with your city’s revenue or finance department. |
| # | Registration or Compliance Item | Authority | Status | Details for High-Revenue Employers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29 | Employer Identification Number — Multi-State | Internal Revenue Service | Required Per State of Employment | If your company has employees working across multiple states — including remote workers — you must register for payroll tax accounts in every state where those employees work. Each state issues its own employer identification number for payroll tax purposes. |
| 30 | Affordable Care Act Compliance — ACA Reporting | Internal Revenue Service | Required at 50 or More Employees | Employers with fifty or more full-time equivalent employees must offer minimum essential health coverage and file Forms 1094-C and 1095-C annually. Failure to comply triggers significant per-employee penalties. A five million dollar company should be monitoring this threshold carefully as it grows its workforce. |
| 31 | Occupational Safety and Health Administration Compliance | United States Department of Labor | Required — All Employers | All employers must comply with applicable Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards. A high-revenue company is far more likely to be subject to an audit or complaint investigation. Maintaining a current Injury and Illness Prevention Program is essential. |
| 32 | Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Filing — EEO-1 | Equal Employment Opportunity Commission | Required at 100 or More Employees | Employers with one hundred or more employees must file the annual EEO-1 Report — a workforce data report by race, ethnicity, gender, and job category. Federal contractors with fifty or more employees and contracts of fifty thousand dollars or more must also file. Limitless Ideas Consulting advises on readiness for these thresholds as clients scale. |
| 33 | Department of Labor Wage and Hour Compliance | United States Department of Labor | Required — All Employers | All employers must comply with the Fair Labor Standards Act — minimum wage, overtime, and recordkeeping requirements. Multi-state employers must apply whichever law — federal or state — provides the highest protection for each employee. This becomes complex and high-risk at scale without a structured compliance program. |
| 34 | Family and Medical Leave Act Compliance | United States Department of Labor | Required at 50 or More Employees | Employers with fifty or more employees within seventy-five miles must provide up to twelve weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave annually for qualifying family or medical reasons. Policies, notices, and recordkeeping requirements must all be maintained. Many states have additional leave laws beyond the federal minimum. |
| # | Item | Authority | Status | Why a Five Million Dollar Company Needs This |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 35 | Federal Trademark | United States Patent and Trademark Office | Strongly Recommended | Protects your brand name, logo, and tagline at the national level. A company at this revenue level with an unprotected brand name risks having that name registered by a competitor in another state. Search the TESS database first. Protection begins at filing. |
| 36 | Federal Copyright | United States Copyright Office | Strongly Recommended | Protects original works — courses, frameworks, reports, marketing content, training materials, proprietary processes documented in writing. Registration is required to seek statutory damages in federal court. Without registration you can only seek actual damages, which are often impossible to prove. |
| 37 | Trade Secret Documentation and Agreements | Internal Policies and Legal Counsel | Required Practice at This Level | Document all proprietary methods, formulas, processes, and client intelligence. Protect them with non-disclosure agreements, confidentiality policies, and restricted access controls. Trade secrets have no registration — protection depends entirely on your internal practices and legal documentation. |
| 38 | Professional Liability — Errors and Omissions Insurance | Private Insurer | Required for Advisory and Consulting Firms | Protects against client claims of negligence, errors, or failure to deliver services. At five million in revenue, a single claim without Errors and Omissions coverage can be catastrophic. All consulting and advisory firms should carry this coverage. |
| 39 | Cyber Liability Insurance | Private Insurer | Strongly Recommended | A company at this revenue level storing client data, financial records, and employee information is a target for data breaches and ransomware. Cyber liability coverage addresses breach response, notification, regulatory penalties, and recovery costs. |
| 40 | Operating Agreement or Corporate Bylaws | Internal — Attorney Recommended | Required for Every Entity | Limited Liability Companies must have an operating agreement defining ownership percentages, profit distribution, decision-making authority, and exit provisions. Corporations must maintain bylaws governing the board structure, officer roles, and governance procedures. Without these documents, state default rules govern your company — and they rarely align with what you actually intended. |
The federal government, state agencies, and private organizations have built a network of free and low-cost resources to support business owners through registration, compliance, financing, and growth. These resources exist — knowing they are there is half the battle. Limitless Ideas Consulting helps clients identify and access the right resources for their specific situation.
U.S. Small Business Administration
The Small Business Administration offers loan programs, certification programs (8a, HUBZone, Women-Owned Small Business), free counseling, and a national network of advisors. The premier federal resource for business development at every stage.
SCORE — Free Business Mentoring
SCORE is a nonprofit partner of the Small Business Administration providing free mentoring from experienced business executives. Over ten thousand volunteer mentors available nationwide. Particularly valuable during the structure and registration phase.
IRS Small Business Center
The Internal Revenue Service maintains a dedicated small business and self-employed tax center with free publications, webinars, and tools covering employer tax obligations, entity elections, and annual compliance requirements.
SAM.gov — Federal Contract Registration
The System for Award Management is the official United States government portal for federal contract eligibility. Free to register. Do not pay a third party to complete your SAM registration — it is always free directly at SAM.gov.
USPTO — Trademark and Patent Portal
The United States Patent and Trademark Office provides free search tools, filing portals, and educational resources covering trademark registration, patent applications, and intellectual property protection for businesses of all sizes.
Georgia Secretary of State — Corporations Division
The official Georgia entity registration and compliance portal. Search business names, file Articles of Organization, submit annual registrations, and access all Georgia corporate forms. This is the authoritative source for all Georgia entity requirements.
Georgia Tax Center — Department of Revenue
Georgia’s secure electronic tax portal for registering all state tax accounts including sales tax, withholding tax, and corporate income tax. Account numbers are issued within fifteen minutes of online registration.
Georgia Department of Labor — Employer Portal
Registration for state unemployment insurance, access to E-Verify enrollment guidance specific to Georgia law, and employer resources covering wage requirements and workforce compliance obligations.
FinCEN — Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
The official portal for Beneficial Ownership Information reporting. As of March 2025, domestic entities are exempt — but monitoring this resource is essential as the regulatory landscape evolves throughout 2026 and beyond.
U.S. Department of Labor — Employer Resources
Official federal resource covering Fair Labor Standards Act compliance, wage and hour requirements, Family and Medical Leave Act obligations, Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards, and the EEO-1 reporting portal.
U.S. Copyright Office
Online registration for original works, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act agent registration portal, and complete educational resources on copyright protection for businesses, content creators, and organizations.
Georgia Small Business Development Center
Georgia’s network of Small Business Development Center advisors provides free and confidential business advising, financial analysis, market research, and registration guidance to Georgia-based businesses at every stage of development.
Limitless Ideas Consulting is a full-service business advisory firm based in Atlanta, Georgia. We are not a law firm and we do not provide legal advice — but we are positioned between the business owner and the legal, regulatory, and financial infrastructure that every serious company must navigate. We guide clients through the complexity of entity structure selection, registration compliance, project evaluation, and business development — and we do it through three distinct engagement models.
Advisory Services
Limitless Ideas Consulting provides direct strategic advisory services for business owners navigating complex decisions about entity structure, compliance, registration strategy, project feasibility, and financial positioning. Advisory engagements are designed for clients who need a trusted, experienced voice guiding their decision-making — not just information, but informed perspective applied to their specific situation.
- Entity structure analysis and recommendation
- Registration sequence planning and compliance roadmap
- Project feasibility and viability evaluation
- Finance advisory and capital strategy guidance
- Multi-state expansion planning
Consulting Services
Consulting engagements with Limitless Ideas Consulting are structured, phase-based service agreements in which our team works directly alongside the client to complete defined deliverables. Whether that is building an entity structure, completing a project development evaluation, or guiding a company through its full registration stack — we are actively involved in the work, not just providing recommendations.
- Entity structure creation — tracked and untracked development
- Corporate board structure and organizational build
- Business protection — intellectual property and insurance coordination
- Contract and registration compliance — private, federal, state, and local
- Project development evaluation — assessment, viability, and credibility
Coaching Services
Limitless Ideas Consulting coaching programs are designed to educate and empower business owners to understand, execute, and maintain their own compliance and development systems. Coaching is for the business owner who wants to build the knowledge and capability internally — not just have work done for them. We coach individuals and teams through the same frameworks, evaluations, and registration processes that drive our consulting engagements.
- Entity structure coaching — understanding your legal foundation
- Registration and compliance coaching — knowing what is required and why
- Project feasibility and scalability coaching
- Finance advisory coaching — understanding capital structures
- Business development coaching — building systems for growth
Ready to Build Your Business
the Right Way?
Whether you are choosing your entity structure for the first time, auditing your existing registrations, preparing for investors, or scaling into new states — Limitless Ideas Consulting is positioned to advise, consult, or coach you through every layer of the process.
Advise
Strategic guidance on your most important business decisions. We provide the perspective that helps you choose correctly the first time.
Consult
Hands-on phase-based engagement. We work alongside you to complete your structure, registrations, and compliance deliverables.
Coach
Education and empowerment. We build your knowledge and capability so your business runs with understanding — not dependence.