The Core Difference
A sole proprietorship is the default: you operate as an individual, with no legal separation between you and your business. There's nothing to file — you just start working.
An LLC (Limited Liability Company) is a separate legal entity created by filing with your state. It provides liability protection, potential tax benefits, and more credibility.
Liability Protection: The #1 Reason to Form an LLC
In a sole proprietorship, your personal assets (home, savings, car) are at risk if your business is sued or can't pay debts.
With an LLC:
- Business debts are generally the LLC's responsibility, not yours personally
- A lawsuit against your business can't (easily) touch personal assets
- You must maintain separation: separate bank account, avoid commingling funds, follow formalities
Who needs this most: Anyone with client-facing services, physical products, employees, significant contracts, or meaningful personal assets to protect.
Who can skip it: Early-stage freelancers with minimal contracts and low liability exposure — until you have something worth protecting.
Tax Comparison
By default, a single-member LLC is a disregarded entity — taxed exactly like a sole proprietorship. No tax difference without making elections.
| Structure | Federal Tax Filing | Self-Employment Tax | Pass-Through? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sole Proprietor | Schedule C (Form 1040) | 15.3% on net profit | ✓ |
| Single-Member LLC (default) | Schedule C (Form 1040) | 15.3% on net profit | ✓ |
| LLC taxed as S-Corp | Form 1120-S + W-2 | Only on salary (not distributions) | ✓ |
| LLC taxed as C-Corp | Form 1120 | None (double taxation) | ✗ |
The S-Corp Election: The Real Tax Strategy
If your LLC earns significant profit, electing S-Corp tax treatment (Form 2553) can save thousands in self-employment tax:
Sole Proprietor/Default LLC earning $150,000:
- Self-employment tax: 15.3% on first $176,100, 2.9% above = ~$22,215
- Income tax: ~$26,000 (24% bracket)
- Total: ~$48,215
LLC taxed as S-Corp, same $150,000:
- Reasonable salary: $75,000 (payroll taxes apply)
- Distribution: $75,000 (no SE tax)
- Payroll taxes on salary: ~$11,475
- Income tax: ~$26,000
- Accounting/payroll costs: ~$3,000
- Total: ~$40,475 (saving ~$7,740)
S-Corp generally makes sense when profit exceeds $40,000–$50,000/year and the savings outweigh added complexity.
Cost Comparison
| Cost | Sole Proprietor | LLC |
|---|---|---|
| State filing fee | $0 | $35–$500 (varies by state) |
| Annual report fee | $0 | $0–$800 (California: $800/yr minimum!) |
| Registered agent | $0 | $50–$300/year |
| Separate bank account | Optional | Essential |
| Accounting complexity | Low | Moderate |
Highest-cost state: California ($70 filing + $800/year franchise tax minimum) Lowest-cost states: Kentucky ($40 filing, $0 annual), Wyoming ($102 filing, $60/year)
When to Form an LLC
Form an LLC when you:
- Have clients who could sue you
- Hire contractors or employees
- Sign significant contracts
- Have personal assets worth protecting (home, investments)
- Want to attract investors or appear more professional
- Plan to scale beyond solo freelancing
Stay a sole prop when you:
- Are just starting out and testing the idea
- Operate in a low-liability field with no employees
- Make under $40k/year (S-Corp election not yet beneficial)
- Want zero administrative overhead
Use our LLC Cost Calculator to see exact filing and annual fees for your state.