Phone / WhatsApp: (214) 699-4790
A Limited Liability Company (LLC) is a flexible business structure formed under state law. The Internal Revenue Service does not recognize an LLC as a specific tax classification on its own. Instead, LLCs are taxed based on elections made by the business and the number of members (owners). An LLC may be taxed as a disregarded entity, partnership, or corporation.
If an LLC has one owner, it is treated as a disregarded entity by default for federal income tax purposes. The business activity is reported directly on the owner’s federal tax return. Reporting depends on the type of income:
The owner of a Single-Member LLC operating a trade or business generally pays self-employment tax, similar to a sole proprietor.
If the Single-Member LLC chooses to be taxed as a corporation, it must file Form 8832 (Entity Classification Election).
A Multi-Member LLC is treated as a partnership by default. The LLC must file Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, and issue Schedule K-1 forms to each member. Each member reports their share of income and deductions on their personal tax return.
A Multi-Member LLC may also elect to be taxed as a corporation by filing Form 8832, or further elect S Corporation status using Form 2553 if eligible.
If an LLC elects corporate taxation:
A corporation does not pass income directly to the owners unless taxed as an S Corporation
S Corporation members receive Schedule K-1 (1120-S) to report income
A Single-Member LLC treated as a disregarded entity typically uses the owner’s Social Security Number (SSN) or EIN for income tax reporting. However, the LLC must obtain its own EIN if it:
Has employees
Files certain federal excise tax forms
Needs an EIN to open business bank accounts or comply with state requirements
EIN applications are submitted using Form SS-4.
Even when a Single-Member LLC is disregarded for income tax, it is treated as a separate entity for:
Employment taxes (Form 941, Form 940, etc.)
Certain excise taxes (Forms 720, 730, 2290, 11-C, and refund claims via Form 8849)
The LLC must use its own name and EIN when filing these returns.
In community property states, a husband and wife who jointly own an LLC may choose to:
Treat the LLC as a disregarded entity, or
File as a partnership
The IRS will accept either classification if the LLC is wholly owned by the spouses and not classified as a corporation. In non-community property states, a jointly-owned LLC must file as a partnership.
The decision between being taxed as a sole proprietorship, partnership, S corporation, or C corporation can significantly affect:
Self-employment tax
Profit distributions
Overall tax liability
Z Tax & Accounting helps business owners choose the best tax structure, file the correct IRS forms, maintain compliance, and minimize taxes.
Contact Z Tax & Accounting Today
Call: 214-699-4790
We assist clients across the United States and provide secure remote document sharing.
S-Corporations C Corporations Partnerships Disregarded Entities LLC's