Related guides: What is a Schedule C? · Self-employed tax deductions · What is an EIN? · How to file freelance taxes

ZenBusiness — form your LLC online in under 10 minutes, starting at $0 + state filing fee
Start Your LLC →

Quick answer: LLC or sole proprietorship?

If you're a freelancer earning under $30,000–$40,000 per year with low-risk clients, a sole proprietorship is fine. It costs nothing to start, requires no paperwork beyond your normal tax return, and you're already operating as one if you do any freelance work. But once your net income consistently exceeds $50,000 per year, or you work with clients where a single lawsuit could wipe you out, an LLC becomes worth the cost.

Here's the thing most articles won't tell you: an LLC does not change how you're taxed by default. A single-member LLC is taxed identically to a sole proprietorship — same Schedule C, same 15.3% self-employment tax, same federal income tax brackets. The primary benefit is liability protection, not tax savings. Tax savings come later, if you elect S-corp status — but that's a separate decision with its own threshold (generally $80,000+ net income).

💡 The one-sentence rule
A sole proprietorship is the default — you already are one. An LLC is an upgrade you pay for when liability protection or professional credibility justifies the cost.

Key differences: LLC vs sole proprietorship

FactorSole ProprietorshipLLC
Formation cost$0 (automatic)$50–$500 (state filing fee)
Formation paperworkNoneArticles of Organization filed with your state
Personal liabilityUnlimited — personal assets at riskLimited — personal assets generally protected
Federal tax treatmentSchedule C, self-employment taxSame (single-member LLC = disregarded entity)
Self-employment tax15.3% on net earnings15.3% on net earnings (identical)
Annual requirementsTax return onlyAnnual report ($0–$300/yr) + registered agent
Business bank accountOptional (but recommended)Required to maintain liability protection
EIN requirementNot required (use SSN)Recommended — get one free from IRS.gov
CredibilityFine for most clients"LLC" after your name signals legitimacy
Ongoing cost$0/year$50–$500/year (varies by state)

The bottom line on that table: if you're comparing taxes alone, there is zero difference. The LLC advantage is legal protection and perceived professionalism. Everything else — deductions, quarterly tax payments, Schedule C filing — remains the same.

Tax implications: what actually changes (and what doesn't)

Self-employment tax: identical either way

Both sole proprietors and single-member LLC owners pay self-employment tax of 15.3% on net earnings — 12.4% for Social Security (on the first $168,600 of earnings in 2026) and 2.9% for Medicare. The IRS treats a single-member LLC as a "disregarded entity," meaning it doesn't exist for tax purposes. You file the exact same Schedule C whether you're a sole proprietor or an LLC.

On $80,000 of net freelance income, self-employment tax looks like this regardless of entity type: $80,000 × 92.35% × 15.3% = $11,304. That number doesn't change by forming an LLC.

When taxes do change: S-corp election

The tax advantage people associate with LLCs usually comes from electing S-corporation status (Form 2553). With an S-corp, you pay yourself a "reasonable salary" and take the remaining profit as a distribution — and distributions are not subject to the 15.3% SE tax.

Example on $120,000 net income with S-corp election: pay yourself a $70,000 salary (SE tax applies = $10,710), take $50,000 as distribution (no SE tax). You save roughly $7,065 in self-employment tax compared to a standard sole prop or single-member LLC. But you also now need payroll processing ($30–$50/month), a separate payroll tax return (Form 941 quarterly), and W-2 preparation. This math generally only works above $80,000–$100,000 net income.

⚠️ Don't form an LLC just for tax savings
A single-member LLC with no S-corp election saves you exactly $0 in taxes. If your primary goal is reducing your tax bill, talk to a CPA about S-corp election timing — it's a separate decision from LLC formation. For immediate tax savings, focus on maximizing your self-employed deductions first.

State tax differences

Some states impose additional taxes on LLCs that sole proprietors don't pay. California charges an $800 annual LLC franchise tax regardless of income — a meaningful cost if you're earning under $50,000. Texas charges a franchise tax on LLCs with revenue above $2.47 million. Most other states charge between $0 and $300 annually for an LLC annual report filing. Check your state's secretary of state website for the exact cost before forming.

Legal protection: what an LLC actually protects (and doesn't)

An LLC creates a legal separation between your business and personal assets. If your business gets sued, creditors can go after business assets (your business bank account, equipment, accounts receivable) but generally cannot touch personal assets (your home, personal savings, retirement accounts).

What an LLC protects:

What an LLC does NOT protect:

For many freelancers — writers, designers, consultants — the realistic liability exposure is a contract dispute, not a catastrophic lawsuit. Professional liability insurance ($300–$600/year for most freelancers) often provides more practical protection than an LLC. The best approach is both: an LLC for the legal shield, plus professional liability insurance for the coverage.

When to switch from sole proprietorship to LLC

There's no single "right time," but these thresholds signal it's worth the investment:

Revenue threshold: $40,000–$60,000+ net income

Below $40,000 net, the annual cost of maintaining an LLC ($100–$800+ depending on your state) represents 1–2% of your income with no tax benefit. Above $50,000–$60,000, the cost becomes negligible relative to your earnings, and you're likely dealing with clients and contracts that increase your liability exposure.

Risk factors that accelerate the timeline

How to form an LLC: costs and steps

Filing is straightforward. You submit Articles of Organization to your state's secretary of state office, pay the filing fee, and designate a registered agent. The entire process takes 1–3 weeks in most states.

Cost ItemRangeNotes
State filing fee$50–$500Kentucky is $40; Massachusetts is $500; most states $50–$200
Registered agent$0–$299/yearYou can be your own (free) or use a service like Northwest ($39/yr)
Annual report$0–$300/yearSome states (like Ohio) don't require one; California charges $800 franchise tax
Operating agreement$0Free templates available; not legally required in most states but strongly recommended
EIN (federal tax ID)$0Free from IRS.gov — takes 5 minutes online

DIY vs formation services: You can file directly with your state for just the filing fee. Formation services like ZenBusiness ($0 + state fee), LegalZoom ($0–$299 + state fee), or Northwest Registered Agent ($39 + state fee, includes registered agent) handle the paperwork and provide a registered agent. For most freelancers, the convenience of a formation service is worth the modest fee — particularly Northwest, which bundles registered agent service at the lowest annual cost.

From our network

Frequently asked questions

Do I need an LLC to freelance?

No. You can legally freelance as a sole proprietor with zero paperwork — you already are one the moment you earn self-employment income. An LLC adds liability protection and credibility, but it's not a legal requirement for freelancing. Millions of freelancers operate profitably as sole proprietors their entire careers.

Does an LLC reduce my self-employment tax?

Not by itself. A single-member LLC pays the identical 15.3% self-employment tax as a sole proprietor. Tax savings only come if you elect S-corp status (Form 2553), which requires paying yourself a reasonable salary and typically only makes financial sense above $80,000–$100,000 in net income. Without S-corp election, your tax bill is exactly the same.

Can I convert my sole proprietorship to an LLC later?

Yes, and it's straightforward. You file Articles of Organization with your state, get an EIN from the IRS (free, 5 minutes online), open a business bank account, and transfer your existing client contracts to the LLC. There's no penalty or tax consequence for converting. Most freelancers start as sole proprietors and upgrade to an LLC when their income or risk profile justifies it.

How much does it cost to maintain an LLC each year?

Annual costs range from $50 to $800+ depending on your state. The main recurring expenses are your state's annual report filing ($0–$300) and a registered agent if you use a service ($39–$299/year). California is the most expensive with an $800 annual franchise tax. States like Wyoming, New Mexico, and Missouri have minimal ongoing costs — typically under $100/year total.

Should I form my LLC in Wyoming or Delaware instead of my home state?

For most freelancers, no. Wyoming and Delaware have favorable LLC laws, but if you live and operate in another state, you'll need to register as a "foreign LLC" in your home state — paying filing fees in both states. This only makes sense for multi-state businesses or companies with complex ownership structures. A single freelancer should almost always form in their home state to avoid double registration costs.