Information for New Small Business Owners
The IRS reminds new small business owners to obtain an Employee Identification Number (EIN). The agency assigns this permanent nine-digit number to small businesses that apply online for free through the IRS’ EIN webpage. Specifically, the IRS uses an EIN to identify employer and zero-employee business tax accounts. Companies need an EIN for most business needs and small business resources, including opening bank accounts and filing tax returns. When starting a business, taxpayers must also determine what kind of entity they will establish. The structure of the business determines which tax return form an owner must file. Briefly, the most common business structures include:- Sole proprietorships – individually owned unincorporated businesses
- Partnerships – a joint trade or business between two or more people
- Corporations – where shareholders own capital stock in the company
- S Corporations – corporations that elect to pass corporate income, losses, deductions, and credits through to their shareholders
- Limited Liability Companies (LLCs) – offers owners limited liability protection for debts and losses and allows pass-through taxation (LLCs do not need to pay taxes on the entity level)
Small Business Resources and Tax Information
Small business owners and self-employed individuals must usually make quarterly estimated tax payments as their business earns income during the tax year. As stated earlier, the business’ structure determines what taxes the owner must pay, as well as how to pay them. Generally, the four types of business taxes are:- Income tax – applicable to all businesses except partnerships (partnerships file information returns)
- Self-employment tax – a Social Security and Medicare tax primarily for sole proprietors
- Employment tax – for small businesses that have employees
- Excise tax – taxes imposed on goods, services, and activities