A friend spent $1,200 with an accountant fixing a structure decision she’d made in about ten minutes on a Friday afternoon, clicking through an online formation service without really understanding what she was choosing. She’d picked an S-corp election because a blog post said it saved money on taxes, without realizing that election also came with payroll requirements and administrative overhead that didn’t make sense yet for a business making $28,000 a year.
I’m not a lawyer or an accountant, and this isn’t legal or tax advice, just a practical walkthrough of how these structures actually differ and where founders most often go wrong picking between them. Talk to a real accountant or attorney before making this decision for your specific situation, especially once real money and real liability are involved.
The Three Most Common Starting Points
Sole proprietorship is the default if you do nothing at all. No formation paperwork, no separate legal entity, business income and expenses reported directly on your personal tax return. It’s the simplest option and the one most first-time founders end up in by accident rather than by choice, simply because they started doing paid work before making any formal decision.
LLC, or limited liability company, creates a separate legal entity that generally separates your personal assets from business liabilities. If the business gets sued or can’t pay a debt, an LLC structure is designed to protect your personal savings, home, and other assets from being on the line, though this protection isn’t absolute and depends on maintaining real separation between business and personal finances.
S-corp isn’t actually a business structure on its own. It’s a tax election, most commonly applied on top of an LLC or a corporation, that changes how the business’s income is taxed and how the owner can be paid. This is the option that trips people up most often, because it’s frequently talked about as if it’s a separate structure choice rather than a tax election layered onto one.
Where the Sole Proprietorship Mistake Happens
The mistake here isn’t choosing a sole proprietorship. It’s staying in one by default long after the business has real liability exposure. A freelance writer with no employees and minimal risk of being sued might be genuinely fine as a sole proprietor for years. A consultant advising clients on decisions that could cost them real money, or anyone with employees or physical products, is carrying real personal liability risk every day they remain a sole proprietor without realizing the exposure is growing alongside the business.
The trigger point isn’t a specific revenue number. It’s a specific risk question: if something went seriously wrong with this business tomorrow, a lawsuit, an unpaid debt, an injury connected to the work, would my personal assets be exposed. If the honest answer is yes and that risk feels real, that’s the actual signal to move past a sole proprietorship, not an arbitrary income threshold.
Where the LLC Mistake Happens
The most common LLC mistake isn’t forming one. It’s forming one and then not maintaining the separation that actually makes the protection meaningful. Mixing personal and business bank accounts, paying personal expenses directly from the business account, not keeping basic records separate. Courts can and do disregard the liability protection of an LLC when the owner hasn’t actually treated it as a separate entity in practice, a concept sometimes called piercing the corporate veil.
An LLC formed correctly and then run like a personal checking account with a different name on it often provides far less real protection than the founder assumes it does.
Where the S-Corp Mistake Happens
This is the one that cost my friend $1,200 to unwind. The S-corp election can genuinely reduce self-employment tax for some businesses, by allowing the owner to take part of their income as a salary and part as a distribution, since distributions aren’t subject to the same self-employment tax as salary. That’s real and can be worth real money.
But the election comes with real administrative cost attached: running actual payroll, filing additional tax forms, and paying yourself what the IRS considers a “reasonable salary” for the work you’re doing, not just whatever minimizes your tax bill. Below a certain income level, commonly cited around $40,000 to $60,000 in net business profit though this varies by situation, the administrative cost of maintaining an S-corp election can outweigh the tax savings it’s supposed to provide. My friend was well below that range when she made the election, and the payroll overhead alone cost more than the tax savings she’d been chasing.
The Actual Decision Process
Rather than picking based on a single blog post’s general advice, the more reliable process looks like this: assess your actual liability risk honestly first, since that determines whether staying a sole proprietor is genuinely fine or genuinely risky. If liability risk is real, form an LLC and actually maintain the separation that makes it meaningful. Only then evaluate the S-corp election specifically against your real profit numbers, ideally with an accountant running the actual comparison for your specific income level, not a general rule of thumb from an article.
What to Do Now
Honestly assess your current liability exposure, not your revenue, as the first real decision point. If you’re carrying real risk and still operating as a sole proprietor, that’s worth addressing soon. If you’re already an LLC, check whether you’re actually maintaining separate finances, not just holding the paperwork.
And if someone suggests an S-corp election because of general tax advice you read somewhere, get the actual math run against your real numbers by an accountant before applying it. The election has real value, in the right situation, at the right income level, run with the right administrative follow-through. It’s expensive to get wrong.