I am wondering if a small business with two other parties involved should form a S Corp or a LLC.
I'm thinking if you form a LLC as a partnership, there must be a general partner, the partner with the greatest liability. So, after the LLC decides to be taxed as a partnership, something must be done to shield the liability from the other partners. To accomplish this you then must form a corporation; the corporation will then be the general partner. Now at the end of the year, you must file a 1065, a 1120, 2 franchise tax returns---in Texas anyway, and three individual returns.
On the other hand, if a S Corp was formed, the liability (financial and legally speaking) is then shifted to the S Corp as long as there are several paper trails adhered to---corp minutes, seperate bank accounts, solid bylaws, and as long as the shareholders aren't grossly negligent. Now, the S Corp has three stockholders, each reporting their share of income on their own returns. The taxation of the individuals is virtually unchanged and their are fewer headaches at tax time.
Do any of you see the benefits of forming a LLC over a S Corp?
I'm thinking if you form a LLC as a partnership, there must be a general partner, the partner with the greatest liability. So, after the LLC decides to be taxed as a partnership, something must be done to shield the liability from the other partners. To accomplish this you then must form a corporation; the corporation will then be the general partner. Now at the end of the year, you must file a 1065, a 1120, 2 franchise tax returns---in Texas anyway, and three individual returns.
On the other hand, if a S Corp was formed, the liability (financial and legally speaking) is then shifted to the S Corp as long as there are several paper trails adhered to---corp minutes, seperate bank accounts, solid bylaws, and as long as the shareholders aren't grossly negligent. Now, the S Corp has three stockholders, each reporting their share of income on their own returns. The taxation of the individuals is virtually unchanged and their are fewer headaches at tax time.
Do any of you see the benefits of forming a LLC over a S Corp?
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