Trading Entity Selection: Sole Proprietor, LLC, S-Corp
Trading entity selection compares sole proprietor, LLC, and S-Corp structures on liability, taxation, and retirement options with concrete decision criteria.
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Trading Entity Selection: Sole Proprietor, LLC, S-Corp
The legal entity a trader chooses affects liability, taxation, retirement options, and administrative cost. The choice is not permanent, but changing it mid-stream is expensive. The framework below sorts the three common structures by the criteria that actually matter for a trading business.
Sole proprietor (default)
A sole proprietorship is the default — no filing required. You and the business are the same legal entity.
- Liability: unlimited personal liability. A trading debt or lawsuit reaches personal assets.
- Taxation: Schedule C profit flows to personal return; self-employment tax applies only if the activity is a "business" not "investing" — traders usually escape SE tax, but the distinction is fact-specific.
- Retirement: Solo 401(k) and SEP-IRA available.
- Cost: $0 to maintain, beyond normal tax filing.
Best for: traders just starting, under $50k capital, testing whether the activity is viable.
Single-member LLC
An LLC is a state-level entity that provides a liability shield between the business and the owner. A single-member LLC is taxed as a disregarded entity by default (same as sole proprietor) but can elect S-Corp or C-Corp treatment.
- Liability: members generally not personally liable for LLC debts. The shield is not absolute — fraud and personal guarantees pierce it.
- Taxation: default disregarded (Schedule C); elective S-Corp or C-Corp.
- Retirement: same retirement options as sole proprietor if disregarded.
- Cost: $50–$500 formation, $0–$800 annual state franchise fee (California is the expensive outlier), separate accounting and bank account required.
Best for: traders with meaningful capital seeking liability separation without corporate complexity.
S-Corp election
An LLC or C-Corp can elect S-Corp status (Form 2553). S-Corps pass income through to owners but allow a salary/dividend split that can reduce self-employment tax.
- Liability: same shield as LLC.
- Taxation: pass-through, but owner must take a "reasonable salary" subject to payroll tax; remaining profit distributes without SE tax. For traders, this is the key benefit only if SE tax would otherwise apply.
- Retirement: Solo 401(k) on salary; higher contribution limits via salary.
- Cost: payroll processing ($500–$1,500/year), separate tax return (Form 1120-S, $500–$1,500 prep), stricter bookkeeping.
Best for: profitable traders whose CPA confirms SE tax exposure, typically netting $80k+ from trading as a business.
The decision matrix
- Capital under $50k, < 1 year track record: sole proprietor. Keep overhead zero.
- Capital $50k–$250k, established track record: single-member LLC for liability, taxed as disregarded.
- Net trading income $80k+, confirmed trader-tax status: LLC electing S-Corp, with a CPA managing payroll and the 1120-S.
- Trading others' capital or managing accounts: LLC or LLC electing S-Corp is mandatory for liability — never manage outside capital as a sole proprietor.
Critical caveats
- Trader tax status (Section 475) is separate from entity choice; an LLC does not grant it.
- State fees vary wildly; California charges $800 minimum franchise tax regardless of profit.
- Commingling personal and entity funds destroys the liability shield — maintain separate accounts and document transactions.
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