Learn
About Incorporating a Business
GENERAL CORPORATION:
The
most common of all corporate structures is the General Corporation.
The General Corporation, like all other corporations, is a separate
legal entity that is owned by stockholders (shareholders, i.e. investors).
A General Corporation may have an unlimited number of stockholders.
Due to the legal nature of the corporation, stockholders are protected,
personally, up to the amount of their investment, from the creditors
of the corporation.
Advantages
- Personal
assets are protected from business debt and liability
- Corporation
is perpetual (life extending beyond the illness or death of the
owners)
- Insurance,
travel, and retirement plan deductions are TAX FREE benefits
- The
ownership of the corporation is easily transferable
- Ownership
will not affect current management
- Raising
capital through the sale of stocks and bonds is simplified
Disadvantages
- More
Expensive to form than proprietorship or partnerships
- Legal
formality
- Must
abide by state and federal rules and regulations
CLOSE
CORPORATION: A
Close Corporation has a few minor differences as compared to General
Corporations. In most states where they are recognized, Close Corporations
are restricted as to the number of shareholders, usually between
30 - 50. The shares of stock upon sale are to be offered to existing
shareholders first. Generally a Close Corporation is particularly
suited for the entrepreneur looking to run a "one-person"
corporation or for a small group of individuals who will all actively
participate in the operation of the business.
SUB CHAPTER S CORPORATION:
S
Corporations have the same basic advantages of General or Close
Corporations with a major distinction of tax liability. Where as
the previous corporation file and pay federal taxes on profits of
the corporation, the Sub-S Corporation eliminates Federal Corporate
Income Tax. The IRS allows all profits to "pass through"
all profits to the shareholders personal tax return.
Sub
Chapter S Corp. Restrictions
- Can
only be a domestic corporation
- Only
one class of stock is permitted
- No
more than 75 stock shareholders
- Only
individuals can be stockholders
- Each
stockholder must be a citizen of the US
Note: 95% of all corporations our company
helps file are Sub Chapter S.
|