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You’ve got a business idea. Maybe you’re already making money from it. But right now, if someone sues your business, they’re also suing you. Your savings, your house, your car — all fair game. An LLC creates a legal wall between your business and your personal life. It’s the most popular structure for small businesses because it gives you protection without drowning you in paperwork.

Why an LLC makes sense

Your personal assets stay protected. If your business gets sued or can’t pay its debts, creditors can only go after business assets. Your personal savings and property are separate. Taxes stay simple. LLC profits flow directly to your personal tax return — no corporate tax return, no double taxation. One less thing to deal with. Fewer formalities than a corporation. No required board meetings, no annual shareholder meetings, no corporate minutes. Just run your business. Clients and banks take you seriously. “Smith Consulting LLC” sounds more established than “John Smith, freelancer.” That matters when you’re closing deals or applying for business credit.

What you’ll need ready

Before starting, grab this information:
  • Company name — We’ll check availability in your state
  • Business address — Your home address works, or use our registered agent address for privacy
  • Owner information — Names, addresses, and ownership percentages for all members
  • Business purpose — Keep it general (“consulting services”, “software development”) for flexibility

Form your LLC

1

Start formation

From your dashboard, click Add CompanyForm a New CompanyLLC.
2

Choose your state

Select where you want to form. Most people choose their home state — it’s the simplest option.
Forming in a different state than where you operate? You’ll need to register as a “foreign LLC” in your operating state too. That means double the fees and double the annual reports.
Popular alternatives:
  • Wyoming — $100 filing fee, strong privacy laws, no state income tax
  • Delaware — Business-friendly courts, but mainly beneficial for corporations seeking investors
3

Enter company details

  • LLC name — Must include “LLC” or “Limited Liability Company”
  • Business address — This becomes public record (use our registered agent address if you want privacy)
  • Business purpose — “Any lawful business” gives you maximum flexibility
4

Add members

List all owners with their:
  • Full legal name
  • Address
  • Ownership percentage
Single-member LLC? You’re the only member at 100%.
5

Choose management structure

  • Member-managed — All owners run the business together (most common for small LLCs)
  • Manager-managed — Designated managers handle day-to-day operations (better when you have silent partners or investors)
6

Set up registered agent

Every LLC needs a registered agent — someone to receive legal documents on behalf of your business. Pluvel includes this service. We’ll be your registered agent and forward everything to your Digital Mailroom.
7

Review and pay

Review your information and pay:
  • Pluvel fee — Included in your subscription
  • State filing fee — Varies by state (5050-500)
  • Expedited processing — Optional, if you need it faster

State filing fees

StateStandard FeeExpeditedProcessing Time
Wyoming$100+$501-2 days (same day expedited)
Delaware$90+$503-5 days (24hr expedited)
Texas$300+$253-5 days (1 day expedited)
California$70+$3505-7 days (3 days expedited)
Florida$125+$303-5 days (1 day expedited)
New York$200+$255-7 days (2 days expedited)

After your LLC is approved

Once the state approves your filing, you’ve got a few more steps:

Get your EIN

Your federal tax ID. Takes 5 minutes online. You need this before opening a bank account.

File BOI report

Required within 90 days for most new companies. Penalties for missing this are steep.

Open a bank account

Use your formation documents and EIN. Keep business money separate from personal.

Review compliance

Annual reports and franchise taxes vary by state. We’ll track the deadlines for you.

Operating agreement

An operating agreement spells out how your LLC works — ownership percentages, voting rights, profit distribution, what happens if a member leaves or wants to sell.
Not required in all states, but you absolutely should have one. Banks sometimes ask for it. And if there’s ever a dispute between members, this document determines who wins.
Pluvel generates a basic operating agreement when you form. Review it, customize it, or have an attorney look it over if you have multiple members or complex arrangements.

Common questions

Yes. A single-member LLC has one owner. The IRS treats it as a “disregarded entity” — all profits go directly on your personal tax return (Schedule C). You get the liability protection without the tax complexity.
Depends entirely on the state. Wyoming can be same-day with expedited processing. California can take a week or more. You’ll receive an email the moment it’s approved.
Yes, but it requires filing an amendment with the state and paying another fee. Choose carefully the first time — it’s cheaper than changing later.
Liability protection. With a sole proprietorship, you and your business are legally the same person. If your business gets sued, your personal assets are at risk. An LLC creates a legal separation between the two.
Probably not, unless you have a specific reason. If you form in Delaware but operate in California, you’ll pay fees to both states and file reports in both. For most small businesses, forming in your home state is simpler and cheaper.