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Business Formation

LLC vs Corporation in Florida: Which Is Right for Your Business in 2026?

Florida business owners choosing between an LLC and a corporation face real differences in taxation, liability, management, and capital-raising. This side-by-side comparison helps you pick the right structure for 2026.

FL Patel Law
April 12, 2026
Business Formation

For Tampa Bay entrepreneurs and business owners across Florida, one of the first decisions after deciding to start a business is choosing the right entity type. The two most common choices are the Limited Liability Company (LLC) and the corporation. Both provide liability protection and a legal structure separate from their owners, but they differ substantially in taxation, management, formality requirements, and how outside capital is raised.

This guide compares LLCs and corporations across every dimension that matters for Florida business owners in 2026, so you can make an informed decision before you file anything with the Florida Division of Corporations.

LLC vs Corporation at a Glance

FeatureFlorida LLCFlorida Corporation
Governing statuteCh. 605, FL StatutesCh. 607, FL Statutes
Owners calledMembersShareholders
Default federal taxPass-through (disregarded / partnership)C corporation (double taxation)
S-corp election availableYes (Form 2553)Yes (Form 2553)
Florida state income taxNone on pass-through income5.5% corporate income tax (C-corp)
Formation filing fee (FL)$125$35 (Articles of Incorporation)
Annual report fee (FL)$138.75$150
Management flexibilityHigh - member or manager managedStructured - board of directors + officers
Formality requirementsMinimal under Ch. 605Meetings, minutes, bylaws required
Raising VC capitalChallengingStandard - preferred stock structures
QSBS eligibility (IRC 1202)NoYes (C-corp only)
Stock options (ISOs/NSOs)Not availableAvailable

Liability Protection: Both Work, With One Key Difference

Both LLCs and corporations provide a legal barrier between the business and its owners. If the business is sued or cannot pay its debts, the owners are generally not personally responsible - provided the entity is properly formed and maintained.

The liability protection is comparable for most small business purposes. Where corporations historically had an edge was that courts were more familiar with the corporate form and its formalities. Today, Florida's LLC statute (Chapter 605) is robust, and Florida courts consistently uphold LLC liability protection when the entity is operated properly.

โš ๏ธMaintaining Your Shield

Liability protection only works if you maintain it. Commingling personal and business funds, signing contracts in your personal name, or treating the entity as an alter ego can result in courts 'piercing the veil' and holding you personally liable. This applies to both LLCs and corporations.

Taxation: The Most Important Difference

The biggest practical difference between an LLC and a corporation for most Florida business owners is how they are taxed.

LLC Taxation (Default)

A single-member LLC is a disregarded entity - its income is reported on Schedule C of the owner's Form 1040. A multi-member LLC is taxed as a partnership by default, filing Form 1065 and issuing K-1s. In both cases, the LLC itself pays no federal income tax. Profits pass through to the owners and are taxed once, at the owner level.

Florida has no personal income tax, which makes pass-through LLC income especially attractive. An LLC owner earning $150,000 in net profits pays zero Florida state tax on that income.

Corporation Taxation (C-Corp Default)

A Florida corporation is taxed as a C corporation by default. The corporation pays 21% federal corporate income tax and Florida's 5.5% corporate income tax on net income over $50,000. When the corporation distributes profits to shareholders as dividends, those dividends are taxed again at the shareholder level - at 15% or 20% qualified dividend rates. This is double taxation.

Example: A C corporation earns $100,000. It pays approximately $23,750 in combined federal and Florida tax. The remaining $76,250 distributed as dividends is taxed again at 15-20%. A comparable LLC owner earning the same $100,000 pays no entity-level tax and no Florida personal income tax.

The S-Corp Election: Available to Both

Both an LLC and a corporation can elect S-corporation tax treatment with the IRS by filing Form 2553. This eliminates the double-taxation problem for corporations and allows LLC owners to reduce self-employment tax by splitting income between salary (subject to payroll taxes) and distributions (not subject to self-employment tax).

Management Structure

LLCs offer flexibility. Under Chapter 605, an LLC can be member-managed (all owners share management authority) or manager-managed (a designated manager - who may or may not be a member - runs the business). The operating agreement defines every aspect of management, compensation, and decision-making.

Corporations have a more structured governance model. Florida corporations (Chapter 607) require a board of directors that oversees the business and elects officers (President, Secretary, Treasurer, etc.) who manage day-to-day operations. Shareholders vote on major decisions but do not manage the company directly.

  • Best for flexibility: LLC
  • Best for defined hierarchy / investor governance: Corporation

Formalities and Administrative Burden

Corporations require annual meetings, documented board resolutions, maintained minute books, and formal officer elections. These formalities are not just procedural - failure to observe them is one of the grounds for piercing the corporate veil.

Florida LLCs have minimal mandatory formalities under Chapter 605. An operating agreement is not even required to be in writing under Florida law (though it absolutely should be). LLCs are generally easier and less expensive to administer than corporations.

Raising Capital

If you plan to raise institutional venture capital, a C corporation - almost always a Delaware C corporation - is the standard. Venture capital funds invest in preferred stock, which only corporations can issue. Convertible notes and SAFEs are designed for corporations. Most VC term sheets assume a Delaware C corporation as the target entity.

LLCs can raise equity capital through membership interest purchases, but the structure is less familiar to institutional investors and does not support preferred equity structures as cleanly. For angel investors, friends-and-family rounds, or SBA lending, an LLC works fine.

Converting Between LLC and Corporation

Florida permits statutory conversion between LLCs and corporations under Chapter 605 and Chapter 607. A Florida LLC can convert to a Florida corporation without dissolving and reforming - the same entity continues with all its contracts, history, and EIN intact. The process involves a Plan of Conversion, Articles of Incorporation, and a filing with the Division of Corporations.

The tax implications of conversion depend on the entity's current tax classification. An LLC-to-corporation conversion structured correctly can be tax-free under IRC Section 351. Converting from a C corporation to an LLC may be treated as a taxable liquidation - consult your CPA before doing this.

When to Choose an LLC vs a Corporation

Choose an LLC When:

  • You want simplicity and flexibility in management and governance
  • You are not planning to raise institutional venture capital
  • You want pass-through taxation and Florida's zero personal income tax to work in your favor
  • You are a real estate investor, consultant, service provider, or small business owner
  • You want the option to later elect S-corp treatment to reduce self-employment tax

Choose a Corporation When:

  • You are raising VC or institutional equity capital
  • You want to offer employee stock options (ISOs or NSOs) as a recruiting tool
  • You want QSBS eligibility under IRC Section 1202 for potential capital gains exclusion on exit
  • You are building toward an IPO or a large strategic acquisition
  • You prefer the structured governance model of a board of directors

Frequently Asked Questions

Not Sure Whether an LLC or Corporation Is Right for You?

FL Patel Law helps Tampa Bay and Florida business owners choose the right entity structure for their goals, tax situation, and growth plans. We offer flat-fee and hourly pricing - call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation online.

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Written by

FL Patel Law

Managing Attorney at FL Patel Law. Experienced business attorney focused on corporate law, entity formation, M&A, and trademarks in Tampa and St. Petersburg, Florida.

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