Why Your Business Needs Insurance
There is a lot riding on your small business. You have invested your money, time, and sweat equity to build a company that will be successful for years to come.
Even if you make all the right business moves, unexpected costs can arise at any time. Accidents, natural disasters, data breaches, and other unexpected occurrences are an ever-present risk to business owners. Small business insurance provides additional protection for your enterprise and could be the difference between a bump in the road and a door-closing catastrophe.
Business Wellness Check!
Achieving business wellness in 2023 can go a long way toward improving your overall physical health. Financial health and personal health are strongly connected. The healthier you are in one of these areas, the more likely you are to be healthier in the other. And, like physical wellness, financial wellness requires investment for the long term.
The Difference Between an LLC and a PLLC (and Whether a REALTOR® Should Ever Have a PLLC)
LLC is an acronym for a business entity otherwise known as a Limited Liability Company, and the acronym PLLC is short for Professional Limited Liability Company. Both of these entity types are creatures of state law, originally created by the legislature of the state of Wyoming and now available in all 50 states. The people who are owners of these types of entities are called “Members”.
Businesses Operating in Tennessee: Beware the Tennessee Franchise and Excise Taxes
If you are a corporation, limited partnership (LP), limited liability company (LLC), or business trust. . .chartered, qualified, or registered in Tennessee or doing business in this state, then you must register for and pay franchise and excise taxes. This sometimes comes as a surprise to people who incorporate or create their entities in another state (like Delaware, Nevada, or Wyoming) but then do business or own property inside that entity in the State of Tennessee.
How Real Estate Investors in Tennessee Avoid Franchise and Excise Taxes: The FONCE Exemption
Anyone who owns an LLC in Tennessee is liable for Franchise and Excise taxes unless they qualify for one of seventeen exemptions (the article referenced above lists all of them.) This article is going to focus on exemption #11: the Family Owned Non-Corporate Entity (FONCE) exemption.
Do I Have to Get a Tennessee LLC if I Do Business in Tennessee and Have an LLC in Another State?
Anyone conducting or transacting business in the State of Tennessee, who has their business registered in another state (for example, someone who has a Wyoming LLC but who runs their business out of a Tennessee location), must register with the State of Tennessee for a Certificate of Authority. That does not mean they have to have a Tennessee LLC, but they will have to pay fees and taxes that could make conducting business in Tennessee more expensive than they realize.
Categories
Tags
- Estate Planning
- Revocable Living Trust
- Asset Protection
- Business Law
- Tennessee Business Law
- Business Taxes
- Business Formation
- LLC
- Will
- Franchise and Excise Tax
- Guardianship
- General Durable Power of Attorney
- F&E Tax
- Revocable Trust
- IRS
- PLLC
- LLC Formation
- Tennessee Estate Planning
- Trusts
- Employee Gifts
- Beneficiary Deeds
- RMDs
- FinCEN
- Required Minimum Distributions
- Charitable Donation