Missouri Business Entity Selection Guide
A practical legal and tax framework for entrepreneurs and professional practices. Educational, pre-consultation guidance, not legal advice.
Educational guide · Last reviewed June 16, 2026
Choosing a Missouri business entity is really three decisions wrapped together: your legal structure, your tax classification, and how you want the company to operate day to day. Missouri recognizes several common forms for small businesses and professional practices, each with distinct tradeoffs between setup simplicity and long-term protection.
Separate legal form from practical operations. There is no single always-best entity; the right choice depends on your specific liability exposure, ownership plans, tax goals, and operational capacity.
Start with four questions
Before comparing entities, answer these four. Your answers point directly to the most suitable structure.
- Liability exposure. How much personal risk will your operations generate? Employees, a physical location, or large contracts call for a robust shield like an LLC or corporation.
- Tax, now and later. How do you want the business taxed today versus three years from now? LLCs offer the most flexibility to change classification as revenue grows.
- Ownership and control. Who will own the business, and how are decisions made? Corporations suit stock-based ownership; LLCs allow highly customized management.
- Management and admin. What administrative burden can you realistically carry? Corporations require formal board meetings and reports; LLCs demand less.
Most small-business owners find the LLC strikes the best balance across all four: real liability protection, tax flexibility, simple management, and low overhead.
Entity comparison at a glance
| Entity | Formation & filing | Liability shield | Default tax treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sole proprietorship | No Secretary of State filing; register a fictitious name if needed ($7). | None; the owner is personally liable. | Flows directly to the owner’s personal return. |
| General partnership | No SOS filing; arises automatically through co-ownership. | None; partners are jointly liable. | Passes through to partners (Form MO-1065). |
| LLC | Articles of Organization with the SOS ($50 online / $105 paper). | Full personal liability shield. | Flexible: default pass-through, or elect corporate / S-corp. |
| Corporation | Articles of Incorporation with the SOS ($58+). | Shareholders insulated from corporate debts. | C-corp by default; Missouri corporate tax is 4%. |
| S corporation (election) | Federal election via IRS Form 2553 on an eligible LLC or corporation. | Shield comes from the underlying LLC or corporation. | Pass-through (Form MO-1120S). |
| Professional corporation | Chapter 356; requires certification from your licensing authority. | Shield exists, but malpractice stays personal. | Corporate default unless an S-election is made. |
| Nonprofit corporation | Chapter 355; SOS filing ($25). | No owner distributions. | Tax-exempt only after a separate IRS application. |
| Foreign entity | Certificate of Authority to register an out-of-state entity ($105 to $155). | Shield carries over from the home state. | Subject to tax on Missouri-source income. |
Filing fees are set by the Missouri Secretary of State and other agencies and are subject to change; confirm current amounts before filing.
LLCs in Missouri
A Missouri LLC is formed by filing Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State. The articles must include the LLC name, the registered office and registered agent, whether management is vested in members or managers, dissolution terms, and organizer information. The LLC exists when the articles are filed, or on a stated later effective date.
Liability. Missouri is favorable to LLC owners: a member or manager is not liable, solely by reason of that status, for the LLC’s debts or obligations. Owners can still be liable for their own torts, personal guarantees, payroll-tax issues, or situations where a court disregards the entity because personal and business assets were mixed.
Management and flexibility. Missouri is contract-friendly. The statute directs members to adopt an operating agreement and gives maximum effect to freedom of contract. Written or oral agreements are recognized; written is far safer.
Tax options. By default the IRS treats a single-member LLC as disregarded and a multi-member LLC as a partnership. An eligible LLC can also elect S-corp status using IRS Form 2553, without first filing Form 8832.
Skipping the operating agreement because there is only one owner; assuming an LLC automatically makes the business an S corporation; and mixing personal and business money or signing contracts under the wrong name.
Corporations and S corporations
A Missouri for-profit corporation is formed by filing Articles of Incorporation. It keeps a registered agent, is managed by a board of directors, and must have at least a president and a secretary; Missouri expressly allows a single shareholder. Shareholders are generally insulated from corporate debts except to the extent of unpaid share consideration. Missouri also recognizes close corporations, which can relax traditional formalities if elected in the articles and there are fifty or fewer shareholders.
The S-corporation election. An S corp is not a Missouri entity type; it is a federal tax election made with the IRS by an eligible corporation or LLC. Missouri generally requires Form MO-1120S where there is a Missouri-resident shareholder or Missouri-source income. Eligibility is strict: no more than 100 shareholders, only permitted shareholder types, and a single class of stock. S corps must run a formal W-2 payroll and pay reasonable compensation to shareholder-employees before non-wage distributions.
Missouri corporations must file annual or biennial registration reports. Failure to file can lead to administrative dissolution or revocation of authority by the Secretary of State.
Professional and nonprofit corporations
Professional corporations (Chapter 356). One or more licensed individuals may incorporate to render the same professional service. The articles require a certification from the relevant licensing authority before issuance, and annual reports require additional licensure disclosures. Eligible professions include attorneys, accountants, architects, engineers, dentists, physicians, psychologists, veterinarians, registered nurses, and physical therapists. The corporation shields ordinary business liabilities, but personal malpractice liability remains.
Nonprofit corporations (Chapter 355). Missouri nonprofits designate themselves as public benefit or mutual benefit, identify a registered agent, and state whether they will have members.
Incorporating as a nonprofit does not by itself create federal or state tax exemption. Federal recognition requires a separate IRS application, and Missouri sales/use-tax exemption requires Form 1746 with the Department of Revenue.
Partnerships, sole proprietorships, and the LLP option
These default structures need minimal setup but carry real personal risk. A sole proprietorship is the default when you do business without a separate entity: cheap and simple, with no shield between personal and business assets. A general partnership arises when two or more people carry on a business for profit as co-owners; all partners are generally jointly and severally liable.
Missouri offers a practical middle ground: a limited liability partnership (LLP). A general partnership may elect LLP status to limit partner liability for many partnership debts, though a partner remains responsible for their own negligence or wrongful acts.
Foreign entities and “transacting business”
In law, “foreign” does not mean international. A foreign entity is simply a business formed under another state’s laws that then registers to operate in Missouri. A domestic entity is formed in Missouri first, which is simpler and cheaper if your operations and owners are based here. Foreign registration grants authority to transact business locally; it does not create a new company.
Whether you are “transacting business” is fact-specific. Missouri lists safe harbors that, by themselves, do not count, including maintaining bank accounts or holding internal meetings, defending lawsuits or securing debts, and conducting isolated transactions completed within 30 days.
A foreign entity that should have registered, but did not, loses the right to maintain proceedings in Missouri courts until it qualifies, a serious and avoidable vulnerability.
Common pairings and transitions
Two upgrades come up constantly. A sole proprietorship and a single-member LLC are taxed identically, but the LLC adds the personal liability shield the proprietorship lacks. A general partnership and a multi-member LLC share pass-through tax treatment, but the LLC removes the joint-and-several personal liability that partners otherwise carry.
Common setup mistakes
- Mixing personal and business funds. Commingling is the fastest way to “pierce the corporate veil.” Pay personal bills from the business account, or the reverse, and a court can strip away your liability protection.
- Skipping the operating agreement. A single-member LLC without one can look like a sole proprietorship to a court; multi-member LLCs without one are exposed to partner deadlocks.
- Using the wrong name on contracts. Signing in your personal name, rather than the exact registered name of the entity, can bind you personally. Sign as an authorized representative (for example, “Your Name, Manager”).
Correcting these after a dispute or audit is often impossible. Separate banking, a written operating agreement, and correct signing habits from day one are the cheapest legal insurance you can buy.
Missouri filing fees, quick reference
- LLC, Articles of Organization (online)$50
- LLC, Articles of Organization (paper)$105
- Corporation, Articles of Incorporation$58+
- Nonprofit, Articles of Incorporation$25
- Foreign entity, Certificate of Authority$105 to $155
- Fictitious (DBA) name registration$7
Fees are set by the Missouri Secretary of State and are subject to change; verify current amounts before filing.
Frequently asked questions
No. An LLC offers flexibility and lower friction, but a corporation can fit better for stock-based ownership, outside investors, or a more traditional governance structure.
No. Liability protection comes from the underlying LLC or corporation. S corporation is a federal tax election with the IRS, not a Missouri entity type.
Yes. Missouri allows single-member LLCs, and the IRS generally treats them as disregarded for federal income tax unless they elect otherwise.
Not to create them. But using a name other than your true name generally requires a fictitious name filing, and separate tax registrations may still apply.
Not necessarily. If the out-of-state entity transacts business in Missouri, foreign registration may be required, along with a Missouri registered agent and any tax accounts.
Primary sources and further reading: the Missouri Secretary of State, the Missouri Revisor of Statutes (Chapters 347 and 351), and the IRS.
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