Startup Legal Launch Checklist (Missouri)
The legal moves that protect a Missouri startup from day one, from choosing an entity to locking down founder ownership, intellectual property, hiring, and financing. Built for founders and student builders. Educational, not legal advice.
Educational guide · Last reviewed June 17, 2026
Most startup legal problems are cheap to prevent and expensive to fix. A missing founder agreement, intellectual property that never made it into the company, or a “friends and family” check that quietly broke securities law can all surface years later, usually right when an investor or acquirer is reading your paperwork. This checklist walks through the early decisions that keep a Missouri startup clean, in plain English.
Student founders, this one is for you too. A company you build in college can be very real, and so can a university policy that claims a piece of what you invent. We flag the student-specific traps throughout, and there is a section just for you below.
1. Choose an entity on purpose
Your first real decision is legal structure. In Missouri, you form a company by filing with the Missouri Secretary of State, and the two common startup choices are an LLC or a corporation. An LLC is flexible and inexpensive, governed by an operating agreement under Chapter 347 of the Missouri Revised Statutes, and it can be taxed several ways. A corporation is more standardized, which is what venture investors and stock-option plans expect.
The rule of thumb: if you plan to bootstrap or stay closely held, a Missouri LLC is usually the cleaner start. If you intend to raise venture capital, issue stock options, or take on many investors, founders often choose a C-corporation, frequently a Delaware C-corp that registers to do business in Missouri. “S corporation,” by the way, is a federal tax election with the IRS, not a separate entity, and its ownership limits make it a poor fit for most venture-track startups. For the full breakdown, see our Missouri business entity selection guide.
2. Get founder terms in writing before you build
The most dangerous phrase in a startup is “we will figure out the equity later.” Put it in writing while everyone still likes each other:
- Who owns what percentage, and why.
- Vesting, so equity is earned over time instead of walking out the door if a cofounder leaves in month three.
- Roles, titles, and who can actually sign contracts and spend money.
- What happens if a founder quits, is removed, dies, or becomes unable to work.
- How decisions get made when founders disagree.
Without vesting, a cofounder who leaves early can keep a large slice of the company forever. That single gap has sunk more fundraises than any weak pitch deck. Investors will ask about it, so handle it up front.
3. Put the intellectual property in the company’s name
Investors and buyers care less about your idea than about whether the company actually owns it. Every founder, employee, and contractor who touches the product should sign an agreement assigning their work and inventions to the company. If the IP lives in a founder’s personal accounts or a contractor’s laptop, you do not really own your own product. Protect the brand early by searching and, where appropriate, registering trademarks with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and keep a written record of who created what.
4. Hire without creating landmines
Early teams blur the line between contractors and employees, and getting it wrong creates tax and wage liability. The IRS test for worker classification turns on control, not on what you call the person. Use written offer letters or contractor agreements, confirm classification, and make sure every worker assigns IP and agrees to confidentiality.
5. Get financing-ready, and respect securities law
When you raise money, you are almost always selling securities, even in a small friends-and-family round. Startups commonly use SAFEs (simple agreements for future equity) or convertible notes early, then priced equity rounds later. These rely on exemptions from registration under federal and state law; the SEC’s exempt-offerings resources are a good starting point. The takeaway: a casual “invest in my startup” text to twenty people can create real legal exposure, so get the structure reviewed before you take a dollar.
6. Register for taxes and get your EIN
Before you open a bank account or pay anyone, get a free Employer Identification Number from the IRS. If you will sell taxable goods, hire employees, or owe Missouri business taxes, register with the Missouri Department of Revenue. Keep business and personal money completely separate from the first transaction, or the liability shield you paid for can be ignored.
The launch checklist
- Pick an entity that matches your funding plan, and form it with the Missouri Secretary of State.
- Adopt an operating agreement, or bylaws and a shareholder agreement.
- Document founder ownership, vesting, and roles.
- Sign IP-assignment and confidentiality agreements with everyone who builds.
- Classify workers correctly and use written agreements.
- Get an EIN and any required Missouri tax registrations.
- Open a dedicated business bank account.
- Have financing documents reviewed before you raise.
LLC or C-corporation for a Missouri startup?
| Factor | Missouri LLC | C-corporation |
|---|---|---|
| Setup and upkeep | Lower cost, flexible; operating agreement governs. | More formal: board, stock, bylaws, reports. |
| Raising venture capital | Possible but unusual; investors often ask you to convert. | Expected structure for priced rounds and funds. |
| Employee stock options | Awkward to grant. | Built for option pools. |
| Taxes | Flexible; pass-through by default. | Entity-level tax; fits investor expectations. |
| Often fits | Bootstrapped, closely held product or service startups. | Venture-track startups planning to raise and grant equity. |
This is a starting point, not a verdict. The right answer depends on your funding plans, ownership, and tax goals.
Special notes for student founders
If you are a college or graduate student in Missouri, a few extra issues deserve attention:
- University IP policies. Many schools claim rights to inventions made with significant use of university resources, lab space, or funding. Read your school’s IP and entrepreneurship policy before you build on campus, and ask the tech-transfer or entrepreneurship office where the line is.
- Accelerator and competition terms. Pitch competitions and campus accelerators sometimes take equity or a license. Read the fine print before you sign.
- Equity among classmates. Splitting a company with friends feels easy until someone graduates and moves away. Vesting and a founder agreement matter even more here.
- International students. Visa status can limit your ability to work for, or be paid by, your own company. Check with your international student office before drawing a salary.
Forming a company as a student is completely legal, and most schools encourage it. You just want to form it cleanly, so the company, not your dorm, owns the product.
Frequently asked questions
If you plan to bootstrap or stay closely held, a Missouri LLC is usually simpler and cheaper. If you plan to raise venture capital or grant stock options, a C-corporation is the expected structure. The right choice depends on your funding plans and ownership.
Yes. Students can form and own companies in Missouri. The main extra steps are checking your university’s intellectual property policy and, for international students, confirming visa rules before you draw a salary.
It depends on your school’s policy and how much you used university resources, funding, or lab space. Many schools claim rights to inventions made with significant institutional resources, so read the policy and ask the tech-transfer office before building on campus.
Usually before you take money, sign meaningful contracts, hire anyone, or build shared IP with cofounders. Forming early keeps ownership and liability clean.
A small round is still a securities offering, so it should be structured to fit an exemption. Having the documents reviewed before you accept money is far cheaper than fixing an improper raise later.
Vesting means founders earn their equity over time instead of owning it all immediately. It protects the company if a cofounder leaves early, and investors usually expect it.
Get a free EIN from the IRS before opening a bank account or paying anyone. Register with the Missouri Department of Revenue if you will collect sales tax, hire employees, or owe state business taxes.
Launching a company in Missouri?
Get formation, founder terms, IP assignment, and financing documents handled before they become expensive. No attorney-client relationship is formed until conflicts are cleared and an engagement agreement is signed.