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Good morning! Starting a business generates more tax obligations in the first 90 days than most people accumulate in years as an employee. The entity choice, the EIN, the state registrations, the sales tax permits, and the estimated tax schedule. None of it shows up on the formation paperwork your state handed you.
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🚀 Starting a biz in 2026? This nine-digit number needs to happen first.
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🪪 Got your EIN? Cool. Here’s what you still don’t have.
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🗺️ You sold to someone in Texas. Texas may already expect a check.
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📋 Free this week: the tax setup checklist every new business needs in 2026.
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Follow us for even more great tips, tricks, and deadline reminders. Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn
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The Basics
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🚀 Starting a business? The first thing you need isn’t what you think
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Image from Envato
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The Quick & Bristly: Before you open a business bank account, sign a contract, or hire anyone, you need an EIN. It takes 10 minutes, it’s free, and skipping it creates problems that follow you for years.
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Everyone starting a business thinks about the logo, the website, the first sale. Almost nobody thinks about the nine-digit number that makes the whole operation legitimate in the eyes of the federal government. Until they need to open a bank account and the banker asks for it.
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An Employer Identification Number (EIN) is your business’s federal tax ID. Think of it as a Social Security number for your business. You need one before almost anything else happens, and the good news is it takes about 10 minutes to set up and costs exactly nothing.
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You need an EIN to:
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Open a business bank account
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File business tax returns
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Set up payroll if you ever hire
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Work with vendors who require a W-9
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Apply for licenses and permits
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The application is Form SS-4, available at IRS.gov. Apply online and your EIN is issued immediately. No waiting, no fee, no follow-up required.
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One thing to get right before you apply: know your entity type. Your EIN is assigned to your business as structured, and changing your structure later can require a new one. Settle the LLC vs. sole proprietor vs. corporation question first, then get your EIN.
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And if you’ve been using your Social Security number on vendor forms and contracts … stop. An EIN keeps your SSN out of business documents and costs you nothing to get.
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👉 Apply for an EIN on IRS.gov
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PRESENTED BY REMOTE
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Every state has its own employment laws, and none of them care that you’re busy. Remote PEO keeps you compliant in all 50 — handling HR operations, risk management, cost control, and employee benefits without the chaos.
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👉 Book a free consultation
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True or False: If you form your LLC in January and want S-Corp tax treatment for that same year, you have until April 15 to file Form 2553.
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(Find the answer at the end of this newsletter)
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The Deep Dive
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🗺️ Your new business probably owes sales tax in states you’ve never visited
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Image from Evanto
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The Quick & Bristly: Since 2018, selling enough into a state — no office, no employees, no physical presence required — can trigger a sales tax collection obligation. Most new businesses don’t know this. The states absolutely do.
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Before 2018, sales tax was simple. You had a store or warehouse in a state, that state could tax you. You had nothing there, it couldn’t. Then the U.S. Supreme Court decided South Dakota v. Wayfair and rewrote the rules entirely.
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Under economic nexus, the post-Wayfair standard now adopted by nearly every state, the volume of sales you make into a state can create a tax collection obligation regardless of where you or your business are physically located. No office required. No employees required. Just sales.
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Many states set the threshold at $100,000 in sales or 200 transactions in a calendar year. Cross it and the obligation begins. Miss the registration and the liability (plus interest, plus penalties) accumulates silently until a state audit finds it.
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For a new business selling nationally, this is not a future problem. It’s a “now” one.
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A few things worth knowing:
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Physical nexus never went away. Employees, contractors performing work in a state, inventory stored in a fulfillment center (including Amazon FBA warehouses you didn’t choose and can’t control) all create nexus. Amazon decided where your inventory lives. The sales tax obligation exists regardless.
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Services aren’t automatically exempt. A growing number of states tax specific services — data processing, information services, some professional services. Don’t assume you’re clear because you sell services rather than goods.
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Voluntary disclosure exists for a reason. If your business has been operating for a year or more without addressing nexus, most states have programs that let you come forward before they find you, typically with a limited lookback period and reduced penalties. If the state contacts you first, those favorable terms disappear.
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The window for clean compliance is the beginning. For a business in its first year, that window is still open.
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👉 Multistate Tax Commission Voluntary Disclosure Program
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Here’s something your accountant wishes you knew sooner: an LLC can change how you’re taxed. Less self-employment tax. More write-offs. Better structure. Rocket Lawyer sets it up for free so you can stop leaving money on the table.
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👉 Set up your LLC for free
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The Freebie
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🗂️ The tax setup checklist every new business needs in 2026
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Image from Evanto
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Everything in today’s issue, turned into a step-by-step action list. Every registration, deadline and filing obligation, in order, from day one through your first full year.
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Download the free new business tax setup checklist →
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🎙️ Listen: Main Street Business “What Every New LLC Owner Must Do to Avoid Costly Mistakes.” No fluff, no upsell, just the mechanics, explained by two people who have done this with thousands of clients.
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🛠️ Use: The IRS “Starting a Business” Resource Hub. It’s not flashy, but it’s authoritative and current. The IRS has organized every federal requirement for new businesses (EIN application, entity type guidance, tax calendar, employment tax setup, estimated tax instructions) in one place.
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📖 Read: “Sales Tax by State: Economic Nexus Laws.” A clean, current, state-by-state breakdown of every economic nexus threshold in the country. The dollar amounts, the transaction thresholds where they still exist, and how each state measures the lookback period. Updated regularly as state laws change.
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🚀 Sign up: FirstBase.io (sponsored). Incorporation, compliance, bookkeeping, taxes — one dashboard. Less adulting, more building.
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Answer: ❌ False!
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The S-Corp election deadline for a new entity is within 75 days of formation, not the April 15 tax deadline. For an LLC formed January 1, that window closes around March 17. Miss it, and your S-Corp election applies to the following tax year at the earliest, unless you qualify for late election relief under Revenue Procedure 2013-30, which requires a reasonable cause statement and is not guaranteed. The deadline is strict and arrives faster than most new business owners expect.
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