In this guide
An LLC is not legally required to start dropshipping. You can operate as a sole proprietor from day one, and many sellers do exactly that while validating their first products. The real question isn't whether it's required, it's when the liability protection and tax flexibility an LLC offers become worth the paperwork.
LLC vs sole proprietor: when to make the switch
As a sole proprietor, there's no legal separation between your business and personal assets, which means a business liability (a lawsuit, a large unpaid debt) can reach your personal finances. An LLC creates that separation. Most guidance points to switching once you have consistent revenue rather than forming an LLC before you've validated your first product.
Note
Forming an LLC before you have a validated, selling product is common advice to avoid, but not universal. If personal liability exposure worries you specifically, forming earlier is a reasonable trade of a small upfront cost for peace of mind.
Tax obligations most new sellers get wrong
- Self-employment tax: sole proprietors and single-member LLC owners pay 15.3% SE tax (12.4% Social Security on the first $168,600 of net earnings, plus 2.9% Medicare) on top of regular income tax.
- Sales tax nexus: each state sets its own threshold for when you must collect sales tax (commonly around $100,000 in annual sales to that state), and you need to register separately in each state where you cross it.
- S-Corp election: becomes worth considering once net profit exceeds roughly $50,000/year, since it lets you split income between salary (taxed) and distributions (not subject to SE tax).
Deductions and setup steps
Common deductible expenses include product costs, shipping and packaging, software subscriptions (Shopify, research tools, apps), advertising spend, a portion of home office and internet costs, and professional services like an accountant.
- 1
Get an EIN
Free from the IRS online or by mailing Form SS-4. Required by all 50 states to form an LLC, and useful even as a sole proprietor to avoid using your personal SSN on business paperwork.
- 2
Decide sole proprietor vs LLC
Sole proprietor to start and validate products is common; form an LLC once revenue is consistent or liability exposure genuinely concerns you.
- 3
Track sales by state
Once any state's threshold is crossed, register for a sales tax permit there and begin collecting.
- 4
Set aside for self-employment tax
Budget roughly 15.3% of net profit for SE tax alone, on top of regular income tax, so quarterly estimated payments don't come as a surprise.
Key takeaways
- An LLC is not legally required to dropship; most sellers start as sole proprietors and form an LLC once revenue is consistent.
- Self-employment tax (15.3%) applies to sole proprietors and single-member LLC owners alike, on top of income tax.
- Sales tax nexus thresholds are set per state (commonly around $100,000/year); track sales by state and register once you cross a threshold.
- An EIN is free from the IRS and required for LLC formation in every state.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Operating as a sole proprietor is legal in every US state; you'll still owe the same income and self-employment taxes, but without the liability separation or S-Corp tax flexibility an LLC can offer.