Get Your Federal EIN / Tax ID Number Online
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Limited Liability Company
For businesses registered as an LLC with their state
Most PopularSole Proprietor / Individual
For individuals operating a business without formal registration
Estate of Deceased Individual
For managing the assets and affairs of a deceased person
Trust
For fiduciary arrangements that manage assets on behalf of beneficiaries
Non-Profit Organization
For organizations seeking or holding tax-exempt status
Corporation
For businesses incorporated as a C-Corporation
Partnership
For General, Limited (LP), or Limited Liability Partnerships (LLP/LLLP)
S-Corporation
For businesses with S-Corp tax election status
Church Organization
For religious organizations formally established as legal entities
Personal Service Corporation
For professional service providers (health, law, accounting, consulting)
EIN Federal Tax ID
1 Select your entity and fill out our simple form
Skip the confusing government forms. Our streamlined application takes just minutes to complete.
2 We review and submit your application to the IRS
Our team checks for errors and handles any issues directly with the IRS so you don't have to.
3 Get your EIN and launch your business
Receive your Tax ID via email with instant access to your documents through our client portal.
Not Sure Which Business Entity to Select?
Limited Liability Company
LLCs combine the simplicity of a sole proprietorship with the protection of a corporation. You form one by registering with your state, and from there you have flexibility in how you run things. Ownership is open to individuals, companies, and even foreign investors with no cap on how many can join.
What makes LLCs attractive is the liability shield—your personal assets stay protected if the business faces legal trouble. Plus, you get to pick how you’re taxed: as a pass-through entity or as a corporation.
Sole Proprietor / Individual
This is the default structure when you earn money on your own without forming a business entity. Consultants, Uber drivers, Etsy sellers, freelance designers—if you’re working for yourself without an LLC or corporation, you’re a sole proprietor.
It also covers individuals who employ domestic workers like housekeepers or in-home caregivers.
Estate of Deceased Individual
When someone dies, their assets don’t just disappear—they’re held in an Estate until everything is sorted out. The Estate pays off any remaining bills, taxes, and debts, then passes what’s left to family members or whoever is named in the will.
An EIN is needed to manage the estate’s finances during this process.
Trust
Trusts let you set rules for how your assets are managed and distributed, often used to provide for family members or protect wealth across generations. A Trustee oversees everything according to the terms you set.
Revocable Trusts give you control to make changes anytime. Irrevocable Trusts lock things in permanently but come with tax benefits and stronger asset protection.
Non-Profit Organization
Non-Profits exist to serve a mission rather than make money for owners. Think charities, youth programs, HOAs, alumni associations, or advocacy groups. If the IRS grants tax-exempt status, donations may be deductible for contributors.
The key requirement: any revenue must go back into the organization’s purpose, not into anyone’s pocket.
Corporation
The classic corporate structure—a C-Corp is its own legal person. It can own property, enter contracts, sue and be sued, all separate from whoever owns shares. That separation is what gives shareholders maximum protection from business liabilities.
C-Corps can bring in unlimited investors, issue multiple stock classes, and scale without structural limits. It’s the go-to for businesses planning to raise significant capital.
Partnership
When two or more people go into business together without incorporating, they have a Partnership. Everyone contributes something—money, skills, labor—and shares in the profits and losses.
Structures range from General Partnerships where everyone’s equally on the hook, to LPs and LLPs that let some partners limit their exposure while others handle day-to-day operations.
S-Corporation
S-Corps start as regular corporations but file an election with the IRS to change how they’re taxed. Instead of the company paying taxes and then shareholders paying again on dividends, profits flow straight to owners’ personal returns.
You get corporate liability protection without the double-tax hit. Popular with small business owners, physicians, and professional service firms.
Church Organization
Religious institutions—whether a church, mosque, temple, or ministry—can apply for an EIN as a Church Organization. The IRS treats these differently from other non-profits, with specific criteria around worship services, established beliefs, and organizational structure.
If your religious group operates as a formal entity with regular gatherings and defined leadership, this is your category.
Personal Service Corporation
This structure is built for licensed professionals—doctors, lawyers, accountants, architects, engineers, and consultants who incorporate their practice. The defining feature: employees who do the actual professional work must own most of the stock.
It’s a way to get corporate benefits while keeping the business centered on specialized expertise.
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