
One of the most common questions new entrepreneurs ask is:
“When should I actually set up an LLC?”
Many business owners wait until they’re “making real money.”
Others wait until they have employees.
Some wait until tax season.
But in reality, the right time is usually much earlier.
From the discussion:
“The day that you’re really serious about performing services for people and trying to make revenue—that’s the right time.”
At FJ & Associates, we work with entrepreneurs across Kaysville, Layton, Roy, Farmington, Riverdale, and Ogden who are building businesses from the ground up. And one of the most valuable things new business owners can do early is create a proper legal and financial foundation.
That foundation often starts with an LLC.
Why Many Business Owners Wait Too Long
New entrepreneurs often think LLC setup is complicated, expensive, or unnecessary in the beginning.
So instead, they:
- Start accepting payments personally
- Run expenses through personal accounts
- Delay formal registration
- Mix business and personal finances
At first, it feels easier.
But over time, that lack of structure creates complications for:
- Taxes
- Bookkeeping
- Liability protection
- Financial organization
- Long-term growth
Why Setting Up an LLC Early Makes Life Easier
From the transcript:
“It’s gonna make your life so much easier.”
That’s absolutely true.
An LLC helps establish separation between you and your business from day one.
That means:
- Separate business banking
- Cleaner bookkeeping
- Better expense tracking
- More professional operations
- Easier tax planning later
Even before major revenue begins flowing, creating that separation matters.
The Importance of Separate Accounts
One of the strongest recommendations from the discussion was setting up:
- A business bank account
- A business credit card
immediately after forming the LLC.
This step is critical.
Without separate accounts, business owners often:
- Mix personal and business expenses
- Lose track of deductions
- Create bookkeeping headaches
- Increase audit risk
Separation creates clarity.
And clarity creates better financial decisions.
Why LLCs Matter Beyond Liability Protection
Most people associate LLCs with liability protection—and that’s important.
From the transcript:
“It does offer some protections…”
But LLCs also create tax flexibility later.
That’s one of the most overlooked advantages.
Establishing the LLC early allows business owners to:
- Build financial history
- Track profitability properly
- Transition to future entity structures
- Improve tax outcomes as revenue grows
The LLC becomes the foundation you can build on.
Why Early Structure Creates Better Tax Strategy
Another important point from the discussion was this:
“When money starts to really flow… you can make adjustments from a tax perspective.”
That’s key.
Many business owners wait until they’re highly profitable before thinking about tax structure.
But proactive business owners prepare early so they can pivot smoothly later.
For example, as income increases, a business may eventually benefit from:
- S Corporation elections
- Advanced tax planning
- Payroll structuring
- Retirement strategies
- Long-term entity optimization
Starting with an LLC makes those future transitions much easier.
A Real Example: Contractor in Layton, Utah
We worked with a contractor in Layton who initially started operating informally.
Revenue came in quickly, but everything flowed through personal accounts.
When we stepped in, we helped:
- Form the LLC properly
- Open separate business accounts
- Organize bookkeeping systems
- Create cleaner expense tracking
The biggest benefit wasn’t immediate tax savings.
It was creating a scalable financial foundation before the business became more complex.
Why Seriousness Is the Real Decision Point
One of the most practical insights from the discussion was this:
“Once you reach that decision point… that’s the right time.”
Not when you hit a revenue number.
Not when tax season arrives.
The moment you’re serious about offering services and building revenue consistently—that’s when structure should begin.
Because systems are always easier to build early than to fix later.
How FJ & Associates Helps New Business Owners
At FJ & Associates, we help entrepreneurs establish businesses correctly from the beginning.
We assist with:
- LLC guidance
- Tax structure planning
- Bookkeeping systems
- Business banking setup
- Ongoing advisory support
- Entity optimization as businesses grow
Because starting correctly creates flexibility later.
Key Takeaways
The best time to set up an LLC is usually earlier than most business owners think.
Creating structure early improves bookkeeping, tax planning, financial organization, and long-term scalability.
An LLC isn’t just about protection—it’s about building the right foundation for future growth.
FAQs
1. When should I form an LLC?
As soon as you become serious about operating a business and generating revenue.
2. Is an LLC expensive to set up?
Typically, no. The cost is relatively low compared to the long-term benefits.
3. Why should I separate business and personal accounts?
It improves bookkeeping, simplifies taxes, and reduces financial confusion.
4. Does an LLC reduce taxes automatically?
Not necessarily, but it creates flexibility for future tax strategies.
5. Can I change my entity structure later?
Yes. Many businesses evolve from LLCs into other structures as they grow.
6. Why do business owners regret waiting too long?
Because fixing mixed finances and disorganized records later is much harder than starting correctly.
7. What should I set up immediately after forming an LLC?
A business bank account, business credit card, and bookkeeping system.
Author Bio
Missy Dennis, CPA
Partner | FJ & Associates, PLLC | Kaysville, Utah
Missy holds a Master of Accounting degree from the University of Utah and is a licensed Certified Public Accountant.
She is committed to providing clear, accurate, and actionable guidance so clients can navigate complex financial decisions with confidence.
With more than twenty years of public accounting experience, Missy Dennis specializes in:
- Tax preparation and tax advisory
- Bookkeeping strategy alignment
- Estate and trust taxation
- Audit and consulting services
- Low-income housing tax credits
- Non-profit accounting
- Small- and mid-sized business advisory

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