Launching a business in Utah involves dozens of interconnected decisions — many of which have permanent financial and tax consequences. Choose the wrong entity structure and you may pay unnecessary self-employment tax for years. Miss the initial payroll registration deadline and you face penalties before your first employee is paid. Skip the EIN application and you cannot open a business bank account.
This checklist walks through every essential step for launching a Utah business, organized by phase: pre-launch planning, legal formation, tax registration, banking and accounting setup, insurance and compliance, and ongoing obligations. Use it as a working guide alongside your CPA and attorney.
Phase 1: Pre-Launch Planning
Define Your Business Model and Revenue Streams
Before any filing or registration, document your business model clearly: what you will sell, to whom, at what price, and how. This clarity drives every downstream decision — entity choice, accounting method, licensing requirements, and initial capital needs.
Choose Your Business Name
- Search the Utah Division of Corporations database at corporations.utah.gov to confirm name availability
- Search the USPTO trademark database for federal trademark conflicts
- Check domain availability for your website
- Reserve the name with the Utah Division of Corporations (optional but recommended)
Select Your Business Entity
This is the most consequential early decision. Your options in Utah:
- Sole Proprietorship: No formal filing required. All income reported on Schedule C. Subject to self-employment tax (15.3%) on all net profit. No liability protection.
- LLC (Limited Liability Company): Filed with the Utah Division of Corporations. Flexible tax treatment (disregarded entity, partnership, or S-Corp election). Personal liability protection. Annual report required.
- S-Corporation: Requires LLC or corporation formation plus IRS Form 2553 election. Reduces self-employment tax for owners who pay themselves reasonable salary. Increases compliance costs (payroll, K-1s).
- C-Corporation: Subject to 21% federal corporate tax. Appropriate for businesses seeking venture capital or planning employee stock options. Double taxation on dividends.
- Partnership/Multi-Member LLC: Two or more owners. Files Form 1065. Income passes through to partners on K-1s.
See our S-Corp vs. LLC guide for the full analysis framework. Our business entity guide explains the tax and liability implications of each structure.
Phase 2: Legal Formation
Register with the Utah Division of Corporations
- File Articles of Organization (LLC) or Articles of Incorporation (corporation) at corporations.utah.gov
- 2024 filing fee: $54 for LLCs, $54 for corporations (online)
- Processing: typically 1–3 business days online
Obtain a Registered Agent
Every Utah business entity must maintain a registered agent — a person or service with a Utah physical address available during business hours to receive legal notices. You can serve as your own registered agent, designate a partner, or use a registered agent service ($50–$150/year).
Draft Governing Documents
- LLC: Operating Agreement — not required by Utah law but essential for defining ownership percentages, profit/loss allocation, voting rights, buyout provisions, and management structure
- Corporation: Bylaws + Shareholder Agreement + initial board resolutions
- Partnership: Partnership Agreement
These documents govern how the business operates and how disputes are resolved. Have an attorney draft or review them.
Obtain an Employer Identification Number (EIN)
Apply at IRS.gov/ein — free, instant online. Required for:
- Opening a business bank account
- Hiring employees
- Filing business tax returns
- Applying for business credit
- Registering with Utah tax authorities
Even single-member LLCs with no employees should obtain an EIN.
Phase 3: Tax Registration
Federal Tax Obligations
- Income Tax: All business income reported on the appropriate return (1040 Schedule C, 1065, 1120-S, or 1120)
- Self-Employment Tax: Sole proprietors and partners pay 15.3% on net earnings; S-Corp owners reduce SE tax through reasonable salary structure
- Estimated Quarterly Taxes: Due April 15, June 16, September 15, January 15 — see our quarterly tax guide
- S-Corp Election: File Form 2553 within 75 days of formation (or by March 15 for the following year) — late elections can sometimes be accepted but require explanation
Utah State Tax Obligations
- Utah TC-69 Business Registration: Register all new Utah businesses at tap.utah.gov — establishes your account with the Utah State Tax Commission
- Utah Income Tax: Flat 4.65% on taxable income — corporations file TC-20, S-Corps file TC-20S, partnerships file TC-65
- Utah Sales Tax: Register if selling taxable goods or taxable services in Utah. Current base rate: 4.85% (varies by county). Register at tap.utah.gov
- Utah Withholding Tax: Register if you will have employees. File quarterly WT-1 withholding returns
Utah Business License
Most Utah cities require a local business license. Kaysville business license applications are filed with the city. Check your municipality’s requirements — fees range from $25 to $200 annually.
Industry-Specific Licenses
Contractors, healthcare providers, financial advisors, real estate agents, food service operators, and other licensed professionals need state-level professional licenses from the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (DOPL). Verify requirements at dopl.utah.gov.
Phase 4: Banking and Accounting Setup
Open a Dedicated Business Bank Account
Never commingle personal and business finances. You need:
- Business checking account (in the business name, using the EIN)
- Business savings account (for tax reserves — set aside 25–30% of every payment)
- Business credit card (builds business credit; keeps expenses categorized)
Required documents: EIN letter from IRS, Articles of Organization/Incorporation, Operating Agreement, owner ID.
Set Up Your Accounting System
Configure cloud accounting software before the first transaction:
- QuickBooks Online: Industry standard; integrates with most banks, payroll providers, and industry apps
- Xero: Strong alternative; excellent bank feeds and reporting
- Wave: Free option for very early-stage businesses with simple needs
Set up your Chart of Accounts to match your industry and tax reporting requirements. Connect your bank accounts for automatic transaction import.
See our bookkeeping basics guide for initial setup guidance.
Establish a Bookkeeping Routine
From day one: record every transaction weekly, reconcile bank accounts monthly, and review your income statement monthly. Most business failures trace back to owners who did not know their numbers until it was too late.
Phase 5: Payroll Setup (If You Have Employees)
Register for Utah Withholding and Unemployment Insurance
- Register for Utah income tax withholding at tap.utah.gov
- Register for Utah Unemployment Insurance (SUI) at jobs.utah.gov/ui — rate assigned after registration, currently ranges from 0.1% to 7.2% depending on industry and claims history
- Register for FUTA (federal unemployment) — 6% on first $7,000 of each employee’s wages, reduced to 0.6% with full Utah SUI payment
Choose a Payroll Provider
Do not process payroll manually. Use a payroll service that handles tax deposits, Form 941 filing, W-2 generation, and year-end reconciliation. Options: Gusto, ADP, Paychex, or a payroll module within QuickBooks or Xero.
Classify Workers Correctly
Each worker must be classified as either an employee or independent contractor before their first day. Misclassification exposes you to back payroll taxes, penalties, and interest. See our W-2 vs. 1099 guide for the IRS test criteria.
Phase 6: Insurance
Required Insurance
- Workers’ Compensation: Required in Utah for any business with one or more employees. Obtain through a private carrier or the State Industrial Commission
- Commercial Auto: Required for vehicles used in business operations
Strongly Recommended Insurance
- General Liability: Protects against third-party bodily injury and property damage claims — often required by landlords and clients
- Professional Liability (E&O): Essential for service businesses — covers claims of negligence, errors, or omissions
- Business Owner’s Policy (BOP): Bundles general liability and commercial property at a discount
- Cyber Liability: Increasingly essential for any business that stores customer data
Phase 7: Ongoing Compliance Calendar
| Obligation | Frequency | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Utah Annual Report (LLC/Corp) | Annual | Anniversary month |
| Federal Estimated Tax Payments | Quarterly | Apr 15, Jun 16, Sep 15, Jan 15 |
| Utah Estimated Tax Payments | Quarterly | Same as federal |
| Federal Payroll Tax Deposits | Semi-weekly or monthly | Per deposit schedule |
| Form 941 (Payroll Tax Return) | Quarterly | Apr 30, Jul 31, Oct 31, Jan 31 |
| Utah Withholding Return (WT-1) | Quarterly | Same as Form 941 |
| Utah Sales Tax Return | Monthly or quarterly | Per permit schedule |
| W-2s and 1099s | Annual | January 31 |
| Federal Income Tax Return | Annual | March 15 (S-Corp/Partnership), April 15 (Individual/C-Corp) |
| Utah Income Tax Return | Annual | Same as federal |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Starting without an operating agreement. Verbal partnerships and handshake deals become costly disputes. Document ownership and decision-making before the first dollar changes hands.
- Using a personal bank account for business. This pierces the LLC liability shield and makes bookkeeping nearly impossible. Open a business account on day one.
- Missing the S-Corp election deadline. The 75-day window from formation closes fast. If S-Corp treatment makes sense for your income level, file Form 2553 immediately upon formation.
- Ignoring estimated tax payments. The first year of self-employment surprises most new business owners with a large April tax bill plus underpayment penalties. Set aside 25–30% of every payment from day one.
- Misclassifying employees as contractors. The cost of reclassification — back taxes, penalties, and interest — routinely exceeds years of payroll tax savings.
How We Help New Utah Businesses
Call (801) 927-1337 or email admin@cpaone.net to schedule a new business consultation. We work with Utah entrepreneurs at the formation stage to ensure the right entity is chosen, tax registrations are complete, accounting systems are configured correctly, and the compliance calendar is set before the first transaction clears.
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.
