Whether your business needs an EIN depends on your business structure, whether you have employees, and certain business activities. This guide helps you determine if you’re required to have an EIN—and whether you should get one even if you’re not.
When an EIN Is Required
The IRS requires businesses to have an EIN in specific situations. If any of these apply to you, an EIN is mandatory.
You Have Employees
If you pay wages to employees, you must have an EIN. This applies to:
- Full-time employees
- Part-time employees
- Seasonal workers
- Household employees (nannies, housekeepers) above certain thresholds
Why required: You need an EIN to file employment tax returns (Form 941), issue W-2 forms, and withhold payroll taxes.
You Operate as a Corporation
All corporations must have an EIN, regardless of whether they have employees.
Includes:
- C-Corporations
- S-Corporations
- Professional corporations
- Nonprofit corporations
Why required: Corporations are separate legal entities that file their own tax returns.
You Operate as a Partnership
All partnerships must have an EIN.
Includes:
- General partnerships
- Limited partnerships (LPs)
- Limited liability partnerships (LLPs)
- Multi-member LLCs (taxed as partnerships)
Why required: Partnerships file Form 1065 and issue K-1s to partners.
You File Certain Tax Returns
An EIN is required if your business files:
- Employment tax returns (Form 941, 940)
- Excise tax returns
- Alcohol, tobacco, or firearms tax returns
You Withhold Taxes on Non-Resident Aliens
If you pay income to non-resident aliens and must withhold taxes, you need an EIN.
You Have a Keogh Plan
Keogh retirement plans require an EIN for plan administration.
You’re Involved with Certain Trusts
Trusts created as a result of death or funded require EINs. This includes estates of deceased persons.
You’re a Nonprofit Organization
Tax-exempt organizations need EINs to apply for and maintain exempt status.
When an EIN Is Not Required
Technically, an EIN is not required in certain situations.
Sole Proprietors Without Employees
If you operate as a sole proprietor and don’t have employees, you can use your Social Security Number (SSN) instead of an EIN.
Examples:
- Freelance writer with no employees
- Independent consultant
- Etsy seller operating personally
Single-Member LLCs Without Employees
Single-member LLCs are “disregarded entities” for tax purposes. If you don’t have employees, you can use your SSN.
However: See below for why you should still get an EIN.
You Should Get an EIN Even If Not Required
Even when not legally required, getting an EIN is strongly recommended for several reasons.
Banks Often Require EINs
Most banks require an EIN to open a business checking account, even for sole proprietorships and single-member LLCs.
Reality check: “Can legally use SSN” doesn’t mean you practically can.
Identity Protection
Every time you provide your SSN for business purposes, you increase identity theft risk.
With SSN: Clients, vendors, and banks all have your personal identifier With EIN: Business contacts have a separate number
Business Credit
Building business credit requires an EIN. Credit bureaus (Dun & Bradstreet, Experian Business) track business credit using EINs.
Using SSN: No business credit history builds Using EIN: Separate business credit profile develops
Professionalism
Providing an EIN on W-9 forms and business applications appears more professional than using an SSN.
Future Flexibility
If you ever:
- Hire an employee
- Add a partner
- Convert to a corporation
You’ll need an EIN. Getting one now avoids scrambling later.
EIN Requirements by Business Type
Sole Proprietorship
| Situation | EIN Required? |
|---|---|
| No employees | No (but recommended) |
| Has employees | Yes |
| Files excise taxes | Yes |
| Has Keogh plan | Yes |
Single-Member LLC
| Situation | EIN Required? |
|---|---|
| No employees | No (but recommended) |
| Has employees | Yes |
| Elects corporate taxation | Yes |
Multi-Member LLC
| Situation | EIN Required? |
|---|---|
| Any situation | Yes |
Multi-member LLCs are taxed as partnerships and always need EINs.
Corporation
| Situation | EIN Required? |
|---|---|
| Any situation | Yes |
All corporations need EINs.
Partnership
| Situation | EIN Required? |
|---|---|
| Any situation | Yes |
All partnerships need EINs.
Nonprofit
| Situation | EIN Required? |
|---|---|
| Any situation | Yes |
Nonprofits need EINs to apply for tax-exempt status.
Common Questions by Scenario
“I’m a freelancer working from home”
Required? No (assuming no employees and operating as sole proprietor)
Should you get one? Yes—for bank accounts, identity protection, and professionalism.
“I just formed an LLC”
Required? Yes, if multi-member. No if single-member without employees.
Should you get one? Yes—your bank will likely require it anyway.
“I’m starting a small Etsy shop”
Required? No, if operating personally without employees.
Should you get one? Consider it for identity protection, especially once revenue grows.
“I’m incorporating my business”
Required? Yes—all corporations need EINs.
When to apply: Apply for your EIN right after incorporation.
“I’m hiring my first employee”
Required? Yes—you cannot process payroll without an EIN.
Timing: Get your EIN before your employee’s first paycheck.
“I’m a landlord with rental properties”
Required? Depends on structure. If properties are in an LLC, probably yes.
Should you get one? Yes—keeps rental income separate from personal.
How to Decide: The Simple Test
Ask yourself these questions:
1. Do you have employees?
- Yes → EIN required
2. Are you a corporation or partnership?
- Yes → EIN required
3. Are you a sole proprietor or single-member LLC with no employees?
- Not required, but strongly recommended
4. Will you open a business bank account?
- Bank likely requires EIN
5. Do you want to protect your SSN?
- Get an EIN
Getting Your EIN
If you’ve determined you need (or want) an EIN, applying is free and fast.
Online: irs.gov (immediate) Fax: Form SS-4 (4 business days) Mail: Form SS-4 (4-5 weeks)
The online application takes about 15 minutes and provides your EIN immediately.
Florida-Specific Considerations
Florida businesses may need additional registrations beyond an EIN:
| Registration | Purpose | Who Needs It |
|---|---|---|
| EIN | Federal tax ID | Most businesses |
| Florida Sales Tax Number | Sales tax collection | Businesses selling taxable goods/services |
| Reemployment Tax Account | Unemployment insurance | Employers |
| Professional License | Industry regulation | Licensed professions |
Your EIN is required for most of these state registrations.
Get Your EIN With Confidence
Not sure if you need an EIN or how to apply? Critical Compliance Services helps Florida businesses determine their requirements and handles EIN applications.
We provide:
- Requirement assessment
- EIN application filing
- State registration guidance
- Ongoing compliance support
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I operate a business without an EIN?
Some businesses can legally use the owner’s SSN. However, practical requirements (bank accounts, vendor relationships) often make an EIN necessary.
What happens if I should have an EIN but don’t?
You may face difficulties filing taxes, opening accounts, or paying employees. Get an EIN as soon as possible.
Can I get an EIN before my business is fully operational?
Yes. You can apply for an EIN as soon as your business entity exists. Many apply immediately after forming their LLC or corporation.
Does having an EIN change my tax obligations?
No. An EIN is an identification number. Your tax obligations depend on your business structure and activities, not the EIN itself.
How many EINs can I have?
Each separate business entity needs its own EIN. You can have multiple EINs if you have multiple businesses.