LLC vs Corporation: Stop Overthinking It.
For 90% of Georgia small business owners, the LLC wins.
A corporation makes sense if you’re raising venture capital, planning an IPO, or need multiple stock classes. That’s not most people. If you’re a freelancer, consultant, service provider, retailer, real estate investor, or creator — an LLC in Georgia is almost certainly the better choice.
Three reasons. Pass-through taxation: no corporate-level tax, no double taxation (C-Corps pay twice). Flexible management: no mandatory board meetings or shareholder resolutions. Identical liability protection: personal assets shielded from business debts and lawsuits the same way as in a corporation. Simpler, cheaper to maintain, more tax-efficient for most Georgia businesses. Corp Nation’s Starter Package is $149 — filing preparation, registered agent for a year, operating agreement. Up and running in days. Stop researching. Start building.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I form an LLC or corporation in Georgia?
For most small businesses: LLC. Simpler management, pass-through taxation, strong liability protection, lower cost. Corporations make sense for businesses seeking venture capital or planning to go public.
Can a Georgia LLC be taxed like an S-Corp?
Yes. Filing Form 2553 with the IRS lets an LLC elect S-Corp tax treatment while remaining an LLC legally — getting the best of both structures.
What are the main differences between a Georgia LLC and corporation?
LLCs have flexible management, pass-through taxation by default, and simpler compliance. Corporations have rigid structure but offer better options for equity investment and employee stock plans.