Corp Nation · Rhode Island LLC Guide · 2026
Rhode Island LLC vs Corporation: Which Is Right for Your Business?
LLC vs Corporation in Rhode Island — comparing liability protection, tax treatment, management structure, and formation costs so you can choose the right entity.
The Bottom Line for Rhode Island
LLC vs Corporation in Rhode Island — comparing liability protection, tax treatment, management structure, and formation costs so you can choose the right entity. When you’re ready to move, Corp Nation handles the entire filing — Articles of Organization, registered agent, operating agreement — so your Rhode Island LLC is set up correctly from day one.
The Rhode Island state fee is $150 and standard processing runs 7-10 days. Corp Nation’s service fee is $149 flat, registered agent included for the first year.
What Corp Nation Does for You
- Prepares and files your Rhode Island Articles of Organization — correctly, the first time
- Registered agent service included — Rhode Island address requirement handled
- Custom operating agreement drafted and delivered with every package
- EIN (Federal Tax ID) filing available as an add-on
- BOI report filing available — federal requirement, serious penalties if missed
- You’re notified the moment your Rhode Island LLC is approved by the state
Form Your Rhode Island LLC Today
$150 Rhode Island state fee + $149 Corp Nation service fee. Registered agent included.
Get Started →Frequently Asked Questions
Should I form an LLC or corporation in Rhode Island?
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 Rhode Island 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 Rhode Island 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.