Beth Ellyn McClendon: If you want investors, skip LLCs and form a C-Corp
May 11, 2018 | Beth Ellyn McClendon
Editor’s note: Beth Ellyn McClendon is a seed-stage investor with board and advisory board experience. She previously worked in design and product management for Google Mapping, Android, YouTube, Cisco and Netscape. The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.
So, you’re planning a startup, you’ve got a good lawyer and now you’re thinking about how to incorporate your business.
If you’re just starting out, it’s tempting to go for the flexibility and simplicity of an LLC. But if you plan to raise venture capital, forming a C-Corporation may be a better place to start.
In simple terms, if you incorporate as an LLC, your startup doesn’t pay taxes. The profits and losses “pass-through” the business to you and are reported on your personal tax return. If there are several co-owners, or “members,” the LLC generates a K-1 tax form for every member, listing the profits and losses that need to be reported.
If you’re a founder, that sounds great — straightforward and simple. But if you’re an active startup investor, it probably adds more complications than it’s worth.
Investing in a C-Corp startup generally creates only one tax event for an investor and it isn’t triggered until the investment “resolves” in some way. For example:
- When a startup is sold, investors report and pay tax on the profit.
- When a startup goes under, investors report and deduct the loss.
- When a startup IPOs, investors sell their stock and report the sale.
- Theoretically, dividends would also generate a tax event but they don’t come into play much in startup investing. C-Corp startups tend to pour profits back into the growth of the company.
On the other hand, when startup investors put money into an LLC, they become “members” and take on a yearly tax obligation. Investors must wait for the LLC to generate a K-1 and include it in their personal tax return, each and every year for as long as they hold the investment.
Further complicating things, if the investor isn’t a co-resident in the LLC’s location, they may become subject to filing yearly taxes in a different state or a different country. Investors are also obligated to report and pay taxes on an LLC’s profits whether or not the LLC chooses to distribute earnings.
Because of this, LLCs do distribute earnings to “members” to cover their tax liability, which can bleed money off a startup that might otherwise be poured back into its growth.
If that sounds like a small price to pay — scale it up. For VCs and active angel investors with multiple investments per year, this quickly adds up to a substantial and recurring burden. Some venture funds, depending on the composition of their limited partners, aren’t even able to consider an LLC for funding.
LLC founders often pitch me by saying, “We’ve written a lot of provisions into our LLC to make it behave like a C-Corp” and that may be true, but it won’t make fundraising easier. If you’re trying to make your LLC behave like a C-Corp, it probably needs to be a C-Corp.
Startup investors like ‘standard’ paperwork. They like to invest in C-Corps, particularly Delaware C-Corps, because it’s a well-worn path. Federal and state law does most of the heavy lifting by default. It limits shareholder liability. It makes equity compensation and stock ownership fairly straightforward. It roughly defines what corporate governance must look like and requires a Board of Directors. It provides some specific tax benefits and keeps the tax complexity of investment down to a minimum.
As with all things in business, you should walk through your options with a good legal advisor and, if you don’t need to raise funds, do whatever suits you. But if you plan to raise money, operating as an LLC may limit your pool of interested investors, so choose wisely.
Beth Ellyn McClendon is a seed stage investor with board and advisory board experience. She previously worked in design and product management for Google Mapping, Android, YouTube, Cisco and Netscape. She holds patents in mapping, navigation and monetization.’ Follow her on Twitter @bemcclendon.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Beating the boys club: Mother of three hits the mat with girls wrestling shoes
Anything guys can do, girls and women just might be doing better, Deb North said. “Our whole goal is to support girls in this process and build them up and be their cheerleaders,” North, founder of Yes! Athletics, explained of the social enterprise — which recently launched The Defiant 1 wrestling shoe, a breathable, lightweight, eco-friendly shoe…
Olathe-built COVID-fighting biotech could be ‘Coolest Thing made in Kansas’ — Voting now open
An Olathe startup that began offering its biotech to researchers in April — just as the pandemic hit — already is receiving statewide recognition for a product that ultimately could help take down COVID-19. T-Blocks were announced Wednesday as one of the Top 16 nominees for the Kansas Chamber’s “Coolest Thing Made in Kansas” prize,…
Meet the No Coast winners: Homebase founder, Garmin lead 2020 KC tech honors
Tech is a team sport — a reality undefeated by COVID-19, the KC Tech Council said Wednesday, capping a two-day virtual No Coast ceremony that recognized the interconnectedness of Kansas City’s tech community with entrepreneurship, corporate innovation, education and policy. Among the first winners unveiled: veteran startup founder and CEO Blake Miller, whose Homebase.ai employs 25…
SafetyCulture deepens its COVID response with $29M acquisition of ‘micro-learning’ app
An Australian startup with a significant presence in Kansas City has acquired a mobile training app to boost COVID-era education for businesses through free “micro-learning” resources. “We’re experiencing the biggest workplace shake-up since economies were rebuilt after World War II. This is not survival of the fittest, this is survival of those that can adapt,”…
