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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

When to Incorporate Your Business

TS行政書士
Supervisado por Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Escribano Administrativo Autorizado, JapónTodo el contenido de MmowW está supervisado por un experto en cumplimiento normativo con licencia nacional.
Know the right time to incorporate your business. Explore income thresholds, liability triggers, and timing tips across 7 countries with MmowW Scrib🐮. Many business owners operate as sole traders for months or years before considering incorporation. Others incorporate on day one because they want the structure in place from the start. Neither approach is universally right or wrong — the optimal timing depends on a combination of financial, legal, and practical factors.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Incorporate when your tax savings exceed compliance costs, when liability risk becomes significant, or when a client or investor requires it — whichever comes first.

What You Need to Know

Many business owners operate as sole traders for months or years before considering incorporation. Others incorporate on day one because they want the structure in place from the start. Neither approach is universally right or wrong — the optimal timing depends on a combination of financial, legal, and practical factors.

Incorporating too early means paying compliance costs before the business generates enough income to justify them. Incorporating too late means missing potential tax savings and carrying unnecessary personal liability risk. Understanding the specific triggers that make incorporation worthwhile helps you time the decision correctly for your situation.

This guide identifies the key signals that suggest it is time to incorporate, explains how to weigh those signals, and provides country-specific context for the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

Signal 1: The Tax Threshold

In most countries, the combined effect of income tax and self-employment / national insurance contributions means that at a certain level of profit, drawing income through a company becomes more tax-efficient than operating as a sole trader.

The specific threshold varies by country, tax rates, and personal circumstances. As a very rough guide:

These are rough guides only. The actual break-even depends on your personal tax rate, your salary requirements, how much you retain in the business, and the cost of accountancy services for the company. Get a projection from a qualified accountant before making the decision.

Signal 2: Liability Risk Has Increased

Some businesses carry negligible liability risk in their early stages but accumulate risk as they grow. A freelance writer has very different exposure to a construction consultancy or a food product manufacturer.

Consider incorporating when:

In all these situations, the limited liability protection of a company can be worth the compliance cost even before the tax threshold is reached.

Signal 3: A Client, Bank, or Investor Requires It

External parties sometimes dictate your structure:

Enterprise clients: Large corporations and government bodies often require their suppliers to be registered companies. If you are trying to win a significant contract and the client requires a company, incorporation becomes necessary regardless of your income level.

Banks: Business lending, merchant accounts, and certain banking products are often only available to registered companies.

Investors: Angel investors and venture capital funds invest in companies, not sole traders. If you plan to raise external investment, incorporate before approaching investors. Investors also prefer clean corporate histories — incorporating at the point of investment after years of sole trading creates complications.

Signal 4: You Are Bringing in a Business Partner

A sole trader structure cannot have co-owners. If you are taking on a business partner — whether a co-founder, a key employee who is receiving equity, or an external investor — you need a corporate structure that can accommodate multiple owners and issue shares.

Timing this incorporation to coincide with the partnership forming is cleaner than doing it later. The earlier you incorporate, the more straightforward the ownership history.

Signal 5: You Want to Build Something Saleable

If your long-term goal is to sell the business, operate it on a larger scale, or eventually bring in investors, incorporating early gives you a cleaner corporate history and a structure that is already investor-ready. Sole trader businesses are very difficult to sell because there is no legal entity — you are essentially selling client relationships and assets.

When to Wait

Despite all of the above, there are situations where waiting makes sense:

In these cases, starting as a sole trader and incorporating at a defined trigger point — a revenue milestone, a new contract, the start of a financial year — is a sensible approach.

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Typical Tax Trigger Liability Trigger Key Consideration
UK £30,000–£50,000 profit When client contracts have significant liability exposure IR35 rules may affect contractors
France Auto-entrepreneur turnover limit (€77,700 services) When personal assets are at risk SASU simplest one-person company
Sweden SEK 400,000+ profit Professional liability risk AB requires SEK 25,000 minimum capital
Australia A$80,000+ profit Products / employees / significant contracts Company tax rate 25% (base rate entities)
New Zealand NZ$60,000+ profit Significant liability exposure Low incorporation cost (NZ$115)
Canada CA$50,000+ profit Employer / contract liability Small business deduction to CA$500,000
USA US$40,000+ net profit Any product / professional risk Single-member LLC simple and cheap

Government resources:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Waiting until you are already in trouble. If a business dispute arises while you are a sole trader, your personal assets are exposed. You cannot retrospectively incorporate to protect assets after a liability event has occurred.
  2. Incorporating and then not maintaining compliance. A dormant or non-compliant company (late filings, unpaid taxes) creates more problems than not incorporating at all. If you incorporate, maintain the annual compliance obligations properly.
  3. Not reorganising your contracts when you incorporate. If you incorporate mid-contract, existing client contracts may technically still be with you personally rather than with the new company. Speak to a solicitor about novating contracts to the company.
  4. Choosing the wrong timing within the tax year. Incorporating mid-year can create split-year tax complications. Where possible, time incorporation to coincide with the start of your financial year.
  5. Doing it without accountant and solicitor input. Incorporation has tax and legal implications that are specific to your situation. Engaging a qualified accountant and solicitor before incorporation is an investment that typically pays for itself in the first year.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

When you are ready to incorporate, MmowW Scrib🐮 helps you prepare the formation documents — articles of association, director consents, shareholder agreements — efficiently and accurately.

Free tools:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. Consult a qualified accountant and solicitor before incorporating.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is there a "right" time of year to incorporate?

In most countries, incorporating at the start of your financial year simplifies the first year's accounting. In the UK, for example, incorporating on 1 April or 1 January avoids a short accounting period in the first year. However, if there is a pressing commercial reason to incorporate immediately — a contract, an investor, a liability event — do not delay purely for timing reasons.

Q: Can I incorporate a company before I have any revenue?

Yes. There is no minimum revenue requirement for company registration in any of the seven countries. Many founders incorporate before trading to have the structure in place and to start building a corporate history.

Q: What happens to my existing contracts if I incorporate?

Existing contracts are with you personally, not with the new company. In most cases, you will want to novate (legally transfer) significant contracts to the company. This requires the agreement of the other party. Speak to a solicitor about the correct process for your contracts.

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Takayuki Sawai
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