Below, we offer some helpful tips for how to start a business in Houston.
Houston is currently the fourth-largest city in the US, and the Greater Houston Partnership estimates that the region’s GDP is $490 billion!
Houston is currently the fourth-largest city in the US, and the Greater Houston Partnership estimates that the region’s GDP is $490 billion.
Additionally, there have been more than 760 expansion and relocation projects in the last two years, so Houston offers a wealth of business opportunities both inside and outside the city limits.
If you are starting a business in Houston, here is everything you need to get started:
A business plan serves as an evolving road map for your company.
It should describe your company’s major goals, value offerings, organizational structure, funding sources, and competitive advantages.
For creating a business plan, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) has some excellent templates. Additionally, you have the option of requesting a bank loan, a microloan, or a federal loan through the SBA and other lenders (you will need a business plan for most funding opportunities).
Your choice of business location will depend on the kind of enterprise you run.
Take a look at the local zoning regulations. Examine the accessibility of your supply chain, your customers, and labor availability.
Considering the Federal and Texas Business Tax Responsibilities of business owners in Texas, It is challenging to locate a business in Texas that is not legally required to hold some kind of license or permit. In reality, the state government website includes 78 pages of various license kinds that people and business owners can register for and renew.
In addition, depending on where you operate and what you do, localities can have additional permit requirements.
Although licenses and permits give the government the ability to track businesses, they are also meant to safeguard consumers and the wider public.
The government treats violations of license and permit requirements extremely severely because they help to keep Texans safe. You risk financial penalties and perhaps closure if you run a business without the required licenses or permits or if you let them expire.
Professionals may occasionally be prevented from getting a future license. The importance of compliance is due to several factors.
Keeping track of all the licenses and permissions you require for your company can be difficult, and many small business owners do not realize they violate the law until it is too late and they are subject to fines from the state.
One should decide on the business structure after taking into account difficulties with tax, liability, management, continuity, transferability of ownership interests, and formality of operation, and ideally after consulting with an accountant. Typical entity structures are:
The sole proprietorship is the most typical and basic type of business.
In a sole proprietorship, a single person operates a business without the need for a formal structure.
The county clerk’s office in the county where a business premise is maintained should get an assumed name certificate (often known as a DBA) if the business is operated under an assumed name (a name other than the individual’s surname).
If no business location is kept up, an assumed name certificate needs to be filed in each county where the assumed name is used for business.
The limited liability company (LLC) cannot be said as a corporation or a partnership but is a different sort of entity that caters to the characteristics of a partnership and corporation, both.
Depending on the structure of the LLC, it is most likely to be catering to a limited partnership in which all of the owners manage and participates and have limited liability, or to a general partnership with limited liability, or to an “S” corporation that doesn’t have any tax restrictions or ownership imposed by the Internal Revenue Code.
A general or limited partnership may choose to register as a limited liability partnership to reduce the responsibility of its general partners.
The Secretary of State offers a form for limited liability partnership registration. SOSDirect offers online registration filing services.
When two or more people come together to operate a business for profit, a general partnership is formed. A partnership normally works in line with a partnership agreement, albeit neither the writing of the agreement nor the filing of it with the state is necessary.
An assumed name certificate, also known as a DBA, needs to be filed with the county clerk’s office in the county where a business premise is maintained if the partnership conducts business under an assumed name (one that does not contain the surnames of all of the partners).
If no business location is kept up, an assumed name certificate needs to be filed in each county where the assumed name is used for business.
A partnership formed by two or more people with one or more general partners and one or more limited partners is referred to as a limited partnership in Texas.
The limited partnership conducts business following a written or verbal partnership agreement of the partners about the management of the limited partnership’s affairs.
The limited partnership is required to file a certificate of formation with the Texas Secretary of State, even though the partnership agreement is not made a public record.
A form that satisfies the fundamental requirements of state law is offered by the Secretary of State. SOSDirect offers online filing for the certificate of formation.
By submitting a certificate of formation to the Texas Secretary of State, a corporation can be formed in Texas.
The Secretary of State offers a form that satisfies the fundamental conditions set forth by state law. SOSDirect offers the ability to electronically file a certificate of formation.
A corporation is a type of legal entity that has limitations on its liability, centralizes its management, exists perpetually, and makes it simple to transfer ownership interests. You should consult an attorney before deciding on the ideal management structure for your corporation. The Secretary of State is unable to help you.
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For assistance in planning and transferring your U.S. assets to Canada, please contact our colleague Phil Hogan, CPA, CA, CPA at (250) 661-9417 or phil@philhogan.com