Protect your specialized practice with an entity structure that fits your specific needs. Whether you’re in construction, healthcare, or another field, our expert team uses deep industry knowledge to provide proper entity formation to ensure compliance and protection.
Liability Protection
Your liability exposure as a professional is significantly higher than the average business owner. Designed to protect you from your industry's unique risks, our entity structure allows you to focus on your expertise while we focus on your protection.
Strategic Liability Limitation
We structure your professional business using the right business entity to create essential legal separation between your assets and professional obligations, significantly reducing your exposure to claims and litigation.
Substantial Tax Optimization
Our entity structuring helps you leverage significant tax advantages, potentially saving thousands during tax season through payroll tax minimization and potential deduction opportunities.
Protect your assets with Armor8®, leveraging Wyoming and Nevada’s strong protection laws. By certifying your LLC membership interests under Article 8 of the UCC and storing them in Wyoming or Nevada, Armor8® ensures those states’ superior protections govern your ownership, not weaker laws elsewhere.
By holding your LLC certificates in Wyoming or Nevada, you gain the advantage of their superior asset protection laws, shielding your ownership from the weaker remedies of other states.
Your LLC membership certificates are securely stored in Wyoming or Nevada, out of the reach of unfavorable court jurisdictions elsewhere.
Find answers to our most commonly asked questions about business formation and asset protection here. If you have additional questions, schedule your free 15-minute consultation with our experts.
Professionals should form a business entity because they are far more likely to be sued. When you are subject to a lawsuit, you will want to limit your liability as much as possible. The easiest way to do this is by forming a business entity that you can use to conduct your business.
This depends upon the type of service that you offer, and the state where you are located. Depending upon your profession, you may be able to operate as an LLC. However, if you are located in California, you will be required to conduct your professional services through a Corporation.
Having malpractice insurance is advantageous, as insurance is always the first line of defense. However, insurance companies have an economic incentive to not cover every claim. If you are sued for malpractice and the insurance doesn't cover your claim, you will be personally responsible for that claim. The best way to limit your liability is to form a business entity to protect your practice.
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