Should I form an LLC or an S-Corp for a Nashville-based tech startup?
Choosing between an LLC and an S-Corp is one of the most consequential decisions for a Nashville founder. While many online guides suggest S-Corps as a universal “tax hack,” Tennessee’s specific tax code—including the Franchise & Excise (F&E) Tax—completely changes the math.
Here is the 2026 strategic breakdown for Nashville-based tech startups.
1. The Tennessee “Tax Trap”: LLC vs. S-Corp
In most states, S-Corps are preferred for saving on federal self-employment taxes. However, Tennessee treats these entities differently at the state level.
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LLC (Single-Member/Disregarded): You generally avoid the 6.5% Tennessee Excise Tax on net earnings. While you pay federal self-employment tax (15.3% on the first $184,500 in 2026), you bypass the state’s entity-level income tax.
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S-Corp: You may save on federal self-employment taxes by paying yourself a “reasonable salary” and taking the rest as distributions. But beware: Tennessee levies a 6.5% Excise Tax on an S-Corp’s net earnings above $50,000. For many mid-sized startups, the state tax cost actually wipes out the federal savings.
2. Fundraising & Scalability
Your choice must align with your exit strategy. If you plan to raise Venture Capital (VC), your structure determines your eligibility.
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LLC Flexibility: Best for “bootstrapped” startups or lifestyle businesses. It offers the most management flexibility and allows for disproportionate profit sharing among founders.
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S-Corp Limitations: S-Corps are capped at 100 shareholders and strictly forbid foreign investors or institutional (VC) members. Furthermore, you can only issue one class of stock, which makes complex Series A funding rounds nearly impossible.
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The C-Corp Alternative: If your goal is a Silicon Valley-style exit, many founders skip the S-Corp entirely and form a C-Corp to utilize Section 1202 (QSBS), which can allow you to exclude up to $10M in capital gains from federal tax upon sale.
3. Compliance & Formalities
Administrative overhead is a silent “growth killer” for early-stage tech companies.
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LLC: Requires minimal formalities. You aren’t mandated by state law to hold annual meetings or keep formal minutes, allowing you to focus entirely on product-market fit.
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S-Corp: Requires strict corporate maintenance. You must run a formal payroll system (even for yourself), file a separate Form 1120-S, and maintain rigorous “corporate veils” to protect your limited liability.
The 2026 Verdict
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Choose an LLC if: You are bootstrapping, want to avoid Tennessee’s 6.5% Excise Tax, or need a flexible “member-managed” structure.
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Choose an S-Corp if: Your profit significantly exceeds $150,000, you have no plans for outside VC funding, and the federal tax savings comfortably outweigh the Tennessee state excise tax and administrative costs.
- This article is part of the Tennessee Business Law FAQs.
- Related practice area: Business Law
- Collins Legal is a Tennessee-based law firm providing straightforward legal guidance to individuals and businesses.