Yes, a minor can own a business in most U.S. states — but there are real legal limits to know first. Learn what age requirements, contract rules, and workarounds apply.
Bizee Editorial Staff
Editorial Team
Yes, a minor can own a business in most U.S. states. There's no federal law that prohibits it, and most states don't set a minimum age for business ownership. But minors face real legal limits — especially around signing contracts — that shape how a teen-owned business needs to be structured.
Yes, in most states a minor can own a business. Federal law doesn't set a minimum age for business ownership, and the majority of states don't either. A handful of states — including Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, and Oregon — do require LLC organizers to be at least 18, but those are the exception, not the rule.
The bigger issue isn't whether a minor can own a business — it's whether a minor can legally act on behalf of one. In most states, minors under 18 lack full capacity to enter binding contracts. That means a minor generally can't sign a lease, open a business bank account, or file formation documents on their own. The business can exist; the legal paperwork around it usually can't.
Most teen entrepreneurs work around this by having a parent or guardian serve as the LLC organizer or registered agent. The minor can still be listed as a member — and own the business — while the adult handles the filings that require a binding signature. It's a practical structure that works in most states.
Contract capacity is the legal ability to enter a binding agreement. In the U.S., the age of majority is 18 in most states — and until a minor reaches it, any contract they sign is typically voidable. That means the minor can walk away from the agreement; the other party can't. It's a protection for minors, but it creates real friction for running a business.
In practice, this affects several things a business needs to function: signing vendor agreements, opening a bank account, applying for a business license, and filing LLC formation documents. A vendor or bank that knows they're dealing with a minor may refuse to contract at all — because they know the minor could void the deal later.
There's one important exception: contracts for necessities — things like food, shelter, and medical care — are enforceable against minors. But that exception doesn't extend to business contracts. Most business agreements fall outside it entirely. The practical takeaway is that a minor-owned business almost always needs an adult involved in the legal and financial side, at least until the owner turns 18.
The most common path is for a parent or guardian to act as the LLC organizer — the person who files the Articles of Organization with the state. The minor is listed as a member, which means they own the business. The adult handles the paperwork that requires a binding signature. This structure works in most states and keeps the business legally sound.
The registered agent — the person or entity designated to receive legal notices on behalf of the business — must also be an adult. In states where the organizer must be 18, the parent files and the minor owns. In states without that restriction, the minor could technically file, but the contract capacity problem still applies to most of the documents involved.
Another option is a custodial arrangement or trust, where a parent holds the business interest on the minor's behalf until they reach 18. This is more common when the business has significant assets or when the minor is quite young. A legal professional can help figure out which structure fits the situation best.
One thing worth knowing: income a minor earns through a business is still taxable. The IRS has specific rules — sometimes called the "kiddie tax" — that apply to unearned income for children under 19. A tax professional can help figure out how the business income gets reported and whether any special rules apply.
It depends. There's no federal minimum age to start a business, and most states don't set one either. A handful of states require LLC organizers to be at least 18. But even in states without an age requirement, minors under 18 can't sign binding contracts on their own — so a parent or guardian typically needs to handle the legal filings.
It depends on the state. Most states don't set a minimum age for business ownership. A minor can be listed as an LLC member — meaning they own the business — even if an adult has to file the formation documents. States like Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, and Oregon are exceptions that require organizers to be 18 or older.
It depends on the state and the type of license. Most states don't set a minimum age for a general business license, but applying for one is a contract — and minors generally can't enter binding contracts without a parent or guardian co-signing. Some local governments add their own age requirements on top of state rules, so check with your city or county as well.
Yes, in most states. Federal law doesn't prohibit a 17-year-old from owning an LLC membership interest. But because a 17-year-old can't sign binding contracts, a parent or guardian will need to file the Articles of Organization and serve as the registered agent. The 17-year-old can still be the owner — the adult just handles the legal paperwork.
Yes, in theory. There's no federal law that prevents a 12-year-old from owning a business interest. In practice, a parent or guardian would need to handle all legal filings, contracts, and bank accounts — because a 12-year-old has no legal capacity to enter binding agreements. The child can own and run the business; the adult handles the legal side.
No. Starting a business isn't illegal for a minor. Most states don't prohibit it, and federal law doesn't either. The legal complications come from contract capacity — minors can't sign binding agreements on their own, so a parent or guardian needs to be involved in the formal side of things. The business itself is legal; the paperwork just needs an adult's signature.
Yes, in most states. Federal law doesn't prohibit a minor from holding an LLC membership interest. Some states require the organizer — the person who files the formation documents — to be 18 or older, but that doesn't prevent a minor from being listed as a member and owning the LLC. A parent or guardian typically files the paperwork and serves as the registered agent.
The requirements vary by state, but a few rules apply broadly. Minors under 18 can't sign binding contracts, so a parent or guardian needs to file formation documents, sign agreements, and open bank accounts on the business's behalf. Some states require the LLC organizer to be 18. Income the minor earns is still taxable under federal rules, including the IRS kiddie tax provisions for unearned income.