You can start a business with $500 or less. Learn which business structures cost the least, what licenses you actually need, and how to keep your finances in order from day one.
Bizee Editorial Staff
Editorial Team
Starting a business with $500 or less is possible — and more common than people think. The key is choosing a low-overhead business type, picking the right legal structure, and handling your registration and taxes from the start. This guide walks through exactly how to do that.
Starting a business doesn't require a large upfront investment. Many businesses — freelance services, online reselling, digital products, local service work — can get off the ground for well under $500. Your actual costs depend on your business type, your state, and whether you need any licenses or formal registration.
The lowest-cost path is a sole proprietorship. There's no formal federal registration required, no state filing fee, and no formation paperwork. You're in business the moment you start working. A sole proprietor reports income and expenses on Schedule C attached to their personal tax return.
If you want liability protection — meaning your personal finances stay separate from business debts — forming an LLC is the next step up. LLC state filing fees range from roughly $50 to $500 depending on where you live. That's often the single biggest cost in a sub-$500 budget.
Your business structure affects your taxes, your liability, and your startup costs. For most people starting with $500 or less, the real choice is between a sole proprietorship and an LLC — and the right answer depends on how much risk you're taking on.
A sole proprietorship is the simplest structure available. There's no state filing, no formation fee, and no separate legal entity. You and the business are the same in the eyes of the law. That means your personal finances are on the hook if the business owes money or gets sued. For low-risk service businesses — writing, tutoring, lawn care — this is often a reasonable starting point.
An LLC creates a legal separation between you and your business. If the business is sued or can't pay a debt, your personal finances aren't automatically fair game. The trade-off is the state filing fee — which can range from $50 in states like Kentucky to $500 in Massachusetts. If your budget is tight, check your state's fee before deciding. In many states, forming an LLC fits comfortably inside a $500 budget.
Registration and licensing costs are where budgets can creep up — but most of them are avoidable or free if you know what you actually need. The SBA's license and permit tool is a good starting point for figuring out what applies to your business type and location.
An Employer Identification Number (EIN) is free to get directly from the IRS at irs.gov/ein. You don't need a paid service to get one. Even if you're a sole proprietor without employees, an EIN keeps your Social Security number off business documents — worth doing from the start.
Free tools can cover most of what a new business needs. Wave and Zoho Invoice handle invoicing and basic bookkeeping at no cost. Google Workspace's free tier covers email and documents. Social media handles marketing. The goal in the early months is to keep fixed costs near zero so your budget goes toward the things that actually require payment — like your state filing fee or a required license.
Tax management is one area where getting it right early saves real money. As a self-employed business owner, you're responsible for self-employment tax — currently 15.3% on net earnings — on top of income tax. The IRS expects quarterly estimated tax payments if you'll owe $1,000 or more for the year.
Keep records of every business expense from the start. The IRS allows deductions for ordinary and necessary business expenses — things like software subscriptions, home office use, and business mileage. Good records mean you pay tax only on actual profit, not gross income. A simple spreadsheet or free bookkeeping app is enough at this stage.
Most entrepreneurs starting out don't realize how much those deductions add up until they file their first return. Tracking expenses from week one — not month six — is the difference between a tax bill and a tax refund.
It depends on the type of business. A service-based business — freelance writing, tutoring, cleaning, consulting — can start with $0 to $100 if you operate as a sole proprietor. If you form an LLC, add your state's filing fee, which ranges from roughly $50 to $500. Most online and service businesses can get started for well under $500.
Service businesses with no physical inventory are the cheapest to start. Freelance writing, graphic design, virtual assistance, tutoring, lawn care, and pet sitting all require little more than your time and a way to get paid. Digital products — ebooks, templates, online courses — also have near-zero startup costs once you have a platform to sell through.
Yes. Most online businesses — freelance services, reselling, digital products, content creation — can launch for well under $500. Your main costs are a domain name ($10–$20 per year), a basic website or storefront (free tiers exist on most platforms), and any required business registration. If you form an LLC, factor in your state's filing fee.
It depends on your structure. A sole proprietorship has no federal registration requirement — you can start working without filing anything. If you want to operate under a business name that isn't your own, some states require a DBA (doing business as) registration. If you form an LLC, you need to file Articles of Organization with your state and pay the state filing fee.
The cheapest way to form an LLC is to file directly with your state's Secretary of State office and pay only the state filing fee. Fees vary by state — some states charge as little as $50. You'll also need a registered agent, which you can serve as yourself in most states at no cost. Getting your EIN from the IRS is free at irs.gov/ein.
As a sole proprietor or single-member LLC, you report business income and expenses on Schedule C with your personal tax return. You'll also owe self-employment tax — 15.3% on net earnings. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more for the year, the IRS expects quarterly estimated tax payments. A tax professional can help you figure out your specific situation.