When starting a business in Florida, one of the first decisions you’ll face is whether to register a DBA (Doing Business As) or form an LLC. While both involve registering a business name with the state, they serve completely different purposes and offer vastly different protections.
This guide breaks down the key differences between a Florida DBA and LLC so you can choose the right structure for your business.
Quick Comparison: DBA vs LLC
| Feature | DBA (Fictitious Name) | LLC |
|---|---|---|
| Creates a legal entity | No | Yes |
| Personal liability protection | None | Yes |
| Initial filing cost | $50 + publication | $125 |
| Annual cost | $50 | $138.75 |
| Tax return required | No (report on personal) | Depends on structure |
| Can open business bank account | Sometimes | Yes |
| Protects business name | Limited (county level) | Statewide |
| Formation time | Same day | 2-3 business days |
What Is a DBA?
A DBA (Doing Business As), called a “fictitious name” in Florida, is simply a registered alias that allows you to operate under a name different from your legal name.
A DBA does NOT:
- Create a separate business entity
- Provide any liability protection
- Separate your business from you personally
- Give you exclusive rights to the name
A DBA DOES:
- Allow you to use a business name
- Let you accept payments in that name
- Meet legal requirements for operating under an assumed name
Example: John Smith wants to operate a landscaping business called “Green Thumb Landscaping.” He registers a fictitious name for $50 plus publication costs. He can now market as Green Thumb Landscaping and open a bank account in that name.
However, John is still personally liable for everything. If a customer sues Green Thumb Landscaping, they’re suing John Smith personally. His house, car, and savings are all at risk.
What Is an LLC?
An LLC (Limited Liability Company) is a formal business entity that creates legal separation between you and your business.
An LLC DOES:
- Create a separate legal entity
- Provide personal liability protection
- Allow business contracts in the company’s name
- Establish business credit separately from personal
- Protect the business name statewide
Example: John Smith forms Green Thumb Landscaping LLC for $125. The LLC is a separate legal entity. If a customer sues, they sue the LLC—not John personally. His personal assets are protected (assuming he maintains proper separation between personal and business finances).
The Liability Protection Difference
This is the most important distinction between a DBA and LLC.
With a DBA Only
You operate as a sole proprietor (or general partnership if multiple owners). There’s no legal separation between you and the business.
What this means:
- Business debts are your personal debts
- Lawsuits against the business are lawsuits against you
- Creditors can pursue your personal assets
- A judgment against the business can take your home, savings, vehicles
With an LLC
The LLC is a separate legal “person.” You own the LLC, but you are not the LLC.
What this means:
- Business debts are the LLC’s debts (with some exceptions)
- Lawsuits target the LLC, not you personally
- Creditors can only pursue LLC assets, not personal assets
- Your home, savings, and personal property are protected
Exceptions: Personal liability protection can be lost (“pierced”) if you:
- Commingle personal and business funds
- Fail to maintain the LLC properly
- Personally guarantee debts
- Commit fraud
Cost Comparison
DBA Costs
| Expense | Cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Initial registration | $50 | One-time |
| Newspaper publication | $30-$100 | One-time |
| Annual renewal | $50 | Yearly |
| First year total | $130-$200 | |
| Ongoing annual | $50 |
LLC Costs
| Expense | Cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Articles of Organization | $125 | One-time |
| Annual report | $138.75 | Yearly |
| Registered agent (optional) | $49-$299 | Yearly |
| First year total | $125-$424 | |
| Ongoing annual | $138.75-$438 |
The LLC costs more, but the liability protection is worth far more than the price difference for most businesses.
Tax Implications
DBA Taxes
A DBA doesn’t change your tax situation. You report all business income on your personal tax return.
- Sole proprietor: Report on Schedule C of Form 1040
- Partnership: File Form 1065, partners receive K-1s
- Self-employment tax: Pay 15.3% on net self-employment income
LLC Taxes
By default, an LLC is taxed the same as a sole proprietorship (single-member) or partnership (multi-member). However, LLCs have options:
- Default: Pass-through taxation (same as DBA)
- S Corporation election: Can reduce self-employment taxes for profitable businesses
- C Corporation election: Rarely used for small businesses
Florida advantage: No state income tax, so you only deal with federal taxes regardless of structure.
When to Use a DBA
A DBA makes sense in limited situations:
1. You Already Have an LLC and Want Another Brand
If you have “Smith Holdings LLC” and want to operate a coffee shop called “Morning Buzz Cafe,” register “Morning Buzz Cafe” as a fictitious name under your LLC.
This gives you:
- A customer-friendly brand name
- The liability protection of your LLC
- One entity to manage (simpler accounting and taxes)
2. Testing a Business Concept
If you want to test a side hustle with minimal investment and risk, a DBA lets you start for under $100. If the business takes off, form an LLC. If it fails, you’ve lost little.
Caution: Even “testing” a business creates liability exposure. One unhappy customer or accident can result in personal liability.
3. You’re Truly a Solo Freelancer with Minimal Risk
If you’re a freelance writer working from home with no employees, no physical products, and clients who pay electronically, your liability exposure is relatively low.
However, as soon as you:
- Meet clients in person
- Work on their premises
- Handle their confidential information
- Provide advice they rely on
…your risk increases, and an LLC becomes more advisable.
When to Form an LLC
Form an LLC if any of these apply:
1. You Have Assets to Protect
If you own a home, have savings, or have anything you don’t want to lose to a business lawsuit, form an LLC.
2. You Interact with Customers or the Public
Any customer-facing business creates liability:
- Retail stores
- Service businesses
- Restaurants and food service
- Professional services
3. You Have Employees
Employees create significant liability exposure. An LLC is essential.
4. You Sign Contracts
Business contracts should be in the LLC’s name, not your personal name. This keeps obligations with the business.
5. You Want Business Credit
Building business credit requires a formal entity. DBAs rarely qualify for business credit cards or loans.
6. You Plan to Grow
If you see the business becoming more than a side hustle, start with an LLC. Converting from sole proprietorship to LLC later adds complexity.
7. You Work in a High-Risk Industry
Some businesses have higher liability exposure:
- Construction and trades
- Healthcare and medical services
- Legal and financial services
- Childcare
- Transportation
- Food service
These absolutely require LLC protection.
Can You Have Both?
Yes—and many businesses do.
Common structure:
- Form an LLC as your legal business entity
- Register one or more DBAs under the LLC for different brands
Example: “Florida Business Holdings LLC” operates:
- “Clearwater Web Design” (DBA #1)
- “Tampa SEO Services” (DBA #2)
- “Bay Area Marketing” (DBA #3)
All three brands have the liability protection of the LLC. One tax return, one annual report, but multiple market-facing brands.
Real-World Scenarios
Scenario 1: Starting a Lawn Care Business
Bad choice: Register “Fresh Cut Lawn Care” as a DBA and operate as a sole proprietor.
Risk: Your mower throws a rock through a car window. The car owner sues for $5,000. As a sole proprietor, they sue you personally and can pursue your personal assets.
Better choice: Form “Fresh Cut Lawn Care LLC” for $125. Same scenario—but now the lawsuit is against the LLC. Your personal assets are protected.
Scenario 2: Opening an Online Store
Question: “I’m selling handmade crafts on Etsy. Do I need an LLC?”
Consider:
- Product liability if something you make harms someone
- Growing into a real business
- Future wholesale or retail relationships
- Payment processors preferring business entities
Recommendation: Start with an LLC. The $125 cost is minimal compared to even one product liability claim.
Scenario 3: Freelance Consulting
Question: “I’m a marketing consultant working from home. DBA or LLC?”
Consider:
- Professional liability (client claims your advice cost them money)
- Contract work creates obligations
- Working with corporate clients (they may require vendors to be LLCs)
Recommendation: Form an LLC. Professional liability exposure justifies the protection.
Making the Decision
Choose a DBA if:
- You already have an LLC and need a trade name
- You’re testing a very low-risk concept
- You understand and accept full personal liability
Choose an LLC if:
- You have personal assets to protect
- You interact with customers
- You have or will have employees
- You sign business contracts
- You want to build business credit
- You’re serious about the business long-term
The Honest Answer
For almost everyone starting a real business in Florida, an LLC is the right choice. The $125 formation cost and $138.75 annual fee buy significant protection.
The only time a DBA alone makes sense is when you already have an LLC and need a trade name for branding purposes.
Form Your Florida LLC Today
Don’t risk your personal assets over a $75 annual cost difference. An LLC provides the liability protection every business owner needs, plus the credibility that comes with a formal business structure.
IncCraft handles Florida LLC formation quickly and affordably. We’ll file your Articles of Organization, obtain your EIN, and provide registered agent service. If you need a DBA too, we can help with that as well.
Get started with your Florida LLC today.