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Florida LLC Banking: How to Open a Business Bank Account

A separate business bank account is essential for your Florida LLC. It maintains the liability protection your LLC provides, simplifies taxes, and makes your business look professional.

This guide covers how to open a business bank account for your Florida LLC, what documents you need, and which banks work best for LLCs.

Why Your LLC Needs a Separate Bank Account

Liability Protection

Mixing personal and business finances is one of the primary ways LLC owners lose their liability protection. Courts call this “commingling funds,” and it’s a factor in piercing the corporate veil.

What happens when you mix funds:

  • Creditors argue your LLC isn’t a separate entity
  • Courts may hold you personally liable for LLC debts
  • Your liability protection becomes worthless

With separate accounts:

  • Clear separation between you and your LLC
  • Stronger protection in lawsuits
  • Evidence that your LLC is a legitimate separate entity

Tax Benefits

Separate accounts make taxes easier:

Benefit How It Helps
Clear deductions Every business expense is documented
Easier bookkeeping No sorting through personal transactions
Audit protection Clean records if IRS questions deductions
Quarterly estimates Know exactly what the business earned

Professionalism

Business accounts let you:

  • Accept payments in your LLC’s name
  • Write checks from your business
  • Use business debit cards
  • Apply for business credit

Customers and vendors take businesses with proper banking more seriously.

What You Need to Open an LLC Bank Account

Required Documents

Document Purpose
Articles of Organization Proves LLC exists
EIN letter (IRS form) Tax identification
Operating agreement Shows ownership/authority
Government ID Owner verification

Articles of Organization

Your filed Articles of Organization from the Florida Division of Corporations proves your LLC legally exists.

Where to get it:

  • Download from Sunbiz.org (free)
  • Your formation service should provide it
  • Certified copy available for $8.75

EIN (Employer Identification Number)

Your EIN is your LLC’s tax ID number. It’s required by virtually all banks.

How to get it:

  • Apply free at IRS.gov
  • Takes 5-10 minutes online
  • Immediate confirmation
  • Print the confirmation letter

Note: Single-member LLCs with no employees can technically use the owner’s SSN, but most banks require an EIN anyway.

Operating Agreement

Not all banks require this, but many do. Your operating agreement shows:

  • Who owns the LLC
  • Who has authority to open accounts
  • How the LLC is managed

Even single-member LLCs should have an operating agreement.

Government-Issued ID

At least one owner/member must present valid ID:

  • Driver’s license
  • State ID
  • Passport

Some banks require IDs from all members.

Step-by-Step Process

Step 1: Gather Your Documents

Before visiting a bank or starting an online application:

Checklist:

  • [ ] Articles of Organization (certified copy preferred)
  • [ ] EIN confirmation letter
  • [ ] Operating agreement
  • [ ] Valid government ID
  • [ ] Initial deposit (amount varies by bank)

Step 2: Choose Your Bank

Consider these factors:

Factor Why It Matters
Monthly fees Affects your costs
Minimum balance Can you maintain it?
Transaction limits Will you exceed them?
Branch access Need in-person banking?
Online features Mobile deposits, transfers
Integration Connects to QuickBooks, etc.

Step 3: Apply

In person:

  • Visit branch with all documents
  • Meet with business banker
  • Complete application
  • Make initial deposit

Online (some banks):

  • Upload documents
  • Complete identity verification
  • Fund account electronically

Step 4: Set Up Account Features

Once approved:

  • Order checks/debit cards
  • Set up online banking
  • Connect accounting software
  • Add authorized users (if needed)

Best Banks for Florida LLCs

Traditional Banks

Chase Business Complete Banking

  • Pros: Large branch network, robust online platform
  • Cons: $15/month fee (waivable with $2,000 balance)
  • Best for: Businesses wanting branch access

Bank of America Business Advantage

  • Pros: Strong integration with QuickBooks
  • Cons: $16/month fee (waivable with $5,000 balance)
  • Best for: Businesses using QuickBooks

Wells Fargo Initiate Business Checking

  • Pros: Lowest fee tier, good branch network
  • Cons: 100 transaction limit
  • Best for: Low-volume businesses

Regions Bank (Florida-based)

  • Pros: Strong Florida presence
  • Cons: Limited outside Southeast
  • Best for: Florida-focused businesses

Online Banks

Mercury

  • Pros: No fees, startup-friendly, good software integrations
  • Cons: No branches, no cash deposits
  • Best for: Tech-enabled businesses

Relay

  • Pros: No fees, multiple account numbers
  • Cons: No cash handling
  • Best for: Businesses separating expenses by category

Novo

  • Pros: No fees, integrations
  • Cons: No cash deposits
  • Best for: E-commerce, online businesses

Bluevine

  • Pros: Interest on balances, no fees
  • Cons: No cash deposits
  • Best for: Businesses holding cash reserves

Credit Unions

Many Florida credit unions offer business accounts:

  • Lower fees than big banks
  • More personal service
  • May have lending advantages

Check: Suncoast Credit Union, Space Coast Credit Union, VyStar.

Fee Comparison

Bank Monthly Fee Waiver Requirement Transaction Limit
Chase $15 $2,000 balance Unlimited
Bank of America $16 $5,000 balance 200/month
Wells Fargo $10 $500 balance 100/month
Mercury $0 None Unlimited
Relay $0 None Unlimited
Novo $0 None Unlimited
Bluevine $0 None Unlimited

Common Challenges

Multi-Member LLCs

Banks may require:

  • All members present
  • All members’ IDs
  • Authorization in operating agreement

Solution: Include banking authorization language in your operating agreement specifying who can open accounts.

New LLCs

Some banks prefer established businesses.

If rejected:

  • Try credit unions
  • Try online banks (more startup-friendly)
  • Build relationship with personal bank first

Foreign Owners

Non-US residents face additional requirements:

  • ITIN instead of SSN
  • Passport required
  • Some banks won’t accept foreign owners
  • Consider Mercury, Relay (more flexible)

No Physical Address

If you use a registered agent address:

  • Some banks require physical location
  • P.O. boxes may not work
  • Consider coworking space address

Separating Business and Personal Finances

What Goes in Business Account

Deposits:

  • All business income
  • Customer payments
  • Revenue of any kind

Payments:

  • Business expenses
  • Vendor payments
  • Employee payroll
  • Owner distributions (clearly labeled)

What Stays in Personal Account

  • Personal expenses
  • Non-business purchases
  • Personal bills

Owner Payments

When you pay yourself from the LLC:

Distributions (profits):

  • Transfer from business to personal
  • Document as “owner distribution”
  • Track for tax purposes

Don’t:

  • Use business debit for personal purchases
  • Pay personal bills from business account
  • Mix the two ever

Beyond Basic Checking

Business Savings

Consider a separate savings for:

  • Tax reserves (set aside 25-30% for taxes)
  • Emergency fund
  • Future investments

Business Credit Card

After establishing the account:

  • Easier expense tracking
  • Builds business credit
  • Cash back/rewards
  • Separates expenses further

Merchant Services

If accepting card payments:

  • Bank may offer merchant processing
  • Compare rates with Square, Stripe, PayPal
  • Deposits go directly to business account

Accounting Software Integration

Most banks integrate with:

Software Best For
QuickBooks Full accounting
Xero Cloud-first businesses
FreshBooks Service businesses
Wave Free option

Benefits:

  • Automatic transaction import
  • Real-time bookkeeping
  • Easier tax prep
  • Reduced manual entry

After Opening Your Account

Immediate Steps

  1. Order debit card/checks
  2. Set up online banking
  3. Download mobile app
  4. Connect accounting software
  5. Set up recurring transfers (if needed)

Ongoing Practices

  • Reconcile monthly
  • Keep minimum balance to avoid fees
  • Review statements for errors
  • Update account if LLC information changes

If Your LLC Changes

Notify bank if:

  • Members change
  • Name changes
  • Address changes
  • Registered agent changes

You may need updated documents.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use my personal account for LLC?

Technically possible but strongly discouraged. It weakens liability protection and complicates taxes.

Do I need an EIN to open a business account?

Almost always yes. While single-member LLCs can use an SSN for tax purposes, most banks require an EIN.

Can I open a business account online?

Many banks allow online applications for business accounts. Online-only banks like Mercury and Relay are entirely digital.

How long does it take to open an account?

In-person: Often same day. Online: 1-5 business days for approval, then time for debit cards/checks to arrive.

What if my LLC application was just filed?

Most banks accept Articles of Organization immediately after filing. Some may want to verify with Sunbiz.org.

Can I have multiple business accounts?

Yes. Many businesses have separate checking and savings, or accounts for different purposes.

Start Your Florida LLC Banking

Getting your LLC’s bank account set up is an important early step. Have your documents ready, choose a bank that fits your needs, and keep your business finances completely separate from personal.

IncCraft handles your Florida LLC formation for $0 + the $125 state filing fee, including the Articles of Organization you need to open your business bank account.

Form your Florida LLC with IncCraft today.

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