Opening a business bank account for an LLC
Forming an LLC creates the legal entity; a separate bank account is what makes that entity function as intended. Until the company has its own account, every dollar that flows through the business is mixed with the owner's personal money — which undermines the very protection the LLC was created to provide. Opening a business account is usually a same-day task once the right documents are in hand. This is general information, not legal or banking advice, and requirements vary by bank and by state in 2026.
Why a separate account is essential
A dedicated business account does three jobs at once, and each one matters more than it first appears.
- It protects the liability shield. The LLC limits an owner's personal liability only while the company is treated as genuinely separate. Running business income and expenses through a personal account is commingling funds, the single most cited reason courts pierce the corporate veil and hold owners personally liable.
- It produces clean books. When every business transaction lives in one account, the records assemble themselves. There is no year-end project to untangle which charges were business and which were personal.
- It simplifies taxes. Deductions are far easier to substantiate when a dedicated account already segregates business spending, and a clean account reduces the work and the risk if a return is ever questioned.
Documents the bank will require
Banks verify that the LLC exists, that it is in good standing, and that the person opening the account is authorized to do so. The specific list varies, but most banks ask for some combination of the following.
| Document | What it proves | Where it comes from |
|---|---|---|
| EIN confirmation letter | The LLC's federal tax ID | IRS (the CP 575 or 147C letter) |
| Articles of organization | The LLC legally exists | State filing agency (often stamped) |
| Operating agreement | Who owns and can act for the LLC | Internal company document |
| Government-issued ID | Identity of the person opening it | Driver's license or passport |
| Beneficial ownership information | Who ultimately owns/controls the LLC | Collected by the bank at opening |
| Business license (if applicable) | The business is authorized to operate | State, county, or city |
A few of these deserve a closer look. The EIN confirmation letter is non-negotiable for a multi-member LLC and effectively required for a single-member LLC too — obtaining the EIN is usually the step that has to happen before the bank visit. If the original IRS confirmation (the CP 575) has been lost, the IRS can issue a replacement confirmation, the 147C letter, on request; banks accept either. The articles of organization should be the state-stamped or certified copy that shows the state accepted the filing, not just the draft the owner submitted. The operating agreement shows the bank who the members and managers are and who has authority to bind the company; some banks ask for it specifically when the LLC has more than one member, and a few ask single-member owners for one as well. Finally, since federal beneficial-ownership rules took hold, banks collect BOI — the names and identifying details of the individuals who own or control the company — as part of standard account opening. This bank intake is separate from, and should not be confused with, any BOI report the company files with the government; satisfying one does not satisfy the other.
Choosing where to bank
Business accounts come from a few broad categories, and the right fit depends on how the business operates rather than on any single feature. The aim here is the categories, not a recommendation of any provider.
- Traditional national and regional banks offer branches, cash and check deposit, and the ability to build a banking relationship that supports later lending. They sometimes carry monthly fees or minimum-balance requirements.
- Community banks and credit unions can offer personalized service and competitive terms, with the trade-off of a smaller branch and technology footprint.
- Online-only business banking platforms emphasize fast digital onboarding, low or no monthly fees, and software integrations, with the trade-off that cash deposits are limited or unavailable.
Practical factors that distinguish accounts include monthly maintenance fees, minimum-balance requirements, transaction and cash-deposit limits, wire and ACH capabilities, integration with bookkeeping software, and whether the provider issues debit and credit cards in the company's name. A business that handles cash needs branch access; a fully digital business may prefer an online platform.
The steps to open the account
Once the documents are assembled, the process is straightforward:
- Confirm the LLC is in good standing. The articles must be filed and accepted, and any required initial report current, before a bank will open an account.
- Obtain the EIN. Have the IRS confirmation letter ready; this is the most common missing piece at the counter.
- Gather the supporting documents. Stamped articles, the operating agreement, photo ID, and any business license that applies to the activity.
- Apply, in person or online. The bank verifies the entity and the applicant's authority and collects beneficial-ownership details.
- Fund the account. Make an opening deposit from the owner's personal funds and record it as a capital contribution, not as income.
- Set up cards and access. Order a debit card and, where available, a business credit card, and connect the account to the company's bookkeeping.
What to set up alongside the account
The account is the foundation, but a few companion pieces make it far more useful from day one. A business debit card comes with the account; a business credit card in the company's name, where the business qualifies, separates spending further and can build a credit profile for the entity. A payment-processing setup — the means to accept card payments — should route deposits into the business account, never a personal one. Connecting the account to bookkeeping software turns each transaction into a categorized record automatically, which is the practical mechanism that keeps the books clean. For LLCs with more than one member, it is also worth confirming early which members or managers have signing authority on the account and documenting that in the operating agreement, so the bank's records and the company's records agree.
Single-member versus multi-member considerations
The mechanics are similar, but the emphasis differs. A single-member LLC faces the greatest temptation to treat the business account as a second personal account, precisely because one person controls both — which is also why the separation matters most here. A documented single-member operating agreement helps satisfy banks that ask for one and reinforces that the company is distinct from its owner. A multi-member LLC should align the account's authorized signers and any spending controls with the ownership and management terms in its agreement, so that no single member can move money in ways the others have not agreed to. In both cases the bank will collect beneficial-ownership details for the individuals behind the company.
Common reasons applications are rejected
Most rejections trace back to a small set of fixable problems. The LLC is not yet showing as active in the state's records because the filing is still processing. The EIN letter is missing or the name on it does not exactly match the articles. The name on the documents and the name on the application differ — a "doing business as" name without the DBA registration to support it. The person applying is not clearly authorized by the operating agreement to act for the company. Resolving these usually means waiting for the state filing to clear, requesting a 147C letter from the IRS to replace a lost EIN confirmation, or aligning the company name across every document before reapplying.
Funding the account and recording it correctly
The opening deposit and any later money the owner adds are capital contributions, not revenue, and recording them correctly from the start prevents a common bookkeeping error. A contribution increases the owner's stake in the business and should be logged as such; treating it as income would overstate the company's earnings and distort its taxes. The same care applies in reverse: when the owner later takes money out, it leaves as a documented owner's draw or distribution from the business account to a personal account, not as a direct purchase of personal items with the business card. Establishing this contribution-and-draw rhythm at the moment the account opens makes the clean separation a default rather than something to remember later. It also gives the books a clear story — here is what the owner put in, here is what the business earned, here is what the owner took out — which is exactly the record that supports both the liability shield and the tax return.
The point of the exercise: never commingle
The reason all of this is worth doing on day one is simple. From the moment the account is open, the rule is to run every business dollar through it and pay personal expenses only from personal accounts. When the owner needs money out of the business, it should leave as a documented owner's draw or distribution, not as a casual swipe of the business card at the grocery store. Keeping that line clean is what preserves the liability protection, keeps the books audit-ready, and turns the LLC from a piece of paper into a functioning, defensible business.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need an EIN to open an LLC bank account?
In practice, yes. A multi-member LLC must have an EIN, and although a single-member LLC can sometimes use the owner's Social Security number, nearly all banks require an EIN to open a business account. Obtaining the EIN is usually the step that precedes the bank visit.
Can I use my personal bank account for my LLC?
It is strongly inadvisable. Running business money through a personal account is commingling, which is the most common reason courts disregard the liability shield and hold owners personally liable. A separate account is what keeps the LLC genuinely separate.
What documents does the bank need?
Typically the EIN confirmation letter, a stamped or certified copy of the articles of organization, the operating agreement, a government-issued ID, and beneficial-ownership details collected at opening. Some banks also ask for a business license. Requirements vary by bank.
Why was my business account application rejected?
Common causes are an LLC filing that has not yet cleared the state, a missing or mismatched EIN letter, a company name that differs across documents, or an applicant not clearly authorized by the operating agreement. Each is usually fixable before reapplying.
Should I open the account before or after forming the LLC?
After. The bank verifies that the LLC exists and is in good standing, which requires the articles to be filed and accepted first. The typical order is: form the LLC, obtain the EIN, then open the account.
Does the opening deposit count as business income?
No. Money the owner moves in to fund the account is a capital contribution, not income, and should be recorded that way. Mislabeling it as revenue overstates income and muddies the books.