DBA vs LLC in Wyoming
Choosing between a DBA and an LLC is one of the first decisions new business owners in Wyoming face. They serve different purposes, and in some cases you may need both.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | DBA (DBA) | LLC | Sole Proprietorship |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liability protection | No | Yes | No |
| Separate legal entity | No | Yes | No |
| Business name registration | Yes | Yes (entity name) | Uses your legal name |
| Cost to file | $99 + filing fee | Higher (state formation fee) | No filing needed |
| Ongoing requirements | Periodic renewal | Annual report (in most states) | Minimal |
| Tax flexibility | No | Yes (choose tax treatment) | No |
| Complexity | Low | Moderate | Very low |
What Is a DBA?
A DBA — called a "Doing Business As" or DBA in most states — is simply a business name registration. It lets you operate under a name other than your legal name. A DBA does not create a new legal entity and does not provide liability protection.
In Wyoming, this filing is officially known as a DBA registration.
What Is an LLC?
An LLC (Limited Liability Company) is a legal business entity registered with the Wyoming Secretary of State. It creates a separate legal structure that provides personal liability protection — meaning your personal assets (home, savings, car) are generally protected if the business is sued or incurs debt.
When to Use a DBA
A DBA makes sense when:
- You're a sole proprietor or partnership and want a professional business name
- You already have an LLC or corporation but want to operate under an additional name
- You want a low-cost, simple way to start doing business under a brand name
- Liability protection is not a primary concern (or you have insurance covering your risk)
- You're testing a business idea and want to keep startup costs minimal
When to Form an LLC
An LLC makes sense when:
- You want personal liability protection for your assets
- You plan to take on debt, sign contracts, or work in a field with lawsuit risk
- You want tax flexibility (LLCs can elect different tax treatments)
- You're building a business you intend to grow long-term
- You want the credibility that comes with a formal business entity
Can You Have Both?
Yes. Many business owners in Wyoming form an LLC and then file a DBA so the LLC can operate under a different name. For example, if your LLC is registered as "Smith Holdings LLC" but you want to do business as "Smith Consulting," you'd file a DBA for the alternate name.
Cost Comparison in Wyoming
- DBA filing: $99 service fee + filing fee — simple paperwork, usually processed in days
- LLC formation: Higher cost (state filing fee typically $50-$500 depending on the state) — more paperwork, more ongoing requirements
Bottom Line
If you just need a business name and want to keep things simple, a DBA is the right choice. If you need liability protection and want a formal business structure, form an LLC. And if you want both a formal entity and a different operating name, you can do both.