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Study Guide: FBLA Review: Types of Business Ownership (Sole Prop, Partnership, Corp, LLC)
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FBLA Review: Types of Business Ownership (Sole Prop, Partnership, Corp, LLC)

By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.

⏱️ ~5 min read

FBLA – Types of Business Ownership (Sole Prop, Partnership, Corp, LLC)

What This Is

The type of business ownership describes the legal structure that determines who controls the firm, how profits are shared, and who is personally liable for debts. Knowing the differences is essential for the FBLA/DECA exam because questions often ask you to match a scenario to the correct ownership form or calculate tax/ liability impacts. Example: A senior?class “Eco?Bag” startup at your high school is run by three friends who want limited personal risk but also want to keep decision?making simple.


Key Terms & Formulas

  • Sole Proprietorship – A business owned by one individual; the owner bears unlimited personal liability and reports income on Schedule C (Form 1040).
  • Partnership – An agreement between two or more persons to share profits, losses, and management; can be general (unlimited liability) or limited (some partners have limited liability).
  • Corporation (C?Corp) – A separate legal entity that files Form 1120, pays corporate income tax, and offers limited liability to shareholders; profits may be double?taxed (corporate-dividend).
  • S?Corporation (S?Corp) – A corporation that elects Subchapter S status; income passes through to shareholders (avoids double taxation) but must meet 5?shareholder and one?class?of?stock rules.
  • Limited Liability Company (LLC) – A hybrid that provides limited liability like a corporation but is taxed as a partnership (or can elect corporate taxation).
  • Double Taxation – Formula: Corporate Tax + Shareholder Dividend Tax; occurs when profits are taxed at the corporate level and again when distributed as dividends.
  • Pass?Through Taxation – Income is taxed once on the owners’ personal returns (used by sole proprietorships, partnerships, S?Corps, and most LLCs).
  • Personal Liability ExposureUnlimited for sole proprietors & general partners; Limited for corporations, S?Corps, LLC members, and limited partners.
  • Equity DistributionProfit Share = (Ownership % × Net Income) for pass?through entities; Dividends are declared by the board for C?Corps.
  • Formation RequirementsArticles of Incorporation for corporations; Articles of Organization for LLCs; DBA (Doing Business As) filing for sole proprietors/partnerships.
  • Continuity of Existence – Corporations and LLCs continue despite ownership changes; sole proprietorships and partnerships dissolve on death or withdrawal unless otherwise stipulated.
  • Management StructureOwner?operator for sole proprietorship; Partners share management; Board of Directors governs corporations; Members/Managers run LLCs.

Step?by?Step / Process Flow

  1. Identify the scenario’s key factors – number of owners, desired liability protection, tax preferences, and need for continuity.
  2. Match the factor to the ownership type
  3. One owner & no liability shield-Sole Proprietorship.
  4. Multiple owners wanting shared control & simple tax-Partnership.
  5. Want limited liability & ability to raise capital-Corporation (C?Corp or S?Corp).
  6. Want limited liability but flexible tax treatment-LLC.
  7. Calculate tax impact (if required) – apply pass?through vs. double?taxation formulas.
  8. Determine formation steps – file the appropriate state documents (DBA, Articles of Incorporation, Articles of Organization).
  9. Select the correct answer or recommendation – justify with at least two of the identified factors (e.g., liability + tax).

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Assuming all corporations avoid personal liability.
    Correction: Only C?Corps, S?Corps, and LLCs provide limited liability; a general partnership does not.

  • Mistake: Confusing “S?Corp” with “LLC” because both have pass?through taxation.
    Correction: An S?Corp must meet strict IRS eligibility rules (?100 shareholders, one class of stock), whereas an LLC has no such shareholder limits.

  • Mistake: Forgetting that a limited partner in a limited partnership still has limited liability only up to their investment.
    Correction: Only general partners bear unlimited liability; limited partners are protected unless they manage the business.

  • Mistake: Using the C?Corp tax rate for an S?Corp’s income.
    Correction: S?Corp income is reported on owners’ personal returns; apply individual tax rates, not corporate rates.

  • Mistake: Believing an LLC automatically files a Form 1065.
    Correction: Single?member LLCs are disregarded entities and report on Schedule C; multi?member LLCs file Form 1065 unless they elect corporate taxation.


Exam Insights

  1. “Best fit” questions – FBLA often presents a brief business scenario and asks which ownership form is most appropriate. Look for clues: “needs investors,” “wants to keep taxes simple,” or “has only one owner.”
  2. Liability vs. Tax trade?off – The exam loves to test your ability to weigh limited liability against tax burden; remember that sole proprietorships = unlimited liability + simple tax, while C?Corps = limited liability + double tax.
  3. Continuity trap – A common distractor is “LLC continues after death of a member.” While true, many students mistakenly pick “Corporation” because they associate continuity only with corporations.
  4. Formation paperwork – Remember the exact document names: DBA for sole proprietorship/partnership, Articles of Incorporation for corporations, Articles of Organization for LLCs.

Quick Check Questions

  1. A high?school robotics club wants to sell merchandise, limit personal risk, and allow three alumni investors to own shares. Which ownership type should they choose?
    Answer: Corporation (C?Corp) – provides limited liability and can issue multiple classes of stock to investors.

  2. Three students launch a tutoring service, split profits equally, and each will manage the business. They want simple tax filing. Which structure fits best?
    Answer: General Partnership – unlimited liability is acceptable, and income passes through to each partner’s personal return.

  3. A single?owner “Eco?Bag” startup wants liability protection but prefers to avoid corporate formalities. Which entity is optimal?
    Answer: LLC (single?member) – gives limited liability while being taxed as a sole proprietorship (Schedule C).


Last?Minute Cram Sheet (10 one?liners)

  1. Sole Proprietorship = one owner, unlimited liability, Schedule C tax.
  2. Partnership = ?2 owners; general partners = unlimited liability; limited partners = liability-investment.
  3. C?Corp = limited liability + double taxation (Corporate Tax + Dividend Tax).
  4. S?Corp = limited liability + pass?through tax; must meet 5?shareholder & one?class rules.
  5. LLC = limited liability + default pass?through tax (unless electing corporate).
  6. Form filing: DBA-sole/partnership; Articles of Incorporation-corporation; Articles of Organization-LLC.
  7. Continuity: Only corporations & LLCs survive owner death/change automatically.
  8. Profit share formula: Owner % × Net Income (for pass?through entities).
  9. Trap: Assuming a limited partnership shields all partners; only limited partners get protection.
  10. Trap: Mixing up S?Corp eligibility (?100 shareholders, one class) with LLC flexibility.