Jan 21, 2026 6:13pm

Converting an LLC to a C-Corporation and Preparing for Fundraising

Educational Resource - Not Legal Advice

The Timing Question: When to Choose Your Structure

Starting with End in Mind

Founders commonly consider:

If you're confident about raising VC:

  • Many incorporate as Delaware C-Corp from day one
  • Avoids conversion costs and complexity later
  • Sets up proper governance from the start
  • Stock option plans easier to implement

If you're uncertain about fundraising:

  • Some start as LLC for simplicity and tax benefits
  • Plan to convert if institutional investment materializes
  • Understand conversion will add costs and complexity
  • Accept the trade-off for early flexibility

If you're only raising friends and family:

  • LLC often works fine initially
  • Simpler structure for early days
  • Can convert when approaching institutional investors
  • Lower initial compliance costs

Red Flags for Investors

Structures that commonly raise concerns:

  • Messy cap tables - Too many small investors, unclear ownership
  • Unusual structures - Custom entities that don't fit standard models
  • Poor documentation - Missing or inadequate operating agreements/bylaws
  • Vesting issues - Founders with unvested equity
  • Complex ownership - Circular ownership, trusts, foreign entities
  • S-Corporation with plans to raise VC - Structurally incompatible

State Selection: Delaware vs. Home State

The Delaware Default for VC-Backed Companies

Why Delaware C-Corporations dominate:

Established corporate law:

  • Extensive case law and precedent
  • Predictable legal environment
  • Business-friendly statutes
  • Specialized Court of Chancery

Investor expectations:

  • VCs typically expect Delaware incorporation
  • Standardized investment documents assume Delaware
  • Attorneys familiar with Delaware law
  • Easier due diligence process

Flexibility:

  • Modern corporate statutes
  • Supportive of various governance structures
  • Allows indemnification provisions
  • Recognizes common VC terms

Costs:

  • Annual franchise tax (~$400 minimum for typical startup)
  • Registered agent fees (~$100-300/year)
  • Must also register in states where operating (foreign qualification)

Home State Incorporation

When founders commonly use home state:

  • Not raising venture capital
  • Bootstrapping or modest growth plans
  • Investors don't require Delaware
  • Want to minimize costs
  • Simpler compliance desired

Considerations:

  • Lower annual fees in many states
  • No foreign registration in home state
  • Local attorneys may be more familiar
  • But may need to convert to Delaware for VC funding

Common pattern: Bootstrapped businesses often start in their home state. VC-track businesses typically choose Delaware from the start.

Equity Compensation and Structure

Stock Options

C-Corporations allow traditional employee stock options:

  • Incentive Stock Options (ISOs)
  • Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs)
  • Well-established 409A valuation process
  • Standard vesting schedules
  • Familiar to employees and investors

LLCs have limitations:

  • No traditional stock options
  • Can grant "profits interests" (more complex)
  • Less familiar to employees
  • Harder to explain value
  • More complex tax treatment

Common pattern: Companies planning significant hiring with equity compensation typically use C-Corporation structure for simpler option administration.

Founder Equity and Vesting

Regardless of structure, founders commonly implement:

  • 4-year vesting schedules
  • 1-year cliff
  • Accelerated vesting provisions (single or double-trigger)
  • Reverse vesting or restricted stock

Investors typically require:

  • All founder stock subject to vesting
  • Buy-back rights for unvested shares
  • Clear documentation of vesting terms
  • Consistency across founders

International Considerations

Foreign Founders

U.S. business structures for non-U.S. founders:

  • C-Corporations work for foreign founders
  • Can own stock in C-Corp regardless of citizenship
  • S-Corporations prohibited for non-U.S. residents
  • Tax implications for foreign owners vary

Common pattern: International founders building in U.S. market typically form Delaware C-Corporation.

Foreign Investors

International investors typically prefer:

  • C-Corporations (avoid partnership K-1s)
  • Clear documentation and governance
  • Structure they can explain to their stakeholders
  • Avoid U.S. tax filing obligations from pass-through entities

The Conversion Process: LLC to C-Corp

Since this is such a common path, here's what typically happens:

When Conversion Commonly Occurs

  • Before approaching VCs for Series A
  • When angels require it as condition of investment
  • Upon acceptance to VC-backed accelerator
  • When counsel advises it for upcoming fundraise

Steps Typically Involved

1. Formation of new corporation

  • File Certificate of Incorporation (usually Delaware)
  • Adopt bylaws
  • Issue initial stock to founders

2. Asset transfer

  • Transfer business assets from LLC to corporation
  • Assign contracts and agreements
  • Transfer IP rights
  • Update vendor/customer relationships

3. Exchange of interests

  • LLC membership interests exchanged for corporate stock
  • Implement vesting schedules
  • Document 83(b) elections if needed

4. Tax considerations

  • Structure as tax-free reorganization if possible
  • File appropriate tax forms
  • Address any tax consequences

5. Cleanup

  • Dissolve or merge LLC
  • Update all legal documents
  • Notify stakeholders
  • File necessary state documents

Costs Typically Involved

  • Legal fees: Often $5,000-$25,000+
  • Accounting/tax advice: Often $2,000-$10,000+
  • State filing fees: $500-$2,000

Total: Often $7,500-$35,000+ depending on complexity

Costs vary widely based on company complexity, state, and professional rates.

Special Situations

Convertible Notes and SAFEs

Bridge financing instruments:

  • Allow raising money before finalizing structure
  • Convert to equity in future priced round
  • Give time to complete entity conversion
  • Popular for pre-seed and seed funding

Common pattern: Founders sometimes raise initial capital on convertible notes/SAFEs while still LLC, then convert to C-Corp before the notes convert to equity.

Revenue-Based Businesses

For businesses with revenue but modest venture ambitions:

  • LLC structure may work fine
  • Pass-through taxation advantageous
  • Investors comfortable with profit distributions
  • May never need VC-style fundraising

Acquisition as Exit Strategy

If acquisition (not IPO) is the goal:

  • C-Corp still often preferred
  • Some acquirers comfortable with LLCs
  • Depends on acquirer's structure and preferences
  • Asset purchase vs. stock purchase considerations

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Choosing Structure Based Only on Current Needs

Some founders optimize for today without considering tomorrow. Structure decision should account for likely fundraising path.

Mistake 2: Waiting Too Long to Convert

Converting mid-fundraise creates delays and complications. Many founders convert before actively fundraising.

Mistake 3: Not Implementing Founder Vesting

Regardless of structure, founder vesting is typically expected by investors and protects against co-founder departures.

Mistake 4: Choosing S-Corp Before Understanding Limitations

S-Corp restrictions make it incompatible with most outside investment, requiring costly conversion later.

Mistake 5: Creating Overly Complex Structures

Custom or unusual structures create investor hesitation and higher due diligence costs.

Mistake 6: Not Consulting with Professionals

Entity selection for fundraising involves legal, tax, and securities law considerations that benefit from professional guidance.

Decision Framework for Fundraising-Oriented Businesses

Consider these factors:

Question 1: What type of capital are you raising?

Venture capital:

  • C-Corporation is standard expectation
  • Delaware incorporation typical
  • Structure from day one or convert early

Angel investors:

  • C-Corporation increasingly expected
  • Some flexibility in early stages
  • May accept LLC with conversion plan

Friends and family only:

  • LLC often works fine
  • Simpler structure acceptable
  • Can convert if institutional investors emerge

No outside equity (loans, grants, revenue):

  • Structure flexibility
  • LLC may offer tax advantages
  • Consider future plans

Question 2: What's your growth trajectory?

High-growth, venture-scale:

  • C-Corporation standard
  • Plan for multiple funding rounds
  • IPO or major acquisition exit path

Modest, sustainable growth:

  • LLC may work well
  • Simpler structure, pass-through taxation
  • Less likely to need institutional capital

Question 3: What's your exit strategy?

IPO potential:

  • C-Corporation required
  • Start with proper structure

Acquisition expected:

  • C-Corporation preferred by most acquirers
  • Some acquirers comfortable with LLC

Long-term hold:

  • LLC may offer advantages
  • Pass-through taxation beneficial
  • Less need for multiple stock classes

Question 4: Where are you and your investors located?

U.S. founders and investors:

  • Full flexibility on structure

International founders or investors:

  • C-Corporation typically simplifies matters
  • Avoids certain tax complications
  • More familiar structure globally

Question 5: What do your advisors recommend?

Attorney guidance:

  • Entity formation attorney can assess specific situation
  • Securities attorney if raising capital
  • State-specific considerations

Tax advisor input:

  • CPA familiar with startup taxation
  • Consider current and future tax implications
  • Optimize for likely scenarios

Mentor feedback:

  • Founders who've raised capital successfully
  • Industry-specific norms
  • Practical experiences

The Bottom Line

Business structure for fundraising isn't one-size-fits-all, but clear patterns emerge:

C-Corporations (typically Delaware) are commonly used when:

  • Planning to raise venture capital
  • Building high-growth, scalable business
  • Want multiple stock classes
  • Planning employee stock options
  • Considering IPO exit path
  • Investors have requested it

LLCs may work when:

Only raising friends and family capital

Investors comfortable with structure

No near-term institutional funding plans

Pass-through taxation advantageous

Willing to convert later if needed

Key principles many successful founders follow:

  • Choose structure with fundraising goals in mind
  • Don't optimize only for current situation
  • Convert early if institutional capital is likely
  • Implement proper vesting and documentation regardless of structure
  • Work with experienced professionals on entity selection
  • Understand investor expectations in your industry
  • Plan for complexity and growth from the start

The cost of getting this right: Initial legal fees of $2,000-$10,000 for proper C-Corp formation, or $7,500-$35,000+ to convert later. Many founders find that investing in the right structure from the start saves time, money, and complications during critical fundraising periods.

Most importantly: Entity selection for fundraising involves legal, tax, and securities considerations that vary by circumstance. Consultation with qualified attorneys and tax advisors is strongly recommended before making this decision.

C-Corporations, LLCs, and S-Corporations What Works for Fundraising (And What Doesn't)

How to Choose Your Business Structure When You Plan to Raise Money