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New York state guide · EIN

Getting an EIN for
your New York LLC

An Employer Identification Number is the federal tax ID your New York LLC needs to open a business bank account, hire employees, or accept payments. We obtain it from the IRS on your behalf after New York approves your LLC.

Issued byIRS (not NY Division of Corporations)
Form filedSS-4
CostIncluded in $299
Typical turnaroundSame day after approval

What the EIN actually is

An Employer Identification Number — EIN — is a nine-digit federal tax ID assigned by the Internal Revenue Service. It's to your LLC what a Social Security number is to an individual: a unique identifier that the federal government, banks, payment processors, and payroll systems use to track the entity.

Every New York LLC that plans to open a business bank account, hire employees, or file federal taxes as a partnership or corporation will need an EIN. The only LLCs that can technically operate without one are disregarded single-member LLCs that never hire anyone and use the owner's Social Security number for everything — which is rarely practical once you're actually in business.

How we obtain your New York LLC's EIN

  1. I.

    We wait for New York approval

    The EIN application requires a formed entity. We don't submit the SS-4 until the NY Division of Corporations returns your stamped Articles of Organization — usually 5–7 business days after filing.

  2. II.

    We prepare Form SS-4

    A formation specialist completes the SS-4 with your LLC's name, New York formation date, principal business activity, and member information — the classification you've elected (disregarded, partnership, S-corp, C-corp).

  3. III.

    We submit to the IRS

    For most founders (U.S. person as responsible party, valid SSN or ITIN) the online IRS system issues the EIN the same day. For non-U.S. responsible parties we submit by fax, which takes roughly four business days.

  4. IV.

    We deliver the EIN letter

    You receive the official IRS confirmation letter (CP 575 or equivalent) — the document every U.S. bank requires to open the business account in your New York LLC's name.

New York note

New York has a publication requirement: within 120 days of formation, your LLC must publish a notice in two newspapers — one daily, one weekly — designated by the county clerk, for six consecutive weeks. After publication you file a Certificate of Publication with the Department of State. Costs vary by county and are steepest in Manhattan, where total publication expense routinely exceeds $1,500.

What the EIN is used for

  • Opening a business bank account. Every major U.S. bank requires the EIN confirmation letter and the stamped New York Articles of Organization before opening a business checking account in the LLC's name.
  • Filing federal tax returns. A multi-member LLC files Form 1065 under the EIN. A single-member LLC defaults to disregarded entity but still benefits from a separate EIN for tax and liability purposes.
  • Payroll and contractor payments. Required for W-2 payroll, 1099 contractor payments, and state withholding registrations in New York.
  • Merchant accounts and payment processors. Stripe, Square, PayPal, and most credit-card processors require the EIN to tie the account to the business entity.

What an EIN is not

An EIN is a federal identifier. It is not a business license, a New York state tax ID, a seller's permit, or a DBA registration. If your business collects New York sales tax or has employees in New York, you'll also need to register with the state's tax authority — that is separate from the EIN and is not part of the $299 formation package.

What's included in the $299 flat fee

State filingArticles of Organization, by a formation specialist
EIN includedFederal tax ID, issued by the IRS after approval
Operating agreementDrafted to your ownership structure — not a template
Agent for service of processOne year included in New York, Albany on file
Ready to form in New York?

$299 flat, plus New York's $200 state fee.

Reservation takes three minutes. A formation specialist in Albany handles the rest.

Start your New York filing