"Should I start an LLC?" is one of the most common questions athletes ask the moment a deal or two comes in. It sounds like the grown-up, official thing to do. But for a lot of athletes, it's a step that creates more work than it's worth — at least at first. Let's break down what an LLC actually is, what it does, and when it starts to make sense.
What is an LLC, in plain English?
LLC stands for limited liability company. Strip away the legalese and it's just this: a simple legal business you create so your business activity is separate from you personally.
Think of it like a separate container. Right now, when you do an NIL deal, the money and the legal responsibility land directly on you. An LLC creates a box with its own name. The deals, the income, and a lot of the legal responsibility live inside the box instead of being glued to your personal life.
It does two main things:
- Liability protection — the "limited liability" part. If the business is ever sued, your personal stuff (your car, your savings) is generally protected, because the lawsuit is against the box, not you. (This protection isn't bulletproof, but it's real.)
- Tax flexibility (later) — at higher income levels, an LLC can be set up to be taxed in different ways that may save money. More on that below.
Why you probably don't need one for your first deals
Here's the part nobody selling you "form your LLC today!" services wants to say out loud: a basic single-member LLC (just you, no partners) is taxed exactly the same as not having one. The IRS looks right through it. So for a $500 or $2,000 deal, you get no tax magic — you'd report that income the same way either way.
Meanwhile, the LLC comes with real costs and chores:
- State filing fees — often $50 to $500 to set up, and many states charge an annual fee just to keep it alive.
- A separate business bank account and bookkeeping to keep things clean.
- Annual paperwork and deadlines you can be penalized for missing.
When an LLC actually starts to make sense
The math flips as your income grows. Two things change:
1. Tax flexibility becomes worth real money
Remember self-employment tax — the roughly 15% extra you pay because you're self-employed? At higher income, a CPA can sometimes have your LLC taxed as an "S-corporation," which can reduce how much of that tax you pay. This is a real, sometimes large, savings — but it only makes sense once you're earning enough that the savings beat the extra cost and complexity (often well into five figures of consistent NIL income).
2. Liability protection matters more
As you do bigger deals, run a real personal brand, hire people, or sell products, the chance of a legal dispute goes up. That's when keeping the business legally separate from your personal life starts to be worth the hassle.
An LLC is a tool, not a trophy. Open it when your income gives it a job to do — not on day one because a YouTube video told you to.
What to do instead, right now
You don't need an LLC to handle NIL money well. You need the basics, in order:
- Set aside about 30% of every payment for taxes — see how much to save for NIL taxes.
- Keep clean records — track income and save receipts for business expenses. This habit matters far more than an LLC, and it's exactly what makes an LLC easy to add later if you need one.
- Build your foundation — emergency fund, no high-interest debt, then invest simply.
- Ask a CPA the LLC question once your income is consistent. A single paid session is cheap insurance.
For the whole picture, start with the complete guide to NIL money, and when you sign deals, learn how to read an NIL contract.
Frequently asked questions
Do college athletes need an LLC for NIL money?
Usually not for your first small deals. An LLC adds paperwork and cost without much benefit at low income levels. As your NIL income grows and becomes consistent, an LLC can offer tax flexibility and liability protection — that's the point to ask a CPA whether it makes sense for you.
What is an LLC in simple terms?
An LLC, or limited liability company, is a simple legal business you create so your business activity is separate from you personally. It can protect your personal assets if the business is sued, and as it grows it can give you more options for how your income is taxed.
Does an LLC lower my NIL taxes?
Not by itself. A basic single-member LLC is taxed the same as just being yourself. The potential tax savings come later, at higher income, when a CPA may elect to tax the LLC differently (such as an S-corp election). For small deals there's usually no tax advantage.
This article is educational and is not personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Whether to form an LLC depends on your specific situation, income, and state — confirm with a licensed CPA or attorney. Tax rules and figures change. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal.