October 7, 2025
Business Licensing & Permits
As a payments and fintech industry expert, I’ve worked with dozens of startups, merchants, and payment processors that rely on proper identity and tax compliance to onboard merchants safely. One of the foundational elements in the U.S. is the Employer Identification Number (EIN Number). In this post, I’ll walk you through everything, from basics to advanced use cases, about EINs for U.S. entrepreneurs. Let’s Start.
An EIN (Employer Identification Number) is a unique nine-digit number assigned by the IRS to business entities for tax reporting and identification purposes. It’s sometimes called a “Federal Tax ID Number.”
Think of it like a Social Security number (SSN), but for a company. The IRS, banks, lenders, vendors, and payroll systems use this to track your business’s tax obligations, liabilities, and filings.
You typically need an EIN if your business:
If you’re a sole proprietor with no employees, you can use your SSN in many cases, but there are important privacy, credibility, and operational downsides (discussed later).
Once an EIN is assigned, it stays with that entity, you don’t typically change it unless the entity structure changes.
There’s sometimes confusion between “TIN” and “EIN.” Let’s clarify.
“TIN” stands for Taxpayer Identification Number. It’s a broad umbrella term used by the IRS to refer to any number that identifies a taxpayer (either an individual or an entity) for tax purposes.
The types of TINs include:
So in short: every EIN is a TIN — but not every TIN is an EIN.
| Business Type / Scenario | TIN Used | Notes / Example |
| Sole proprietor, no employees | SSN (or ITIN if non-resident) | You may use your SSN for tax filing. But some banks/partners prefer EIN. |
| Sole proprietor, with employees | EIN | Required when you hire employees to withhold payroll taxes. |
| Single-member LLC (no employees) | Might use SSN / request EIN | Many opt to get EIN for separation between personal and business. |
| LLC taxed as partnership / multi-member LLC | EIN | Because partnership returns need business-level TIN. |
| Corporation or S-Corp | EIN | Always required. |
| Trust / Estate / Nonprofit | EIN | To identify the entity in IRS systems. |
Example: Suppose Alice runs a freelancing side business as a sole proprietor and has no employees. She can file Schedule C using her SSN. But when she wants a merchant account or opens a business bank account, the bank may refuse to use her SSN and ask for EIN. Meanwhile, Bob forms an LLC taxed as a partnership with his cofounder; he must use an EIN for Form 1065.
So from a best-practice standpoint, even if you’re eligible to use your SSN, many business owners choose to apply for an EIN to decouple personal vs business identity and to appear more professional.
Here’s a practical walkthrough.
1. Decide the Appropriate Entity / Need:
Before applying, know your business structure (sole proprietor, LLC, corporation, etc.) and whether or not you need the EIN for hiring, banking, etc.
2. Gather Key Information
You’ll need:
3. Choose Application Method
You can apply via:
Online is free (no fee by IRS) and the EIN is assigned immediately if valid.
Note: The online application is only available Monday–Friday, typically 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Eastern Time.
4. Fill Form SS-4 (if not online):
The SS-4 form has 18 lines. Key items:
After filling, you fax or mail.
5. Receive Confirmation
You’ll receive a CP 575 notice from IRS confirming your EIN.
6. Maintain and Update EIN Info
If your business changes its address or responsible party, file Form 8822-B within 60 days.
If you change structure (e.g. LLC to corporation), you may need a new EIN.
As someone who’s reviewed dozens of EIN applications in payment-processor onboarding, here are the most common pitfalls and how to avoid them:
Avoiding these mistakes speeds up the process and ensures seamless integration with banks, payroll, and merchant services.
You might wonder: “How does a number help with fraud?” Well, a lot more than you think.
Many financial institutions and merchant acquirers use EIN as a baseline identity marker to cross-check against IRS records and business registries. If the EIN doesn’t match the legal name, that raises flags.
Payment processors and fintech platforms often require EIN + formation documents to run Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) checks. EIN helps correlate with tax filings and watchdog databases.
Transactions, tax filings, payroll, vendor payments all tie back to the EIN. This centralized tracking helps reveal anomalies or suspicious activity.
Using an EIN instead of your SSN for business reduces exposure of personal SSN in public or shared systems, lessening identity risk.
Some B2B clients or platforms validate EINs via IRS “TIN Matching” services (for payers, to confirm TIN & name combos before submitting forms).
Given how fintech and payments are increasingly under regulatory and fraud oversight (e.g., growing investments in transaction monitoring tools with ~18 % CAGR), having a clean, proven EIN lineage helps you stay on good ground.
EIN is not just for taxes. Here’s how it powers real business operations:
Banks require an EIN to differentiate your company from your personal finances. For merchant accounts (credit card processing), acquirers typically run a risk check involving your EIN. They tie your business identity to chargeback history, credit, and fraud assessments.
If you have employees, you’ll use your EIN to withhold and remit payroll taxes (Social Security, Medicare, federal income tax withholding, etc.). Payroll software (e.g. ADP, Gusto) will ask for EIN to set up reporting (Forms 941, W-2, etc.).
Business tax returns — whether Form 1120 (corporation), 1065 (partnership), 1120S (S corp), or other — are filed with your EIN. The IRS uses it to map all your business income and deductions.
As a vendor or contractor, clients often request a Form W-9, which asks for your TIN (in business context, your EIN). Other businesses will then issue Form 1099 (for non-employee compensation) using your EIN.
Lenders and credit agencies use your EIN when assessing your creditworthiness. Building credit under your EIN (e.g. via vendor trade lines) helps grow business credit independent of your personal credit.
Many SaaS or fintech platforms (Stripe, PayPal, Square, Paycron, etc.) require your EIN during onboarding to verify your business identity and reduce fraud risk.
An EIN is a critical foundational piece for any U.S. business beyond a simple solo side gig. While TIN is the broader umbrella, EIN is the specific identification mechanism for entities, used across tax, banking, payments, and security systems.
As fintech, payments, and platform businesses increasingly focus on identity, compliance, and fraud resilience, your EIN becomes more than just a tax number; it’s part of your legal identity, trust layer, and operational foundation.
If you’re building a fintech, marketplace, or merchant-driven business, getting your EIN right early will save you friction later when scaling into payroll, payment processing, merchant onboarding, or financial compliance.
Yes — non-U.S. residents can obtain an EIN via mail, fax or phone (for international applicants). The online system generally requires a U.S. SSN or ITIN.
Generally, no. You should notify the IRS of a name change, often via tax return or letter. You need a new EIN only if you change the business structure (e.g., from LLC to corporation).
Yes, for sole proprietors with no employees. But using EIN is safer (less personal exposure) and more accepted by banks and vendors.
You can find it via IRS correspondence (CP 575), prior tax returns, IRS online tools (for authenticated users), or request IRS help.
No — once assigned, it generally remains for the life of the business (unless structure changes).
No — applying directly via IRS is free. Be wary of third-party services that charge for applying on your behalf.
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