There are several types of companies, each designed for different business needs, structures, and legal protections. Here’s a breakdown of the most common ones globally (with special notes for India and USA):
πΉ 1. Sole Proprietorship
- Owned by: One person
- Legal Status: Not a separate legal entity
- Liability: Unlimited (owner is personally liable)
- Taxation: Personal income tax
- Best For: Freelancers, small local businesses
πΉ 2. Partnership
- Owned by: 2 or more people
- Types:
- General Partnership (equal responsibility)
- Limited Partnership (one or more partners with limited liability)
- Legal Status: Not always separate
- Liability: Varies (general partners are personally liable)
- Best For: Joint ventures, small firms
πΉ 3. Limited Liability Partnership (LLP)
- Separate legal entity
- Owners: Partners
- Liability: Limited to their contribution
- Taxation: Pass-through in many countries
- Best For: Professionals like lawyers, consultants
πΉ 4. Private Limited Company (Pvt Ltd) β Common in India
- Separate legal entity
- Owners: Shareholders (max 200)
- Directors: Minimum 2
- Liability: Limited by shares
- Canβt trade shares publicly
- Best For: Startups, medium-sized businesses
πΉ 5. Public Limited Company (Ltd or PLC)
- Separate legal entity
- Owners: Public shareholders (can issue shares on stock market)
- Strict regulations
- Liability: Limited
- Best For: Large companies, listed on stock exchanges
πΉ 6. One Person Company (OPC) β India-specific
- Single owner with limited liability
- Separate legal entity
- Best For: Solo entrepreneurs who want corporate structure
πΉ 7. Limited Liability Company (LLC) β USA-specific
- Separate legal entity
- Owners: Members
- Liability: Limited
- Flexible taxation options
- Best For: Small-medium businesses, startups
πΉ 8. Corporation (Inc. or Corp) β USA and global
- C Corporation (C-Corp):
- Taxed separately (double taxation)
- Best for large-scale businesses, raising capital
- S Corporation (S-Corp):
- Pass-through taxation
- Limited to 100 shareholders (US citizens/residents only)
πΉ 9. Non-Profit Organization (NPO / NGO)
- Purpose: Charitable, educational, religious, etc.
- Tax Benefits: Often tax-exempt
- No profit distribution to members
- Best For: Social enterprises, charities
πΉ 10. Joint Venture (JV)
- Temporary partnership between two or more entities
- For a specific project or goal
- Separate legal structure optional