Back to Blog
FinanceMarch 10, 2025Updated: June 10, 202617 min read

How to Open a Business Bank Account: Requirements, Documents, and Steps

How to Open a Business Bank Account: Requirements, Documents, and Steps

Updated: June 10, 2026

A Message from Slava

I'm Slava, founder of Jupid. Before this, I built Anna Money, where we worked with more than 60,000 small businesses. A surprising number of the painful conversations we had with owners traced back to one early shortcut: running the business out of a personal checking account "just for now."

"Just for now" becomes eighteen months. Then a client wants to pay an invoice made out to your LLC, or a lender asks for business bank statements, or your accountant has to untangle 2,000 mixed transactions at tax time — and the shortcut suddenly costs real money.

Opening a business bank account is not hard. It usually takes under an hour once your paperwork is in order. What trips people up is showing up with the wrong documents, mismatched information, or a business entity the bank can't verify. This guide covers exactly what banks require, the documents you need for each entity type, how the verification process works behind the scenes, and what to do when an application gets rejected.

Here's what we'll cover:

  • Why a separate account matters (it's bigger than tidiness)
  • Business bank account requirements: the four things every bank asks for
  • Documents needed by entity type — sole prop, LLC, corporation, partnership
  • The step-by-step opening process
  • Traditional bank vs. online bank vs. credit union
  • Fees to watch, common rejection reasons, and what to do after opening

Why a Separate Business Bank Account Matters

A business checking account isn't an upgrade you get to later. Three things depend on it from day one.

Liability protection. If you formed an LLC or corporation, the legal shield between business debts and your personal assets only holds if you treat the business as genuinely separate. Commingling funds — paying personal bills from the business account, depositing business revenue into your personal account — is the classic evidence a court uses to "pierce the corporate veil" and reach your personal assets. A dedicated account is the cheapest liability insurance you'll ever buy. If you're still choosing a structure, our state-by-state LLC formation guides walk through that decision.

Clean books and defensible taxes. The IRS expects you to substantiate business income and deductions. When every business transaction flows through one account, your records essentially build themselves; when business and personal are mixed, every deduction becomes an argument. The U.S. Small Business Administration puts a business account at the top of its launch checklist for exactly this reason.

Credibility and access. Clients can pay your business name instead of your personal one. Payment processors, lenders, and platforms like Stripe or Shopify generally require a business account for payouts. And the account itself starts a banking relationship you'll lean on later for a business credit card or line of credit.

One more practical point: deposits at FDIC-insured banks are protected up to $250,000 per depositor, per bank, per ownership category — and business accounts of corporations, partnerships, and LLCs are insured separately from the owners' personal accounts. That separation only exists if the accounts are actually separate.

Business Bank Account Requirements: What Every Bank Asks For

Requirements vary by bank, but they all reduce to four questions:

  1. Who are you? A government-issued photo ID (driver's license or passport) for every owner who'll be on the account.
  2. What is your business? Formation documents proving the entity exists — or, for sole proprietors, proof you're operating (a DBA certificate or business license).
  3. What's your tax ID? An Employer Identification Number (EIN) for LLCs, corporations, and partnerships. Sole proprietors without employees can typically use a Social Security number, per the SBA — though most banks accept (and many owners prefer) an EIN even then.
  4. Who controls and owns it? For legal entities, federal rules require banks to identify every individual owning 25% or more, plus one person with management control. More on this below.

The EIN deserves a special note because it's the document people most often get wrong. The IRS issues EINs for free at IRS.gov — the online application takes minutes and gives you the number immediately. Any site charging for an EIN is reselling a free government service. Our Form SS-4 guide covers the application end to end, and if you've already got one but can't find it, here's how to find your EIN number.

Documents Needed to Open a Business Bank Account, by Entity Type

Banks publish slightly different lists, but this is the standard set. Call ahead or check the bank's website — showing up with one missing document is the most common reason an in-branch application stalls.

DocumentSole PropLLCCorporationPartnership
Government-issued photo IDYesYesYesYes
SSN or EINSSN OKEINEINEIN
Formation documentArticles of OrganizationArticles of IncorporationPartnership agreement / certificate
Governing documentOperating agreementBylaws + corporate resolutionPartnership agreement
DBA / assumed name certificateIf using a trade nameIf operating under a different nameIf operating under a different nameIf operating under a different name
Business license / permitsIf your state or city requires oneSameSameSame
Beneficial ownership infoAll 25%+ ownersAll 25%+ ownersAll 25%+ owners

A few notes by entity:

Sole proprietorship. The lightest paperwork. You'll need your SSN (or EIN), photo ID, and — if you operate under a name other than your own — the DBA registration from your county or state. Some banks also ask for a business license where one applies.

LLC. This is the most common case, so it's worth being precise about what a business bank account for an LLC requires: the Articles of Organization stamped by your state (sometimes called a Certificate of Formation or Certificate of Organization), your EIN, and usually the operating agreement — especially for multi-member LLCs, because it tells the bank who's authorized to act on the account. Some banks also want your EIN on IRS letterhead: that's the CP 575 confirmation letter you received when the EIN was issued, or a 147C replacement letter if you lost it.

Corporation. Articles of Incorporation, EIN, bylaws, and typically a corporate resolution naming who is authorized to open and operate the account. If officers aren't listed in your state filing, the bank may ask for meeting minutes or a signed officer certification.

Partnership. The partnership agreement, EIN, and any state filing (limited partnerships and LLPs register with the state; general partnerships often don't, in which case the agreement itself plus a DBA certificate does the work).

If your state issued you a separate state tax ID — for sales tax or payroll withholding — some banks ask for that too. It's a different number from the federal EIN; our state tax ID guide explains the distinction.

How to Open a Business Bank Account, Step by Step

Step 1: Make sure your entity actually exists

The bank verifies your business against state records, so your formation must be complete and in good standing before you apply. If the state hasn't finished processing your LLC filing, wait. If you're at this stage, the LLC formation guides cover the sequence state by state.

Step 2: Get your EIN — free, from the IRS

Apply online at IRS.gov and you'll have the number in one sitting. The IRS recommends forming the entity with your state before applying, since a mismatched application can be delayed. Download the CP 575 confirmation PDF at the end and save it somewhere permanent — banks ask for it more often than you'd expect.

Step 3: Decide what kind of bank fits how you operate

The honest decision framework is one question: do you handle cash? If yes, you need a traditional bank or credit union with branches. If your revenue arrives by card, ACH, and wire, an online bank's lower fees and faster onboarding usually win. The comparison table below goes deeper.

Step 4: Compare specific accounts on fees, not perks

Sign-up bonuses fade; monthly fees compound. Compare the monthly maintenance fee (and what waives it), included transactions, cash deposit limits, and wire/ACH pricing against your real expected volume.

Step 5: Apply — online or in a branch

Most banks now let you open a business bank account online, including many traditional banks; fintech-style banks are online-only and often approve straightforward applications the same day. In-branch applications make sense when your situation is unusual — multiple entities, trust ownership, a recently re-formed company — because a banker can resolve questions on the spot. Either way, enter your business name, address, and EIN exactly as they appear on your state filing and IRS records. Mismatches are a top rejection trigger.

Step 6: Pass verification

The bank now runs identity and business checks (the KYB section below explains what happens). Online banks often clear this in minutes; anything that needs manual review can take a few business days. Respond fast if they ask for an extra document — stalled applications usually just need one more piece of paper.

Step 7: Fund it and route everything through it

Make the opening deposit (anywhere from $0 to a few hundred dollars depending on the bank), activate the debit card, and then do the part most people skip: move every business money flow to the new account. Update payment processors, invoicing, subscriptions, and anywhere clients pay you. The account only protects you if it's actually the one you use.

Traditional Bank vs. Online Bank vs. Credit Union

Traditional bankOnline bank / fintechCredit union
Opening speedDays; often branch visitMinutes to ~1 day, fully onlineDays; membership required first
Monthly fees$10–$30, usually waivable with a balanceOften $0Low, often $0–$10
Cash depositsEasy, at branches/ATMsHard — third-party networks, feesEasy at branches; shared-branch networks
In-person helpYesNo — chat/email supportYes, typically more personal
Lending relationshipStrong; SBA loans, credit linesLimited or via partnersStrong for members, competitive rates
Software integrationsImproving, variesUsually the bestOften weakest
Best forCash-handling businesses, future borrowersOnline businesses, freelancers, speedLocal businesses that value relationship banking

Two caveats. First, many fintech business accounts are not banks themselves — they partner with FDIC-insured banks to hold deposits. That structure is common and workable, but read how your money is actually insured. Second, credit unions require membership (usually based on location or association), and their deposit insurance comes from the NCUA rather than the FDIC — same $250,000 coverage level, different insurer.

Fees to Watch

The advertised account is rarely the account you experience. Check these six lines in the fee schedule:

  • Monthly maintenance fee — and the waiver condition. A "$15/month, waived with $2,000 minimum balance" account is free only if your balance never dips.
  • Transaction limits — many traditional accounts include 100–250 free transactions per month, then charge per item. High-volume businesses hit this fast.
  • Cash deposit fees — often free up to a monthly cap ($5,000 is common), then charged per $100 deposited.
  • Wire fees — incoming and outgoing, domestic and international. If you pay overseas contractors, this line matters more than the monthly fee.
  • ACH fees — usually free to receive; some banks charge for sending or for same-day ACH.
  • Out-of-network ATM fees — relevant for online banks with no ATM fleet of their own.

How Banks Verify You: KYB in Plain English

Between submitting the application and getting approved, the bank runs a process called Know Your Business — identity verification required under federal anti-money-laundering law. We wrote a full KYB verification guide, but here's the short version of what happens to your application.

The bank confirms your business is real and active: it checks your entity against state registry records (name, status, registered address) and validates your EIN against IRS records. It verifies the humans involved: ID checks on you and anyone else on the account. And under FinCEN's Customer Due Diligence Rule, it must collect a beneficial ownership certification — the name, date of birth, address, and SSN of every individual who owns 25% or more of the company, plus one person with significant management control, before the account can open.

This is why preparation beats persuasion. If your LLC shows "delinquent" in the state registry because you missed an annual report, or the business address on your application doesn't match your formation document, the automated checks fail and a human has to sort it out — or the bank just declines. Five minutes checking your own state registry listing before applying saves days.

Why Business Bank Account Applications Get Rejected

Rejections cluster around a handful of causes, most of them fixable:

ChexSystems history. Most banks screen the owners through ChexSystems, a consumer reporting agency that tracks banking behavior — unpaid overdrafts, accounts closed for cause, suspected fraud. A negative record on your personal banking history can sink your business application. You're entitled to a free copy of your ChexSystems report (it's a specialty consumer reporting agency under the FCRA); if you're rejected, pull it, dispute errors, and settle legitimate old balances. Some banks and fintechs don't use ChexSystems — worth asking before you apply elsewhere.

Information mismatches. The business name on the application says "Acme Design LLC," the state record says "Acme Design Group LLC," the EIN letter says something else. Banks verify against official records character by character. Fix the source records or match them exactly.

Entity not in good standing. Missed annual reports or franchise taxes can flip your status to delinquent or administratively dissolved. Cure it with the state first.

Incomplete beneficial ownership information. If a 25%+ owner won't provide their details, the bank legally cannot open the account. There's no workaround.

Restricted industries. Banks maintain their own risk policies; businesses in cannabis, gambling, crypto, and adult content get declined at many institutions regardless of paperwork. If you're in one of these, look for banks that explicitly serve your industry.

A rejection at one bank is not a blacklist. Diagnose the reason, fix it, and apply somewhere with requirements that fit your situation.

Two Worked Examples

The freelance designer who formed an LLC. Maya runs a single-member design LLC in Colorado. No cash, all revenue via Stripe and ACH. Her path:

Mon    File Articles of Organization with CO Secretary of State (online)
Wed    State confirms — LLC active in the registry
Wed    Apply for EIN at IRS.gov (15 min) → EIN issued immediately,
       CP 575 PDF downloaded and saved
Thu    Apply at an online business bank: uploads photo ID,
       Articles of Organization, enters EIN
       Beneficial ownership: just Maya, 100% owner — one form
Thu    Approved same day. $0 monthly fee, $0 opening deposit
Fri    Stripe payouts re-pointed to the new account

Total: 5 days end to end, ~1 hour of actual work, $0 in banking fees.

The two-partner food truck. Sam and Dana run a 50/50 LLC with heavy daily cash sales. An online-only bank would make every cash deposit a chore, so they choose a credit union with branches near their routes. They bring: Articles of Organization, EIN confirmation letter, the operating agreement (the credit union checks who's authorized to sign), both photo IDs, and beneficial ownership details for both partners (each owns 25%+). The application takes a branch visit and two days for approval. The fee math favors them too: free cash deposits up to $10,000/month versus per-deposit fees elsewhere.

Same legal requirements, opposite right answers — the deciding variable was how the money physically arrives.

What to Do After the Account Is Open

Opening the account is the start, not the finish. In the first month:

  1. Move every flow. Client payments, payment processor payouts, software subscriptions, contractor payments — all through the business account. Pay yourself with a deliberate transfer (owner's draw or salary, depending on your entity) instead of spending directly from business funds.
  2. Stop the commingling cold. One personal charge on the business card "because it was handy" becomes thirty. The discipline is binary.
  3. Start the credit file. A business bank account is a prerequisite for most business credit cards and vendor credit. If you plan to seek contracts or trade credit, get a DUNS number — it's free and starts your business credit profile with Dun & Bradstreet.
  4. Register the account where taxes happen. If your state requires sales tax or payroll withholding registration, you'll connect this account for remittances — see the state tax ID guide if you haven't registered yet.
  5. Connect your bookkeeping before transaction #1. Categorizing transactions as they happen is trivial; reconstructing a year of them in April is misery.

That last step is where I'll mention what we built. Jupid is an AI accountant that connects directly to your business bank account and auto-categorizes every transaction with 95.9% accuracy — so the clean separation you just created turns into clean books without manual data entry. There's no new app to learn: Jupid works over WhatsApp and iMessage, so when you want to know "how much did I spend on equipment this quarter?" you ask in a chat and get the answer from your real bank data. It also learns your corrections, so the way you categorize an expense is how it gets categorized going forward.

To be clear about what Jupid is not: it's not a bank, and it doesn't open accounts for you. It's the layer on top — the one that makes the account you just opened actually useful for taxes, deductions, and knowing where your money goes. The best moment to connect it is the week the account opens, while the transaction history is still empty. Try Jupid and start with books that never fall behind.

Action Checklist

  • Confirm your entity is filed and shows "active/good standing" in the state registry
  • Get your EIN free at IRS.gov and save the CP 575 PDF
  • Decide: cash business → traditional bank or credit union; online business → online bank
  • Compare monthly fees, transaction limits, cash deposit caps, and wire pricing
  • Gather documents for your entity type (table above) and check name/address consistency
  • Prepare beneficial ownership details for every 25%+ owner
  • Apply, respond quickly to verification requests, make the opening deposit
  • Re-point every payment flow to the new account and stop using personal accounts
  • Connect your bookkeeping (Jupid, or whatever you use) before transactions pile up

Sources


This guide is for general educational purposes and does not constitute tax, legal, or banking advice. Bank requirements and federal rules can change, and your situation may differ. Verify details with your bank and state, and consult a qualified professional before acting.

Keep reading

Ready to simplify your finances?

Join 1,000+ businesses using Jupid to save time and money. Start simplifying your finances today.

30-day money-back guarantee