Comparison
Quick answer
Both an LLC and a sole proprietorship are simple business structures — but they differ fundamentally on liability protection. A sole proprietorship offers zero separation between you and your business; an LLC creates a legal shield that protects your personal assets from business debts and lawsuits. For most business owners, the cost and complexity of an LLC is worth it.
For almost any active business, an LLC is worth the modest formation cost. The liability protection alone — keeping a business lawsuit from becoming a personal financial catastrophe — justifies it. Sole proprietorships make sense primarily for brief proof-of-concept testing before formal formation. A business attorney can form your LLC correctly and draft the operating agreement that governs it.
Hourly rate
$150–$500/hr
Wide range reflects specialization — IP and corporate law command higher rates than general advisory
Per session
$200–$750
Typical for a 60–90 minute contract review, legal strategy, or compliance consultation
Project rate
$500–$5,000+
Flat-fee engagements for entity formation, contract drafting, or trademark filings