Home/Start/PLLC in Vermont
Vermont : Professional LLC

Form a PLLC in Vermont.

Licensed professionals in Vermont can form a Professional LLC (PLLC) to combine the liability protection of an LLC with the regulatory framework of the licensing board. Vermont permits PLLC for licensed professionals. Most licensed professions (medicine, law, accounting, architecture, engineering, dentistry, therapy) require the PLLC structure plus the relevant state licensing board approval before the entity can practice in Vermont. Our domestic formation service fee is $0.

Part of your File.Business BOS · 51 jurisdictions · 220K+ businesses
LICENSED PROFESSIONAL · VERMONTPVTPLLC AVAILABLELICENSED PROFESSIONAL · VERMONT
Vermont PLLC essentials

What forming a Professional LLC in Vermont actually involves.

Vermont PLLC status

Vermont permits PLLC for licensed professionals.

All members must be licensed

Most states require every member of a PLLC to hold an active license in the profession the entity will practice. Adding a non-licensed business partner usually disqualifies the PLLC; that partner would need to be structured separately.

Liability protection limits

A PLLC protects each member from the malpractice of other members and from general business debts, but does NOT protect a member from their own personal malpractice. Professional liability insurance covers the gap.

Vermont licensing board approval

Vermont requires the relevant state licensing board (medical board, bar association, board of accountancy, board of architects, etc.) to approve the entity formation. The Articles often have to be signed off before the SOS will accept the filing.

Federal tax treatment

PLLCs are treated the same as regular LLCs for federal tax: disregarded entity (single-member), partnership (multi-member), or S-Corp / C-Corp by election. Professional services income is not treated differently by the IRS based on entity type.

Naming requirements

PLLC name in Vermont must include the entity suffix ("PLLC", "P.L.L.C.", or "Professional Limited Liability Company") and may need to include the profession. Most licensing boards have specific naming rules on top of Vermont SOS rules.

How it works

A clean handoff, in 7 steps.

Confirm your license is current

Most Vermont licensing boards will not approve the entity formation if your individual professional license is delinquent, suspended, or on probation.

Pick the right entity for Vermont

PLLC is the standard for most professions in Vermont. Verify with your specific licensing board whether they prefer PLLC, regular LLC, or Professional Corporation.

Get licensing board approval

The Vermont board that regulates your profession typically reviews the formation paperwork before the SOS accepts the filing. Submission process varies by board.

File Articles with Vermont SOS

We prepare the Professional LLC Articles with the Vermont Secretary of State. State filing fee passes through.

Get your EIN

The IRS issues an EIN to the PLLC just like any other LLC. We file Form SS-4 after Vermont accepts the entity.

Set up professional liability insurance

Malpractice insurance is the layer that covers the gap PLLC does not protect against (your own professional negligence). Most states require evidence of coverage before the licensing board will activate the entity to practice.

Stay current on board reporting

Most Vermont licensing boards require annual or biennial reporting of entity status, member changes, address changes, and continuing education. The Compliance Bundle tracks these alongside the standard Vermont annual report.

Pricing

Know your cost before you file.

Pricing for this service and any state fees are laid out in one place on our pricing page, passed through at cost with no markup. See exactly what your filing costs before you commit.

See pricing →
FAQ

Common questions.

Does Vermont permit a PLLC for licensed professionals?

Most states offer a professional LLC for licensed occupations, but the rules vary, so the first step is confirming Vermont recognizes the PLLC and which board must sign off. Some states route licensed professionals into a PLLC or a professional corporation instead of an ordinary LLC. We verify Vermont's exact requirement for your profession before filing so the entity is accepted the first time.

What is the difference between a PLLC and a regular LLC in Vermont?

A PLLC is an LLC built for state-licensed professions, so on top of normal formation it usually requires that the owners hold the relevant Vermont license and that the licensing board approve the filing. Liability protection works like a regular LLC for business debts and other members' malpractice, with one key exception: it does not shield you from your own professional negligence. Structurally similar, professionally stricter.

Which professions require a PLLC in Vermont?

It depends on Vermont, but the usual list covers fields the state licenses: doctors, dentists, lawyers, accountants, architects, engineers, therapists, and similar. Some states require these professionals to use a PLLC or professional corporation and will reject a standard LLC; others make it optional. Because the list and the rule are Vermont-specific, we check whether your license triggers a PLLC there.

Can I have a non-licensed partner in my Vermont PLLC?

Usually not, and this trips people up. Many states require every member, or a controlling share, of a PLLC to hold the same professional license, which blocks bringing in a non-licensed investor or spouse as an owner. Vermont may allow limited exceptions or a different structure for outside capital. We confirm Vermont's ownership rule so you do not build a cap table the board will reject.

Does a PLLC protect me from malpractice claims?

Only partly, and it is important to understand where the line is. A PLLC shields your personal assets from the business's debts and from another member's malpractice, but it does not protect you from liability for your own professional negligence, which is why Vermont typically also requires malpractice insurance. Think of the PLLC and your policy as two different layers of protection doing two different jobs.

How is a PLLC taxed in Vermont?

A PLLC is taxed like any LLC: pass-through by default, with the option to elect S-corp treatment once the numbers justify it. The professional designation changes the licensing and ownership rules, not the tax classification. Many established practices elect S-corp status to manage self-employment tax, which we can walk through for your specific Vermont situation.

Do I need an Operating Agreement for my Vermont PLLC?

Yes, and it should go further than a standard one. Beyond the usual ownership and management terms, a PLLC Operating Agreement addresses what happens if a member loses their license, dies, or leaves the profession, since Vermont ties ownership to licensure. Getting these provisions right protects both the practice and the remaining members. We draft a PLLC-specific agreement for Vermont.

How much does PLLC formation cost in Vermont?

The base is the Vermont formation fee plus our service, but a PLLC often adds a licensing-board review or certification step that a regular LLC skips, and you should budget for required malpractice insurance separately. Current Vermont figures and our pricing are on the pricing page. The extra cost is mostly the board approval, not the filing itself.

Can I convert my regular Vermont LLC to a PLLC later?

Often yes, where Vermont allows it, by amending the entity to meet the professional requirements, confirming all owners are licensed, and obtaining board approval. It is not just a name change: the state has to recognize the conversion and the ownership has to comply. If you have been operating a licensed practice through a standard LLC, we help you correct the structure to a proper Vermont PLLC.

Start your business in the next 5 minutes.

No state-fee markup. Pay only the state fee. 60-day money-back guarantee.

No state-fee markup 60-day money-back Cancel anytime