Professional licensing. Firms in regulated industries.
Firms in regulated industries must obtain professional licenses at both the individual and firm level. This guide covers the overall framework, common requirements, and state-by-state variation.
Start here.
Individual professional license + firm license. Both required in most regulated professions.
LLC, PLLC, Professional Corporation. Specific structures often mandated by profession.
Each state has its own licensing board for each profession.
Operating in multiple states requires firm licensing in each.
Annual renewals, continuing education, audit requirements.
The full picture.
Two-level licensing
Most regulated professions require both: (1) Individual professional license for each licensed practitioner; (2) Firm license for the business entity. Both must be current to operate legally.
Entity structure requirements
Many states mandate Professional LLC (PLLC) or Professional Corporation (PC) structures for licensed professions. Standard LLCs and C-Corps may not be permitted. Check your state and profession.
Common regulated professions
Architecture, engineering (all disciplines), general construction, real estate brokerage, law, medicine, accounting (CPA), dentistry, veterinary, pharmacy, nursing, social work, mental health counseling, physical therapy, others.
Individual license required
Every licensed practitioner in the firm must hold an active individual license. Hiring or partnering with unlicensed individuals as practitioners is typically prohibited.
Ownership restrictions
Some states require all firm owners to be licensed in the profession (architecture, engineering, law typically). Others allow non-licensed ownership (real estate often).
Designated qualifier
Many regulated firms must have a "designated qualifier" or "responsible licensee" - a licensed practitioner who is responsible for the firm's professional work.
Multi-state operations
Operating in multiple states requires individual licensure (often via reciprocity) in each state, plus firm licensure in each state.
Continuing requirements
Annual renewals; continuing education for individual licenses; sometimes annual reports specific to the profession; audit requirements for certain firms.
Penalties for non-compliance
Operating without proper license is typically illegal. Penalties include cease-and-desist orders, fines, criminal penalties in some states, civil claims by clients for unauthorized practice.
Common questions.
Do I need both individual and firm licenses?
Can I use a standard LLC?
Do all owners need to be licensed?
Multi-state operations?
Who handles renewals?
How does the firm license differ from individual?
Penalties for unlicensed operation?
Can File.Business help?
Set up your professional firm.
PLLC formation, registered agent, ongoing compliance. We handle entity-level requirements; you handle the professional practice.
Professional licensing is handled by state boards. File.Business handles entity formation and ongoing compliance.
On the $129/yr Compliance Annual Filings plan, we cover state late fees.
When you autofile your annual report through the $129/yr plan and we miss the deadline, we pay the state's late fee. The guarantee applies to that specific plan and the filings it includes. Other File.Business services are billed at the prices on this page.