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Guide · Business

Business bank account opening requirements

Documentation banks typically require for business accounts by entity type, plus the qualifying-deposit windows that trigger bonuses.

Reading time: 9 min Last reviewed: 2026-05-17 Type: Foundations

Entity type matters

Banks treat business accounts differently from personal accounts because the customer is a legal entity, and the bank needs to verify both the entity's existence and the individuals authorized to act on its behalf. The documentation requirements scale with the complexity of the entity. A sole proprietor operating under their own SSN faces almost the same paperwork as a personal customer. A multi-member LLC or a corporation faces a substantially longer list.

Knowing the documents your specific entity type requires — and having them ready on application day — is the difference between a 20-minute online opening and a multi-week back-and-forth. For bonus offers, the qualifying-deposit window typically starts running from account opening, so delays in approval directly compress the time you have to qualify.

Sole proprietor with SSN

The simplest case. You're operating a business in your own name, without a separate entity, and you intend to use your SSN as the tax ID. Banks generally treat this as a personal-plus opening: the standard ID documents (driver's license, passport, or other government ID), your SSN, your address, and a description of the business. Some banks ask for a DBA (doing business as) filing if you operate under a business name distinct from your legal name.

This is the easiest entity type for bank-bonus pursuit. The trade-off: as a sole prop with no separate entity, you have no legal-liability separation between your personal and business assets, and the account is essentially a second personal account in the bank's eyes.

Sole proprietor with EIN

If you've obtained an EIN (Employer Identification Number) from the IRS — typically because you have employees or because you've chosen to use an EIN for privacy or convenience — banks ask for the EIN confirmation letter (CP 575 or 147C) in addition to your personal ID. Some banks treat this identically to a sole prop with SSN; some treat it as a true business account with somewhat more documentation. Verify the specific bank's posture.

LLC requirements

Limited Liability Companies are the most common business-entity form for small businesses. Bank documentation typically includes:

Single-member LLCs (the most common shape for solo founders) are simpler. Multi-member LLCs require beneficial-ownership certification for each owner above the 25% threshold. Manager-managed LLCs require documentation of the manager's authority.

Corporation requirements (C-corp and S-corp)

Corporations carry the most documentation:

The Customer Due Diligence (CDD) rule

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) requires banks to identify and verify the beneficial owners of legal-entity customers. The rule's "25% threshold" requires the bank to collect identification information for each individual who owns 25% or more of the equity interests of the legal entity, plus a single individual with significant managerial control (the "control prong"). The information collected typically includes name, date of birth, address, and SSN or other identification number.

For single-owner entities, this is mechanical: the bank documents you as both the 100% beneficial owner and the control person. For multi-owner entities, you'll need to gather the same information for each qualifying owner — having it ready before applying saves time.

The CDD rule is federal and applies at all US banks; banks may not waive it. Some banks have a longer in-house list that goes beyond the federal minimum. Read the bank's specific business-account opening checklist before applying.

Qualifying deposit timing

Business banking bonuses tie payout to a qualifying deposit (and sometimes additional activity) within a window after account opening. Common shapes:

The clock starts on account opening, not on application submission. If the bank's documentation review takes two weeks, you have less of the qualifying window left to fund and qualify. Build a buffer into your planning.

"Qualifying deposit" usually means new money — funds not already at the institution. Verify the specific bank's definition. Some count any inbound ACH or wire; some have a list of disqualifying source types similar to the personal direct-deposit landscape (see our direct deposit guide, though business deposit definitions are typically broader).

Running personal and business finances cleanly

For LLCs and corporations, mixing personal and business cash flows in the business account undermines the liability protection the entity is supposed to provide — courts can "pierce the corporate veil" when business and personal finances are treated as commingled. For sole proprietors, the legal protection isn't there to begin with, but bookkeeping clarity and tax preparation both benefit from separation.

A clean discipline: route business income to the business account, pay business expenses from it, and move funds to your personal account only via documented owner draws or scheduled payroll (for S-corps with shareholder-employees). Avoid using the business debit card for personal purchases even if you intend to reimburse. The bookkeeping burden of unsnarling commingled transactions is much larger than the discipline of keeping them separate.

For bonus purposes

The combination of higher documentation, longer approval timelines, and larger required deposits makes business bonuses more involved than personal ones. The payoff scales: business bonuses are typically larger in absolute dollar terms. But "set up a shell entity to chase a bonus" rarely makes financial sense — the formation cost, the annual filing burden, and the bookkeeping discipline outweigh most single bonus opportunities.

Business bonuses make sense when you already have a legitimate business that needs banking. The bonus is then a meaningful supplement to a relationship you'd be establishing anyway. See business banking bonuses for the listing context and methodology.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-17 This page is for general educational purposes and is not personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Verify all terms with the issuing institution. Consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.