Trading through an LLC or business entity
Registering an entity, payouts to a business, and tax paperwork.
Updated 2026-07-02
Yes — you can run your accounts through a legal entity. The trading is still done by one named human (identity rules always apply), but the billing relationship and payouts can point at your LLC, corporation, or equivalent.
How to set it up
- Purchase normally under your personal login — the entity association happens at payout, not at checkout.
- At your first payout request, complete KYC as yourself, then submit your entity details: legal name, formation state or country, and tax ID.
- Once verified, payout rails (ACH and wire) can settle to the business account; the entity name appears on your payout records.
Tax documents
US traders (individual or entity) receive a 1099 for reward income above the IRS reporting threshold in a calendar year. International traders receive an annual earnings statement instead. Nothing we issue is tax advice — bring the paperwork to your accountant.
Good to know
One person per account still applies. An entity can receive the money; it cannot put three traders on one login.
More in Getting Started
What this firm is — and what it is not
Simulated accounts, real payouts, and why we say so on every page.
Choosing between Pro, Flex, and Direct
Three routes to a funded account, tuned for different tolerances.
From checkout to first trade
The 30-second provisioning SLA and what to do if it slips.
How many accounts you can run
The funded ceiling, evaluation stacking, and the household rule.
Didn't answer it?
A human will — seven days a week, account ID in hand.