Enigma Knowledge

Glossary

Sole Proprietor: The Person Is the Business

February 5, 2026

Understand sole proprietorships—businesses where there's no legal separation between owner and business, and the unique KYB challenges they present.

A sole proprietor is an individual who owns and operates a business without forming a separate legal entity. The person and the business are legally identical. There is no corporation, LLC, or partnership structure creating separation.

Sole Proprietorships Are Everywhere

Scale

  • Approximately 23 million sole proprietorships in the US
  • Represent 73% of all US businesses
  • Account for only 4% of business revenue
  • Most common structure for micro-businesses

Common Types

  • Freelancers and consultants
  • Independent contractors
  • Small retail shops
  • Personal service providers (tutors, photographers, cleaners)
  • Gig economy workers
  • Side businesses

What Makes Sole Proprietors Different

Liability

  • Sole Proprietor: Personal assets at risk
  • LLC/Corporation: Limited to business assets

Taxation

  • Sole Proprietor: Personal tax return (Schedule C)
  • LLC/Corporation: Separate entity taxation

State registration

  • Sole Proprietor: Not required (just licenses)
  • LLC/Corporation: Required filings

Existence

  • Sole Proprietor: Tied to individual
  • LLC/Corporation: Perpetual

Identity = Owner Identity

The business is the person:

  • Business debts are personal debts
  • Business lawsuits are personal lawsuits
  • Business income is personal income
  • Business credit is personal credit

Operating Names

Sole proprietors often operate under trade names:

  • "John Smith" does business as "Smith's Consulting"
  • Requires DBA (Doing Business As) registration
  • Creates appearance of formal business
  • Trade name does not equal legal entity; the owner remains personally liable

Why Are Sole Proprietors Hard to Verify?

No State Registry

Unlike corporations and LLCs, sole proprietorships don't file with the Secretary of State. There's no central record of:

  • When the business started
  • Who operates it
  • Whether it's still active
  • What it does

Verification Complexity

Verifying a sole proprietor requires different approaches:

What doesn't exist:

  • Corporate registration
  • EIN (may use SSN instead)
  • Annual reports
  • Registered agent

What might exist:

  • DBA registration (county or state)
  • Business licenses (local)
  • Tax records
  • Professional licenses
  • Web presence

Identity Verification Overlap

KYB for sole proprietors resembles KYC (Know Your Customer):

  • Verify the individual's identity
  • Confirm they operate the claimed business
  • Check for licenses if required
  • Assess individual creditworthiness/risk

The business verification is the person verification.

Data Challenges

Finding Sole Proprietors

Sole proprietors are harder to discover and verify:

Secretary of State: No

Business registries: Sometimes (DBAs)

Tax data: Yes (but private)

Web presence: Inconsistently

Professional licenses: Some industries

Payment data: Yes (with limitations)

The Trade Name Problem

A sole proprietor filing says:

Business Name: "Green Thumb Gardening"
Owner: John Smith

But without Secretary of State records, connecting "Green Thumb Gardening" to a real person requires:

  • DBA records (where filed)
  • License records
  • Web and social presence
  • Transaction patterns

Distinguishing from LLCs

A business calling itself "ABC Services" could be:

  • A sole proprietor operating under a DBA
  • An LLC with a trade name
  • A corporation with a fictitious name

Without formation records, determining the structure requires investigation.

Risk Considerations

Higher Risk Factors

Sole proprietorships may present elevated risk:

  • No liability shield means financial fragility
  • Business can vanish instantly if owner stops
  • Limited creditworthiness assessment options
  • Higher failure rates than incorporated businesses

Lower Risk Factors

They also have some advantages:

  • Clear accountability (one person responsible)
  • No complex ownership structures to unravel
  • Typically small transaction volumes
  • Owner reputation directly at stake

Industry Patterns

Risk varies significantly by industry:

  • Professional services (low risk) vs. cash-intensive businesses (higher risk)
  • Licensed professions have additional verification points
  • Service businesses vs. inventory-based businesses

Sole Proprietors in Compliance

Regulatory Treatment

Some regulations treat sole proprietors differently:

  • Corporate Transparency Act: Sole proprietors not organized as entities are exempt
  • BSA/AML: Still applies to financial activities
  • Industry regulations: May require licensing regardless of structure

Verification Approach

For sole proprietor KYB:

  1. Verify individual identity (KYC-style)
  2. Confirm business operation (licenses, DBA, web presence)
  3. Assess industry-specific requirements
  4. Check for professional credentials if applicable
  5. Evaluate based on individual and business signals combined

Key Takeaways

  • Sole proprietors have no legal entity separation; person and business are one
  • They represent the majority of US businesses but a small fraction of economic activity
  • No Secretary of State records exist, so verification requires alternative data sources
  • KYB resembles KYC: verifying the business means verifying the individual
  • Trade names create complexity. Connecting an operating name to an owner requires investigation.
  • Risk assessment differs. Consider both individual and business factors.

Related: Legal Entity | Trade Name | Micro-Business | Entity Verification