Small Business in Hawaii

Hawaii Small Business Intel

Tuesday, May 19, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on small business developments in Hawaii. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on hawaii small business headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Hawaii Small Business Headlines

1 story

1.1

HI Business Entity Search Tool: Look Up LLCs, Corps & EINs Instantly.

EntityCheck offers a lookup service for Hawaii business entity records, covering corporations, LLCs, LPs, partnerships, UCC and trademark filings, plus contact and legal details.

Why It Matters

Small business professionals in HI can quickly verify competitor or partner standing, conduct due diligence, and ensure compliance without navigating state bureaucracy.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

An EIN is not your state tax ID.

The federal EIN identifies the business to the IRS for payroll, federal tax filing, and bank-account opening. State tax IDs are separate, often required for state payroll, sales tax, and unemployment-insurance accounts. Some states issue multiple IDs for different functions. Using the EIN alone leaves state obligations unfiled.

Why It Matters

State agencies catch missing registrations through cross-checks with the federal EIN database, often years later, with penalties and interest accruing the whole time.

2.2

A buy-sell agreement without funding is just a wish list.

Buy-sell agreements among co-owners specify what happens at death, disability, or departure — but only matter if there is a funding source to actually execute the buyout. Common defects: insurance policies that lapsed, valuation methods that produce numbers no one can pay, and trigger events that include voluntary departure without a payment plan.

Why It Matters

Without funding, the surviving owner faces a co-owner's heirs as the new business partner. Most buy-sell disputes that reach litigation are not about the agreement's terms but about the absence of a funding mechanism.

2.3

Why quarterly estimated payments fail in year two.

The federal safe harbor for estimated payments is the lesser of 90% of current-year tax or 100% (110% for higher incomes) of prior-year tax. New businesses meet safe harbor easily in year one when prior-year tax was zero. In year two, last-year-based safe harbor disappears and underpayment penalties surface.

Why It Matters

The penalty is not large per dollar but compounds across quarters and surprises owners who thought their bookkeeper was handling it. Cash flow gets squeezed at exactly the growth point where it is tightest.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 19, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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