Small Business in Hawaii

Hawaii Small Business Intel

Thursday, July 9, 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

How to Register a Hawaii DBA for Your Small Business.

Northwest Registered Agent explains the process for Hawaii sole proprietors, general partnerships, LLCs, and corporations to register a trade name (DBA).

Why It Matters

A properly registered DBA allows HI small business owners to legally operate under a different name and build brand recognition without forming a separate entity.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

The four insurance gaps small businesses share.

Most small-business insurance portfolios share predictable gaps: cyber liability (often excluded from general liability), employment practices (separate from general liability), business interruption (often capped well below actual reliance), and professional liability (excluded if not specifically purchased even when professional services are offered).

Why It Matters

Each gap can become a six-figure claim that the owner assumed was covered. The cost of filling the four gaps is typically a few hundred to a few thousand dollars annually.

2.2

How to read the actual cost of a merchant cash advance.

MCAs quote a "factor rate" (typically 1.20-1.50) on the advance amount, plus a daily holdback as a percentage of receipts. Translated to APR, most MCAs cost 60-150% annualized. The structure is legally not a loan, so usury caps and disclosure rules do not apply.

Why It Matters

Cash-strapped small businesses that "just need it now" stack multiple MCAs and end up with daily holdbacks consuming most receipts. Recovery from MCA stacking is rare without formal restructuring or bankruptcy.

2.3

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.

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Issue Summary

DateJul 9, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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