Small Business in Maryland

Maryland Small Business Intel

Wednesday, May 13, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

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

1

Maryland Small Business Headlines

1 story

1.1

Streamlined Registrations & Filings for Maryland Small Businesses.

Discover easy online tools for registering a business, trade name, and tax accounts in Maryland.

Why It Matters

These resources simplify the startup process for small business professionals in Maryland.

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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

When the S-corp election actually saves money for an LLC.

The S-corp election lets owner-operators take part of their income as wages (subject to payroll tax) and the rest as distributions (not subject to self-employment tax). The savings only matter once profit consistently exceeds a "reasonable salary" — typically $50K-$80K of pure profit above the salary baseline. Below that threshold, the added payroll-processing cost eats the savings.

Why It Matters

Many LLCs elect S-corp status before they have enough profit to benefit, paying payroll processing for no tax savings. The election is reversible but not on a clock that matters in real time.

2.3

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.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 13, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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