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DefinitionAn EIN, or Employer Identification Number, is a 9-digit federal tax ID that the IRS assigns to a US business. It is the business equivalent of a Social Security Number, and almost
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What Is An Ein · File.Business

What is an EIN? The federal tax ID, explained.

An EIN, or Employer Identification Number, is a 9-digit federal tax ID that the IRS assigns to a US business. It is the business equivalent of a Social Security Number, and almost every US LLC, Corporation, partnership, or other entity needs one to open a bank account, hire employees, file taxes, or apply for licenses.

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Formal Definition

An Employer Identification Number (EIN), also called a Federal Employer Identification Number (FEIN) or Federal Tax Identification Number, is a unique 9-digit number assigned by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to identify a business entity for federal tax purposes.

In plain English

Here is what that actually means.

Think of an EIN as the Social Security Number for a business. Just as the IRS uses your SSN to identify you on your personal tax return, it uses your EIN to identify your LLC, Corporation, or other entity on the business return. Banks use it to verify the entity when you open a business account. Payroll providers use it to file the entity's payroll tax returns. The state may also reference it when you register for state employer taxes.

The EIN format is two digits, a hyphen, then seven digits: XX-XXXXXXX. The first two digits used to indicate which IRS service center issued the number, but that meaning has largely been retired with the move to online issuance. There is no fee to obtain an EIN; the IRS issues them for free directly through irs.gov.

Once issued, an EIN is permanent for the life of the entity. You do not renew it. If the entity is sold or restructured significantly, a new EIN may be required. If the entity dissolves, the EIN is not "released" or re-used; it stays associated with that entity in IRS records.

Key facts

The four things to know.

9-digit number
Format: XX-XXXXXXX, assigned by the IRS
Free from the IRS
No fee to obtain. We file the application for you.
Permanent
Issued once, lasts the life of the entity, does not renew
Required for most
Any LLC, Corp, employer, or business bank account needs one
Who needs this

Common situations.

LLCs and Corporations Required to open business banking, hire employees, file federal taxes.
Sole proprietors with employees Required as soon as you hire any W-2 employee.
Trusts and estates Required to file Form 1041 for income.
Nonprofit organizations Required before filing for 501(c)(3) tax exemption.
Partnerships Required to file Form 1065 partnership return.
Real estate holding LLCs Required to open the rental property bank account.
How it compares

Related concepts side by side.

EIN vs SSN
SSN is for individuals. EIN is for business entities. Some single-member LLCs use the owner's SSN, but every bank prefers an EIN.
EIN vs ITIN
ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number) is for non-US individuals who need to file US taxes. EIN is for businesses.
EIN vs State Tax ID
EIN is federal. Most states also issue a separate state-level employer ID for state payroll tax filings.
EIN vs Business License Number
A business license number is issued by a city or state and licenses you to operate. The EIN is your federal tax ID.
FAQ

Common questions.

What is an EIN?
An EIN (Employer Identification Number) is a federal tax ID the IRS assigns to your business, used to file taxes, open a bank account, hire employees, and identify the entity, essentially a Social Security number for your business. Most entities need one. We obtain your EIN so your business can operate, bank, and file.
Do I need an EIN?
Most businesses do: you generally need an EIN if you have employees, operate as a corporation or partnership, or open a business bank account, and even a single-member LLC usually benefits from one. We flag whether your situation requires an EIN so you obtain it when you actually need it.
How do I get an EIN?
The IRS issues EINs, and we apply on your behalf, including for founders without a Social Security number, who must apply outside the online system. We obtain the EIN so you do not have to navigate the IRS process, and so a missing SSN does not block your business setup.
Can I get an EIN without a Social Security number?
Yes: a founder without an SSN can obtain an EIN by applying directly with the IRS rather than online, which takes longer but works, so foreign founders can still get one. We handle the application so the lack of an SSN does not prevent your business from getting its federal tax ID. See international founders.
What is an EIN used for?
It identifies your business to the IRS for tax filings, lets you open a business bank account, hire and run payroll, apply for licenses, and build business credit, so it is foundational to operating. We obtain it so your banking, hiring, and filings can proceed on the business's own identity.
Is an EIN the same as a tax ID?
An EIN is a type of federal tax ID for businesses, while individuals use a Social Security number or an ITIN, so the term tax ID is broader. We flag which number your situation needs so your business and, if relevant, you personally have the right identifiers.
Does my EIN ever change?
Usually not: an EIN stays with the business, and events like a name change generally do not require a new one, though certain structural changes can. We flag when a new EIN is actually required so you do not needlessly apply for another or, conversely, keep using one that no longer applies.
How long does it take to get an EIN?
Applying through the IRS can be quick for those eligible for the online process and longer for applicants without an SSN who apply another way, so timing varies. We flag realistic timing and handle the application so you have your EIN when your banking or hiring needs it.
Can File.Business get my EIN?
Yes: we obtain your EIN from the IRS as part of setting up your business, including for founders without an SSN, so you can open a bank account, hire, and file taxes on your business's own federal identity without dealing with the IRS process yourself.

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