I and my wife are licensed PEs working in land development, but she has been a stay-at-home mom with our two kids for some time (license still active). She is considering taking on part-time engineering work (think 10 hours a week) on her own as a way to keep herself sharp and busy while otherwise occupied with our kids. Her intended projects will be very small, mostly targeted to contractors who need engineered traffic control plans, minor site plans, etc. which are all required in our area, but larger firms are costly and slow to do them.
In the mid- to long-term, she will need an LLC to provide some liability protection. We will be getting her E&O insurance from day one. However, we're debating whether it's absolutely necessary to start an LLC for her day one. Her revenues will likely be very small, as will her risk. There is a serious chance she will find that there is not as much work as she hoped, and she will decide not to pursue it further; in that case, it will be nice to just shut down her little operation without any drama or paperwork. If she gets 1-2 months of consistent work and some profits, then she can quickly get an LLC established.
In the meantime, we are considering getting her a DBA so that she doesn't have to operate under her own name as a sole proprietor, but still not be a registered 'entity' with the state. She would start an LLC with the same name once she knows the work is there. Two questions: 1) is anyone aware of any requirement for engineers (specifically) to operate under their own name (i.e. no DBA allowed) unless part of a registered firm; and 2) has anyone done this when starting their own small shop, and have any lessons learned to share?
In the mid- to long-term, she will need an LLC to provide some liability protection. We will be getting her E&O insurance from day one. However, we're debating whether it's absolutely necessary to start an LLC for her day one. Her revenues will likely be very small, as will her risk. There is a serious chance she will find that there is not as much work as she hoped, and she will decide not to pursue it further; in that case, it will be nice to just shut down her little operation without any drama or paperwork. If she gets 1-2 months of consistent work and some profits, then she can quickly get an LLC established.
In the meantime, we are considering getting her a DBA so that she doesn't have to operate under her own name as a sole proprietor, but still not be a registered 'entity' with the state. She would start an LLC with the same name once she knows the work is there. Two questions: 1) is anyone aware of any requirement for engineers (specifically) to operate under their own name (i.e. no DBA allowed) unless part of a registered firm; and 2) has anyone done this when starting their own small shop, and have any lessons learned to share?