How to Get a Business License in Georgia (GA): 2026 Guide
Step-by-step guide to registering a business in Georgia. State, county, and city licenses, fees, and tax registrations.
Starting a business in Georgia? Most entrepreneurs underestimate how many licenses, permits, and registrations are actually required. Here's the checklist — 2026 edition.
Step 1: Choose your business structure
Your structure determines how you're taxed and how much paperwork you need:
- Sole proprietorship: simplest, no formation needed, but no liability protection
- LLC: most common for small business — flexibility + personal asset protection
- S-Corp: LLC taxed as S-Corp — tax savings for higher earners, more formality
- C-Corp: for VC-funded startups, public companies
File formation documents with the Georgia Secretary of State. LLC filing fees range from $40 to $500 depending on state.
Step 2: Get an EIN (Federal Tax ID)
Apply for an Employer Identification Number at IRS.gov. Free. Takes 5 minutes online if you have a U.S. SSN or ITIN.
You need an EIN to:
- Open a business bank account
- Hire employees
- File business taxes
Step 3: Register for state taxes
Most businesses must register with the Georgia Department of Revenue for:
- Sales tax (if selling taxable goods/services)
- Employer withholding (if hiring)
- Unemployment insurance
See our Georgia sales tax guide for details.
Step 4: Get a general business license
Georgia does not have a single statewide business license for most industries. Instead, licensing happens at the city and county level:
1. Check your city clerk — most cities require a general business/privilege license
2. Check your county — some require county registration too
3. Typical fees: $50-$500/year
Some industries require a state professional license instead (or in addition):
- Contractors, electricians, plumbers
- Medical practitioners (doctors, nurses, dentists)
- Attorneys, accountants, architects
- Cosmetologists, barbers
- Restaurants, food service (health permit)
- Alcohol sales (ABC/liquor license)
- Real estate agents
Step 5: Industry-specific permits
Depending on what you do:
- Food business: Health department permit + food handler certifications
- Home-based business: Zoning review from your city
- E-commerce: Sales tax permit in each state where you have nexus
- Hiring employees: Workers' compensation insurance (required in most states)
Step 6: Other registrations
- DBA (Doing Business As): if operating under a name different from your legal entity name
- Trademark: federal trademark at USPTO.gov if your brand is important
- Assumed name: some states require fictitious name registration with county
Typical total cost
Starting a typical small business in Georgia:
- LLC formation: $100-$300
- EIN: free
- Local business license: $50-$200/year
- Industry-specific permits: $0-$500
- Professional registered agent (optional): $50-$300/year
Budget: $500-$1,500 for full setup.
How TinSuite helps
Once you're licensed, TinSuite handles the ongoing operational side:
- Keep track of all your license renewals (calendar + reminders)
- File sales tax and payroll automatically
- Generate reports for annual state filings
- Store license documents in one place
See also: Georgia sales tax guide and Georgia payroll guide.