Protect Your Practice. Protect Your Future.
Malpractice insurance covers claims. An LLC protects everything else — your home, savings, and retirement. Whether you're starting a private practice, consulting, or offering telehealth, an LLC creates a legal boundary between your professional and personal life.
Even with strong malpractice coverage, claims that exceed your policy limits — or fall outside coverage — can reach your personal assets. An LLC creates a separate legal entity for your practice.
An LLC ensures that practice-related claims stay with the business entity. Your personal home, savings, and retirement accounts remain protected beyond what malpractice insurance covers.
Operating through an LLC gives your practice a formal business structure for HIPAA compliance, Business Associate Agreements, and proper record-keeping requirements.
Many insurance panels and hospital credentialing committees require or prefer providers who operate through a business entity. An LLC demonstrates professional structure.
If you bring on associates, contractors, or partners, an LLC provides the legal framework for profit-sharing, liability allocation, and practice governance.
Whether you're a physician, therapist, dentist, chiropractor, or telehealth provider — operating through an LLC is the professional standard for protecting your practice and personal assets simultaneously.
We handle the formation, compliance, and filings so you can focus on patient care.
The legal entity behind your practice. Filed with Wisconsin DFI, state fee included.
Required for practice banking, insurance credentialing, and payroll.
Keep your personal address off public filings. We receive legal notices for your practice.
Operate under your practice name — "River City Physical Therapy" instead of your LLC legal name.
Annual report reminders, deadline tracking, and compliance monitoring for your practice LLC.
LLC Formation + first year Registered Agent + Compliance Pro. Everything a healthcare professional needs to launch their practice with proper legal structure.
Pick your services — LLC formation and any add-ons you need.
Share your details — practice name, address, structure. About 10 minutes.
We file everything with the Wisconsin DFI. We prioritize every filing.
Documents in your portal. Set up your practice bank account, get credentialed, and start seeing patients under your LLC.
Yes. Malpractice insurance covers specific claims up to policy limits. An LLC protects your personal assets from business liabilities that fall outside malpractice coverage — lease disputes, employee claims, vendor contracts, and claims exceeding your policy limits.
Some states require licensed professionals to form a PLLC instead of a standard LLC. Wisconsin allows healthcare professionals to form either. We'll help you determine the best structure for your specific situation during the formation process.
Absolutely. Therapists, counselors, psychologists, and social workers in private practice benefit from LLC protection. It separates your practice liability from personal assets and provides a professional business structure for insurance billing.
An LLC provides the formal business structure needed for Business Associate Agreements, proper record retention, and compliance documentation. It doesn't replace HIPAA training or technical safeguards, but it provides the organizational framework.
Yes. An LLC provides the legal structure to bring on employees or independent contractors. Your operating agreement can address profit-sharing, liability allocation, and practice governance as you grow.
Telehealth providers especially benefit from an LLC because you may be providing services across state lines. An LLC provides a home-base business structure and liability protection regardless of where your patients are located.
Yes. Nurse practitioners in Wisconsin can operate through an LLC, though Wisconsin doesn’t require a specific Professional LLC (PLLC) designation for most NP services. Confirm your specific scope of practice with the Wisconsin DSPS before filing.
No. HIPAA applies to covered entities regardless of business structure — an LLC doesn’t add or remove HIPAA obligations. What an LLC does change is liability exposure: HIPAA breach lawsuits target the LLC first, protecting your personal assets.
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Stop practicing without proper business protection. Form your LLC and give your healthcare career the legal foundation it deserves.