Its possible to do it and its not......
It depends on the credit card application and the structure of the company. Most credit cards issued to a small business are guaranteed by the owner. In that case, you must pay. If the card was issued soley to the company, the credit card company could sue your corporation to recover any assets available. If the company was a sole proprietorship or a partnership, you are liable.
can the executor be liable for estate tax
Yes - if you used the company credit card, you are liable to repay the amount you spent ! The employer can recover that directly from your wages.
A true business credit card is a line of credit that is taken in the name of the business, under the business' credit. Activity, whether good or bad, is reflected on your business' credit report through D&B and other financial institutions, and the liability for any debts incurred and bills owed is with the business.However, some companies out there offer "business" credit cards which they require a person guarantee for. These institutions will often ask for a personal guarantee, and will almost always ask for a social security number from the person applying for the card. If this is the case, the credit card is not a business credit card, but is simply a personal credit card which is used for the business. The business is not liable for bills and debts - you are.When applying for a credit card for your business, watch out for areas asking for your SSN (and not your TaxID or EIN) and be wary of any credit card that asks for a personal guarantee. By ensuring that your credit card is in the name of your business, you can help to build your business' credit, while avoiding creating problems with your own. Many companies offer a list of credit cards that are issued under the business name only. Those lists typically run $300-$900, depending on the quality of the information inquiring. I would suggest starting your search online via google or yahoo. Search for "strong business credit" (just like that in quotes) to find services that sell the information. Good luck, Ilya Bodner Small Business Owner Initial Underwriting Group
In a limited liability corporation, the company is not personally liable for it, and the owners and shareholders will not get personally sued, only the company will. It has a high start up cost, and it has a long life. Sole proprietorship's have a low start up cost, generally have short life spans, and are personally liable,
If your business fails with debts you are personally liable. You only have yourself to blame.
no
The owner can be held personally liable for business debts, but it depends on the business structure and what type of contract the owner holds. If the owner is operating a sole proprietorship (he/she is the only owner), the owner and the business are technically considered the same entity, meaning the owner has full personal liability for any business debt. In a partnership, the business belongs to each partner, meaning that business debt also belongs to each partner personally. Each partner is liable for 100% of business debts. The only time an owner is not held personally liable for debts is in a corporation or LLC. In both of these cases, the business and owner are considered separate entities and, in theory, the owner could have no personal liability for business debt. Liability could occur if the owner has signed a personal guarantee, has offered his/her property as collateral, has signed a contract in his/her own name, he/she uses personal loans or credit cards to fund the business, or there is some sort of fraud or sloppy record-keeping.
It depends on the credit card application and the structure of the company. Most credit cards issued to a small business are guaranteed by the owner. In that case, you must pay. If the card was issued soley to the company, the credit card company could sue your corporation to recover any assets available. If the company was a sole proprietorship or a partnership, you are liable.
If the defendant was found personally liable, you may not receive much from this judgment. A judgment just says the money is owed, it doesn't provide the remedy for paying it.
Yes, you are liable for your husbands credit card.
You are completely liable. That's the point of the personal guarantee. When you agreed to that you destroyed the concept of a corporate shield and are completely liable for the debt.
can the executor be liable for estate tax
A small business owner would claim bankruptcy for a few reasons. The biggest reason would be to eliminate most or all debts for which a business owner is personally liable for.
Yes. First, if it isn't an Incorporated business, they most likely are completely totally involved (as the business is normally simply them personally really). And of course, if it is a Corp, the officers may be personally liable for some things...sales and payroll taxes most notably.
ia an additional credit card holder liable for the whole debt of the credit card account
For business credit cards you must have a business credit profile. Without a business profile and a business credit score you cannot get a "business" credit card. What you CAN get is a personally guaranteed credit card for business use. What people often fail to realize that by personally signing for a credit card it is STILL a personal credit card. The only difference is that the bank says "this is a business credit card" and it is to be used for business purchases. Consider building up your business credit profile before applying for a real business credit card (a credit card which allows the business to be its own collateral, not you). A true business credit card is a line of credit that is taken in the name of the business, under the business' credit. Activity, whether good or bad, is reflected on your business' credit report through D&B and other financial institutions, and the liability for any debts incurred and bills owed is with the business. However, some companies out there offer "business" credit cards which they require a person guarantee for. These institutions will often ask for a personal guarantee, and will almost always ask for a social security number from the person applying for the card. If this is the case, the credit card is not a business credit card, but is simply a personal credit card which is used for the business. The business is not liable for bills and debts - you are. When applying for a credit card for your business, watch out for areas asking for your SSN (and not your TaxID or EIN) and be wary of any credit card that asks for a personal guarantee. By ensuring that your credit card is in the name of your business, you can help to build your business' credit, while avoiding creating problems with your own. Many companies offer a list of credit cards that are issued under the business name only. Those lists typically run $300-$900, depending on the quality of the information inquiring. If your business is a sole prop., you are not going to get a credit card with only your tax id number. Our business has a credit card with our business name on it, however, it shows up on our personal credit report. If your business is a partnership, your local bank may help you get a credit card using your tax id number. Our local bank here in TN worked with us. Internet offers are no help in this situation. We also found a service that guarantees to help you get business credit cards using a tax id, but they wanted $1,500 for the service. Business Credit is separate from Personal credit - that is important to remember as a small business owner. Many business owners, just like in this question, have bad credit but that is not to be confused with business credit. Just like Equifax reports credibility of an individual the business has a credit reporting agency that reports on its stability as well. The key is to get your business registered with the credit reporting agency so that lenders can feel comfortable issues out loans, credit lines, or extended terms to the business. Bad credit or lack of credit is no longer an obstacle that prevents the small business owner from finding financing or funding their small business. Small business loans are available to those who have incorporated their business, have a corporate tax id and are willing to keep up their business profit and the business credit score.