You need a new EIN, in general, when you change your entity’s ownership or structure.
You don’t need a new EIN if you just change your business name or address.
Check your entity type to see when you need a new EIN.
If you have an EIN as a sole proprietor or household employer, use that EIN for care you receive in your home. Don’t get a new EIN.
Get a new EIN if you:
- Incorporate.
- Form a partnership.
- Declare bankruptcy.
You don’t need a new EIN if you:
- Change your business name or locations.
- Own multiple businesses.
Get a new EIN if you:
- Get a new charter for a corporation from the secretary of state.
- Are a corporation’s subsidiary.
- Change to a partnership or a sole proprietorship.
- Merge and create a new corporation.
You don’t need a new EIN if you:
- Change your business name or location.
- Declare bankruptcy.
- Are a division of a corporation.
- Are the surviving corporation after a corporate merger.
- Choose to be taxed as an S corporation.
- Reorganize to change only your identity or location.
- Convert at the state level and don’t change your business structure.
Get a new EIN if you:
- Incorporate.
- Take over a partnership to operate as a sole proprietor.
- End a partnership and begin a new one.
You don’t need a new EIN if you:
- Change your name or location.
- Declare bankruptcy.
- Undergo a change in ownership that does not result in the termination of the partnership.
Get a new EIN if you:
- Terminate an existing LLC and form a new corporation or partnership.
- Own a single-member LLC and have to file excise or employment taxes.
You don’t need a new EIN if you:
- Change your name or location.
- Report income tax as a branch or division of another entity and you don’t have employees or owe excise tax.
- Convert a partnership to an LLC classified as a partnership.
- Change your tax election to a corporation or an S corporation.
- Use your sole proprietor EIN for your single-member LLC and don’t choose to be taxed as a corporation or an S corporation and don’t have employees or owe excise tax.
Get a new EIN if you:
- Create a trust with estate funds (not simply a continuation of the estate). The new EIN will be for the trust.
- Represent an estate that operates a business that is not a legal entity separate from its owner (sole proprietorship) after the owner's death. The new EIN will be for the business.
You don’t need a new EIN if you:
- Change the name or address of the administrator, personal representative or executor.
Get a new EIN if you:
- Are the grantor of many trusts. Generally, you will need an EIN for each trust.
- Change to an estate. The new EIN will be for the estate.
- Change a living or inter vivos trust to a testamentary trust.
- Terminate a living trust by distributing its property to a residual trust.
- Have a revocable trust that changes to an irrevocable trust.
You don’t need a new EIN if you:
- Change the trustee.
- Change the grantor or beneficiary name or address.