Shutting Down Your Business? What You Need to Know – Ray J. Bulaon
Many California business owners believe that once a business closes, its debts die with it—especially if the business operated as a corporation or limited liability company (LLC). This assumption is often wrong. While entity structures provide important protections, business shutdowns frequently expose owners to personal financial liability that survives long after operations end. Understanding where personal money exposure arises is critical before shutting the doors.
Limited Liability Does Not Eliminate Financial Exposure: Corporations and LLCs are designed to separate business debts from personal assets. However, limited liability is conditional. When a business shuts down, unpaid obligations are often scrutinized more closely by creditors and taxing authorities. If certain categories of debt remain unresolved, owners may face direct personal financial responsibility, regardless of the entity’s existence. Closure is one of the moments when limited liability is most likely to fail.
Unpaid Payroll Taxes: Direct Personal Liability: One of the most dangerous financial exposures for owners involves unpaid payroll taxes. Amounts withheld from employee wages—such as federal income tax withholding and FICA—are considered trust fund taxes. These funds are deemed to belong to the government the moment they are withheld.
If the business closes without paying these taxes, individuals who had authority over finances—owners, officers, managers, or signatories—can be held personally liable. This liability is not dischargeable simply because the business shuts down and can be enforced aggressively by the Internal Revenue Service and California tax agencies. Importantly, the government does not need to pierce the corporate veil to impose this liability. Responsibility alone is enough.
Sales Tax Liability Can Follow Owners Personally
California sales tax creates similar risks. Sales tax collected from customers is held “in trust” for the state. When a business closes with unpaid sales tax, the state may pursue owners or responsible persons individually for the balance. Even if the business entity dissolves, unpaid sales tax can remain a personal financial obligation, including penalties and interest. Owners are often surprised to learn that dissolution does not eliminate this exposure.
Personal Guarantees Override Entity Protection
I see this a lot in my bankruptcy law practice. Many business owners personally guarantee commercial obligations, including: Office or retail leases, Equipment financing, Business loans, Lines of credit, etc. When a business shuts down, these guarantees remain fully enforceable. The lender or landlord does not need to sue the business first—they may pursue the owner directly for unpaid balances.
In many cases, closure triggers acceleration clauses, making the entire remaining balance immediately due. Dissolving the business does not cancel these guarantees and may eliminate leverage that could have been used
Financial Consequences Depend on How You Shut Down
From a financial perspective, the way a business closes often matters more than the fact that it closes. A rushed or informal shutdown increases the likelihood that owners will absorb debts personally. A structured, strategic closure may reduce or eliminate personal exposure through negotiation, settlement, or orderly wind-down planning.
Final Thoughts
Shutting down a California business does not automatically shield owners from financial responsibility. Payroll taxes, sales tax, wages, personal guarantees, and improper shutdown actions can all convert business debt into personal financial liability.
For owners, closure is not the end of risk—it is often the moment risk becomes personal. Careful financial planning before shutting down can mean the difference between a clean exit and years of ongoing financial exposure.
Ray J. Bulaon is a bankruptcy attorney and business debt mediator in Valencia who has successfully helped more than 5,000 clients in getting out of debt. For a free consultation, call 866-477-7772 or 661-775-4880.
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