Apply for EIN Number Online: Fast 2025 Guide | TaxIDFast
Apply for EIN (2025) — Fast & Simple

Apply for EIN Number Online — Get Your EIN Fast

Apply for an EIN online and (when approved) receive it immediately during IRS operating hours. Prefer done-for-you? Start below and we’ll prepare and file it for you.

Secure websiteNo hidden feesU.S. businesses & nonprofits
15–20 minTypical intake time
Same-daySubmission during IRS hours*
Accuracy-firstEvery required field covered

*IRS online EIN system operates Monday–Friday, 7 a.m.–10 p.m. Eastern.

What You’ll Need

  • Legal name & mailing address for the business/organization
  • Entity type (LLC, Corporation, Sole Prop, Nonprofit, Trust, Estate, etc.)
  • Responsible party’s legal name & SSN/ITIN
  • Reason for applying (new business, hiring employees, banking, etc.)
  • Start date & principal activity
Begin — It’s Fast

Short answer: You can apply for an EIN online and receive it immediately when approved during IRS hours. If you want a guided, accuracy-first filing, start your application with TaxIDFast and we’ll handle the submission for you.

What is an EIN?

An Employer Identification Number (EIN) is a 9-digit federal tax ID used to identify your business or organization for banking, licenses, payroll, and tax filings.

Note: The IRS issues EINs at no cost. TaxIDFast is a private preparation & filing service.

How to Apply for an EIN (Step-by-Step)

Choose your entity type. LLC, Corporation, Sole Proprietor, Partnership, Nonprofit, Trust, Estate, etc.
Confirm your responsible party. Usually the owner or person with control over funds/assets (must have SSN/ITIN).
Gather your details. Legal name, address, start date, activity, and the reason for applying.
Complete the intake. Use our guided form so nothing critical is missed or mis-entered.
We submit during IRS hours. Online requests are issued immediately when approved; otherwise we use fax/mail as needed.
Save your confirmation letter. Keep it for banking, permits, payroll, and future filings.

Who Needs an EIN?

  • Businesses that hire employees
  • Partnerships, Corporations, LLCs, Nonprofits
  • Trusts, Estates, Retirement plans
  • Anyone opening a business bank account or obtaining certain licenses
Tip: If you’re forming an LLC or corporation, create the entity with your state first, then apply for the EIN to avoid delays.

Requirements & Responsible Party

The EIN application must list a responsible party — the individual who owns or controls the entity and manages its assets. For most entities, this must be a person (not another company) and that person’s SSN or ITIN is required.

Limit: One EIN per responsible party per day

IRS Hours & Ways to Apply

  • Online: Mon–Fri, 7 a.m.–10 p.m. ET (instant issuance when approved)
  • Fax: Send Form SS-4 to 855-641-6935 (~4 business days with return fax)
  • Mail: IRS, Attn: EIN Operation, Cincinnati, OH 45999 (~4 weeks)
  • International by phone: 267-941-1099, Mon–Fri, 6 a.m.–11 p.m. ET

Prefer Done-For-You?

Complete our secure intake and we’ll prepare and file your EIN request the right way, the first time.

Start Application

We are not the IRS. We help prepare and submit your request to the IRS.

Common EIN Application Mistakes

  • Applying before your LLC/corporation is legally formed with the state
  • Listing the wrong responsible party or missing SSN/ITIN
  • Timing submissions outside IRS online hours and expecting instant issuance
  • Submitting multiple times (can trigger duplicates or mismatches)
  • Using special characters in names/addresses that the IRS system doesn’t accept

Quick Scenarios

LLC (single or multi-member)

Use the owner as responsible party. If multi-member, any member with control can be listed.

Sole Proprietor

Use your legal name and SSN/ITIN as responsible party; you can still brand with a DBA.

Nonprofit/Church

Form the organization first (articles/bylaws), then apply. Choose the correct nonprofit type when prompted.

Banking next steps: After you receive your EIN, bring your EIN letter, formation documents, and ID to open a business bank account.

After You Get Your EIN: Next Steps

  • Update IRS if your address or responsible party changes (Form 8822-B)
  • Check whether your entity must report beneficial owners to FinCEN
  • Set up payroll and tax deposits if you have/will have employees
  • Save the confirmation letter — you’ll need it for banking and licenses

About the Author

Richard Lang headshot, Finance Manager and EIN filing specialist

Richard Lang, MBA — Finance Manager & EIN Filing Specialist

MBA, Western International University BS, Business Management Owner, Lang Bookkeeping LLC Former Police Officer (Phoenix)

I help founders, contractors, nonprofits, and family-run businesses set up correctly from day one—so banking, payroll, and taxes run smoothly.

I’ve prepared and reviewed hundreds of business filings and finance workflows. At TaxIDFast, my focus is simple: a clean, complete EIN application with the right details the first time—so you can open accounts, hire, and move forward without delays.

Editorial policy: We fact-check all EIN guidance against official IRS sources and update this page regularly. If you spot an error, tell us and we’ll correct it quickly.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to get an EIN?

If you apply online during IRS hours, approved applications are issued immediately. Faxed applications typically take about four business days; mailed applications about four weeks.

Is there a fee to get an EIN?

No. The IRS issues EINs at no cost. TaxIDFast charges a service fee for preparation and submission.

Can I apply without an SSN/ITIN?

International applicants without an SSN/ITIN can apply by phone with the IRS or by submitting Form SS-4 by fax or mail.

How many EINs can I get per day?

Only one EIN per responsible party per day, regardless of method (online, phone, fax, or mail).

Where can I get help?

Use our Contact page or review our How It Works guide. You can also consult the official IRS instructions for Form SS-4.

Helpful Links

Disclaimer: TaxIDFast is a private document preparation and filing service. We are not affiliated with or endorsed by the IRS. The IRS issues EINs at no cost; our fee is for preparation and submission assistance.