On this guide
Follow the path in order.DoorDash channel guide • Arizona launch path
Start DoorDash in Arizona
Decide your setup, get the Arizona registration order straight, and finish the early DoorDash launch steps without losing the official detail behind the answer.
Best for launching on DoorDash in Arizona. Need the full appendix? Open the full reference guide.
On this journey
1 of 7 reviewed
Current chapter: Choose setup
On this journey
1 of 7 reviewed
Current chapter: Choose setup
01
Chapter 1 of 7
Choose the setup you want to launch with
Start with the setup decision first, then use the rest of the guide to build the state registrations and platform steps around it.
What this chapter does
Your setup choice, the short safe path, and the money realities that matter before spending deeply.How to move through it
Review sole proprietor.Use Part 1 to get oriented, then compare both setup paths before you spend more time or money.
3 parts to review • 33 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Chapter parts
Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.
Part 1 of 3
Start here before you spend heavily
A short orientation for the guided journey before the detailed launch steps begin.
Part 1 of 3
Start here before you spend heavily
A short orientation for the guided journey before the detailed launch steps begin.
Short answer
Use this first part only to get oriented. The detailed state, platform, local, and packet steps will follow in order.- First decide whether you are launching as a sole proprietor or a single-member LLC.
- Then work through the Arizona registrations, DoorDash setup, local checks, and packet review in order.
Do next: Do not spend money yet.
Why this matters
Key detail
Do not spend money yet.
Keep in mind
- First decide whether you are launching as a sole proprietor or a single-member LLC.
- Then work through the Arizona registrations, DoorDash setup, local checks, and packet review in order.
Official links
Part 2 of 3
Compare sole proprietor and LLC
The side-by-side setup comparison.
Part 2 of 3
Compare sole proprietor and LLC
The side-by-side setup comparison.
Short answer
Read both setup paths before you decide which one you want the rest of the launch flow to follow.- Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.
- Arizona says a sole proprietorship requires no formal Arizona formation filing.
- Faster launch.
Do next: Review sole proprietor.
Save the path you want to optimize around
The unchosen setup stays visible for comparison, but the chosen one gets visual priority so the reading path feels more intentional.
Quick tradeoff view
Use one pass to compare the launch speed, separation, and upkeep tradeoffs.The detailed comparison stays below. This lens just makes the two setup shapes easier to scan before you read every bullet.
Best for
Sole proprietor
Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.
Best for
single-member LLC
Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business shell around your delivery work.
Compare details
Sole proprietor
Best for
Best for
Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.
What it means
- Arizona says a sole proprietorship requires no formal Arizona formation filing.
- If you use a public trade name, Arizona trade-name filing is optional rather than automatically required.
- Business income generally runs through your personal tax return unless facts change the tax treatment.
- You usually do not get a liability shield.
Why someone chooses it
- Faster launch.
- Lower up-front filing costs.
- Fewer maintenance steps for a solo Dasher.
Main downside
Personal liability
single-member LLC
Best for
Best for
Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business shell around your delivery work.
What it means
- File Articles of Organization (L010) with the Arizona Corporation Commission.
- Pair the filing with Statutory Agent Acceptance (M002) and complete the post-approval publication branch.
- Arizona LLCs do not file annual reports as of April 26, 2026, but you still have to maintain the statutory-agent and address records.
Why someone chooses it
- Liability protection.
- Cleaner setup for banking, bookkeeping, and contracts.
- Better fit if you later hire, add vehicles, or add another business line.
Main downside
Higher setup friction and cost than a sole proprietorship
Official links
Part 3 of 3
See the money and risk realities before you spend
The upfront friction and risk notes that shape the launch decision.
Part 3 of 3
See the money and risk realities before you spend
The upfront friction and risk notes that shape the launch decision.
Short answer
These are the friction points most likely to catch a new DoorDash operator off guard in Arizona.- This is not a storefront or resale pack.
- DoorDash public payout branding is moving from older Fast Pay and DasherDirect language toward newer DoorDash Crimson language.
Do next: Review arizona-specific friction.
Why this matters
Arizona-specific friction
Main takeaway
This is not a storefront or resale pack.
Watch for
- The hardest Arizona question is not seller tax. It is whether your delivery vehicle must be handled through the ADOT/MVD commercial use or for hire light-motor-carrier branch.
- The answer can change if you use a car, add another courier line, or stop staying inside ordinary DoorDash work.
DoorDash-specific friction
Main takeaway
DoorDash public payout branding is moving from older Fast Pay and DasherDirect language toward newer DoorDash Crimson language.
Watch for
- DoorDash's public insurance posture is only partly visible from ungated public pages, so you should not assume the platform replaces your personal policy.
- DoorDash pay is variable. The public pay page describes base pay per offer, tips, promotions, and optional Earn by Time, not a flat wage.
Official links
02
Chapter 2 of 7
Handle the Arizona registration path in order
This is the state-side work before you rely on the platform to carry any part of the operating flow.
What this chapter does
The Arizona and federal registration sequence, tax setup, and state-maintenance checks.How to move through it
Step 2: Choose your name and brand approach.Use the order check first, then move from name and entity work into EIN, banking, and tax setup.
4 parts to review • 43 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Registration sequence
Keep the Arizona and federal setup in this order.This chapter works best when you keep the filings, EIN, banking, and tax work in one clean sequence instead of bouncing between tabs.
- 1 Use the checklist to keep the order straight
These checklist groups keep the pre-spend, pre-sale, and pre-launch work visible before you open the platform workflow.
- 2 Handle name, entity, and filing setup
Use the name-and-formation steps plus the state LLC order before you open banking or state tax registration.
- 3 Get the EIN and banking basics in place
Use the EIN and banking steps before you start platform onboarding, payouts, or supplier paperwork.
- 4 Close the Arizona tax and filing branch
Keep the Arizona tax and maintenance rules together before you assume the platform solved them.
Chapter parts
Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.
Part 1 of 4
Use the checklist to keep the order straight
The quick-start checklist grouped by the main launch phases.
Part 1 of 4
Use the checklist to keep the order straight
The quick-start checklist grouped by the main launch phases.
Short answer
These checklist groups keep the pre-spend, pre-sale, and pre-launch work visible before you open the platform workflow.- Decide whether you are staying a solo Dasher or building a more formal LLC shell.
- Form the business or file your trade name if needed.
- Get an EIN from the IRS if applicable.
Do next: Pick your entity.
See checklist
Do these before you spend money
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Pick your entity.
- Decide whether you are staying a solo Dasher or building a more formal LLC shell.
- Confirm that you meet DoorDash's current Arizona age gate and document requirements.
- Confirm whether you plan to dash by car or use another transport mode in an eligible city.
- Confirm that your insurer will discuss delivery use before you count on your current personal policy.
- Decide whether you will avoid Shop & Deliver, alcohol deliveries, and any employee branch on day one.
Do these before your first dash
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Form the business or file your trade name if needed.
- Get an EIN from the IRS if applicable.
- Open a dedicated business bank account or a dedicated business-only money workflow.
- Verify the Arizona ADOT/MVD commercial use or for hire branch for your vehicle if you will deliver by car.
- Check Phoenix home-occupation or use-permit rules only if your home will become more than a place where you park your own car and do light admin work.
- Create your DoorDash account and complete verification.
Do these before launch goes live
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Complete the platform setup branch.
- Confirm your payout method and understand the difference between weekly direct deposit, Fast Pay, and DoorDash Crimson.
- Set up mileage tracking and a tax reserve.
- Start with ordinary restaurant delivery before adding Shop & Deliver, alcohol, or more complicated delivery modes.
Official links
Part 2 of 4
Handle name, entity, and filing setup
The name, formation, and LLC-order work for the state launch path.
Part 2 of 4
Handle name, entity, and filing setup
The name, formation, and LLC-order work for the state launch path.
Short answer
Use the name-and-formation steps plus the state LLC order before you open banking or state tax registration.- Step 3: Form the business.
- If you dash under your legal name:.
- Arizona Commerce also says a fictitious-name certificate can be filed with the county recorder.
Do next: Step 2: Choose your name and brand approach.
Step details
Best practical order for a Arizona single-member LLC launch
- Decide whether you are truly staying in the ordinary solo Dasher lane.
- Choose the entity name.
- File the LLC formation document if you want the LLC shell.
- Get the EIN.
- Open the bank account.
- Verify the Arizona ADOT/MVD commercial use or for hire branch for the vehicle you actually plan to use.
- Finish the publication branch if you formed an LLC.
- Check the Phoenix home-business and local-tax branch if you are in Phoenix.
- Build the DoorDash Dasher account.
- Finish identity, payout, and background-check setup.
- Start with ordinary restaurant delivery before adding Shop & Deliver, alcohol, or employees.
- Track recurring tax, insurance, and registration obligations on the compliance calendar.
Sole proprietor: Decide whether you need a local assumed-name filing
Main takeaway
If you dash under your legal name:
Watch for
- Arizona Commerce also says a fictitious-name certificate can be filed with the county recorder.
- For a standard solo Dasher, a trade name is optional rather than automatically required.
Single-member LLC: Name search and naming standards
Main takeaway
Before filing:
Watch for
- and a public trade name is separate from the legal LLC name.
Single-member LLC: File the formation document
Main takeaway
Core filing:
Watch for
- Form name: Articles of Organization.
- Form number: L010.
Single-member LLC: Complete the immediate post-filing step
Main takeaway
File or arrange Statutory Agent Acceptance (M002).
Watch for
- If the statutory-agent street address is in Maricopa or Pima County, the public notice is posted on the ACC website instead of requiring outside newspaper publication.
- The operating agreement is kept internally rather than filed with the ACC.
Single-member LLC: File the assumed-name or DBA form if needed
Main takeaway
Arizona trade-name filing is optional.
Watch for
- Current state filing fee: $10.
- Optional expedite fee: $25.
- Term: 5 years from receipt.
Step 2: Choose your name and brand approach
Main guide step 2
What this step settles
You need to decide whether you are:
Why it matters: Important:
- operating under your own legal name,
- using a trade name,
- forming an LLC with its own legal name,
- or staying as a solo courier with no separate public-facing brand.
- A standard solo Dasher usually does not need a heavy brand-building path on day one.
- If you want a public trade name, Arizona trade-name filing is optional but useful for consistency.
- Do not treat the name on a DoorDash account as a substitute for real-world filings.
Step 3: Form the business
Main guide step 3
What this step settles
If you choose sole proprietor: Arizona does not require a separate formation filing for an ordinary sole proprietor.
- If you choose sole proprietor: Arizona does not require a separate formation filing for an ordinary sole proprietor.
- If you choose sole proprietor: If you want a trade name, use the Arizona Secretary of State trade-name process.
- If you choose single-member LLC: Do this in order:
- If you choose single-member LLC: Search name availability through the Arizona Corporation Commission and Secretary of State records.
- If you choose single-member LLC: File Articles of Organization (L010).
- If you choose single-member LLC: Submit Statutory Agent Acceptance (M002) and complete the publication branch after approval.
- If you choose single-member LLC: File an optional trade name only if you want a public name that differs from the LLC legal name.
Official links
Part 3 of 4
Get the EIN and banking basics in place
The EIN, banking, and recordkeeping baseline before launch.
Part 3 of 4
Get the EIN and banking basics in place
The EIN, banking, and recordkeeping baseline before launch.
Short answer
Use the EIN and banking steps before you start platform onboarding, payouts, or supplier paperwork.- Step 5: Open banking and bookkeeping.
Do next: Step 4: Get your EIN.
Step details
Step 4: Get your EIN
Main guide step 4
What this step settles
Use the IRS EIN application if applicable. For many LLCs this is required. For many sole proprietors it is optional but still useful for banking, taxes, and keeping DoorDash income records cleaner.
Step 5: Open banking and bookkeeping
Main guide step 5
What this step settles
Do this right away:
- Open a business checking account or a clearly separated business-only money flow.
- Use one account and one card for business only.
- Save every weekly payout statement, instant-transfer receipt, support credit, fuel receipt, parking bill, toll bill, and maintenance receipt.
- Keep a mileage log from day one.
- Set aside tax reserves because DoorDash public materials do not describe ordinary wage withholding for Dashers.
Official links
Part 4 of 4
Close the Arizona tax and filing branch
The Arizona tax stack, registration timing, and maintenance follow-up.
Part 4 of 4
Close the Arizona tax and filing branch
The Arizona tax stack, registration timing, and maintenance follow-up.
Short answer
Keep the Arizona tax and maintenance rules together before you assume the platform solved them.- A single-member LLC should usually get an EIN early.
- JT-1/UC-001 exists for TPT, use tax, withholding, and unemployment registration.
- DoorDash is not a marketplace-seller tax branch in this pack.
Do next: Step 6: Register for state tax, vehicle, or permit branches that actually apply.
Step details
1. EIN
Main takeaway
A single-member LLC should usually get an EIN early.
Watch for
- A sole proprietor can sometimes wait longer, but that does not mean waiting is practical once you want cleaner banking or bookkeeping.
2. Arizona sales tax, seller permit, or equivalent registration
Main takeaway
JT-1/UC-001 exists for TPT, use tax, withholding, and unemployment registration.
Watch for
- That is not the default first filing for an ordinary solo Dasher.
- The closer Arizona branch for a car-based Dasher is the ADOT/MVD commercial use or for hire light-motor-carrier review, because the state statutes treat transporting property for compensation differently from a normal retail seller branch.
- If you add another taxable Arizona business line or hire employees, re-check JT-1, AZTaxes.gov, and Business One Stop.
3. Marketplace or platform tax rule
Main takeaway
DoorDash is not a marketplace-seller tax branch in this pack.
Watch for
- The relevant Arizona distinction is narrower: transporting property for compensation by motor vehicle versus ordinary retail selling.
- The answer also changes if you stop staying inside ordinary DoorDash app-based courier work.
4. Resale purchases or exempt purchasing
Main takeaway
Resale certificates and seller-permit logic are not part of this DoorDash baseline.
Watch for
- This pack did not identify a resale-certificate branch that a normal Dasher needs before beginning ordinary deliveries.
5. Entity tax treatment
Main takeaway
This pack did not identify a special Arizona-only tax election page for a standard single-member LLC Dasher setup.
Watch for
- In practice, Arizona treatment generally follows the federal classification unless another election changes it.
- The IRS gig-economy guidance still matters because the Dasher must report the income even if no 1099 arrives.
6. Entity filing-fee or franchise-tax rule
Main takeaway
As of April 26, 2026, this pack did not identify a separate Arizona LLC franchise tax or annual-report filing for a standard domestic LLC.
Watch for
- That does not remove recurring insurance, registration, or platform-verification obligations.
7. If the founder changes entity type later
Main takeaway
Do not assume your bank account, EIN, insurance profile, or DoorDash tax profile will carry over cleanly.
Watch for
- Re-check entity documents, payout information, and tax records if you move from sole proprietor to LLC.
Sole proprietor: Register for Arizona tax, vehicle, or commercial-use setup that actually applies
Main takeaway
Ordinary DoorDash delivery is not a resale or storefront branch.
Watch for
- Arizona's public For Hire Certificate says that paying the light motor carrier fee exempts the activity from ADOR TPT on transporting for hire.
Sole proprietor: Understand the tax reality
Main takeaway
A sole-proprietor Dasher usually reports business income on the personal return.
Watch for
- The IRS gig-economy guidance reviewed on April 26, 2026 says gig income is taxable even if no information return is received.
- Public DoorDash materials describe Dashers as independent contractors rather than regular employees.
Single-member LLC: File ongoing entity maintenance
Main takeaway
Key points:
Watch for
- due: keep the statutory agent and addresses current; renew any optional trade name before expiration.
- missing the publication or statutory-agent branch creates avoidable compliance problems.
Step 6: Register for state tax, vehicle, or permit branches that actually apply
Main guide step 6
What this step settles
DoorDash is not a storefront or inventory-resale business by default, so do not start with a seller-permit or resale-certificate assumption.
- DoorDash is not a storefront or inventory-resale business by default, so do not start with a seller-permit or resale-certificate assumption.
- Arizona's transporting classification taxes transporting freight or property by motor vehicle for hire, but A.R.S. 42-5062 excludes light motor vehicles subject to a fee under Title 28, Chapter 15, Article 4.
- Arizona ADOT/MVD says For Hire is a commercial-use option when a vehicle is 12,000 pounds or less and you receive compensation for transporting people or property.
- Arizona's public For Hire Certificate also says that, upon payment of the light motor carrier fee, the activity is exempt from ADOR TPT on transporting for hire.
- Because ordinary DoorDash work means transporting property for compensation, this pack treats the ADOT/MVD commercial use or for hire light-motor-carrier review as the closest public Arizona fit.
- This is the biggest retained caveat in the pack: confirm with ADOT/MVD before the first dash whether your exact vehicle and use pattern need commercial registration, a for hire certificate, or both.
Official links
03
Chapter 3 of 7
Finish the DoorDash account and operations branch
Use these steps for the platform-side account, plan, operations, and eligibility work after the state basics line up.
What this chapter does
DoorDash account setup, operations, and pre-launch readiness.How to move through it
Step 10: Choose the right DoorDash payout and earnings setup.Open the DoorDash branch only after the Arizona basics line up, then finish plan and operations choices.
3 parts to review • 38 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Chapter parts
Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.
Part 1 of 3
Open the DoorDash account
The first account and verification work for the platform path.
Part 1 of 3
Open the DoorDash account
The first account and verification work for the platform path.
Short answer
Start the platform onboarding only after the legal name, EIN, and payout details line up cleanly.Do next: Step 9: Create your DoorDash Dasher account.
Step details
Step 9: Create your DoorDash Dasher account
Platform step 1
What this step settles
Have these ready:
Why it matters: Platform registration flow: DoorDash's public Arizona signup page reviewed on April 26, 2026 says Dashers in Arizona must be at least 19, need a phone number, and need an SSN for the background-check process. It also says a driver's license number is needed if you are using a car.
- government-issued ID
- phone number
- email address
- bank account information or the payout option you plan to use
- SSN
- driver's license number if you are using a car
- vehicle and insurance information if the car branch asks for it
- Start at the public DoorDash Dasher signup page.
- Enter basic personal information and choose your market.
- Complete identity verification and the background-check branch.
- Add payout details.
- Finish any transport-mode, document, and activation steps and wait for approval.
Official links
Part 2 of 3
Review the plan, pricing, and optional programs
Plan, pricing, and optional program decisions before launch.
Part 2 of 3
Review the plan, pricing, and optional programs
Plan, pricing, and optional program decisions before launch.
Short answer
Use this part for the platform plan, pricing, or optional brand and program choices that come before operations.- Step 11: Decide whether advanced delivery branches belong in the initial launch.
Do next: Step 10: Choose the right DoorDash payout and earnings setup.
Step details
Step 10: Choose the right DoorDash payout and earnings setup
Platform step 2
What this step settles
Practical rule:
Why it matters: Pick the simplest payout method that matches your cash-flow needs and re-check the exact fee and timing language in the app before relying on a same-day transfer.
- There is no public monthly seller plan to buy before you can dash.
- DoorDash public earnings pages reviewed on April 26, 2026 describe two pay modes: Earn per Offer and Earn by Time, with tips and promotions layered on top where available.
- Public payout pages reviewed on April 26, 2026 show three real branches:
- weekly direct deposit
- Fast Pay
- DoorDash Crimson
- DoorDash's public payout language is still moving. The public pay page still references older payout vocabulary in places, while newer Crimson pages describe instant earnings access, a virtual card, standard transfers, and optional faster transfers.
Step 11: Decide whether advanced delivery branches belong in the initial launch
Platform step 3
What this step settles
For a first launch:
- Shop & Deliver is optional and not required for the first launch.
- DoorDash's public Arizona signup page says the activation kit, including a hot bag and Red Card, is sent after the first dash.
- Alcohol delivery is also optional and carries a stricter handoff and ID-check branch.
- start with ordinary restaurant delivery,
- add Shop & Deliver only after your Red Card arrives and you want that branch,
- and treat alcohol as a later compliance branch instead of a day-one default.
Official links
Part 3 of 3
Finish operations and eligibility before scaling
Operations and eligibility checks before the business scales.
Part 3 of 3
Finish operations and eligibility before scaling
Operations and eligibility checks before the business scales.
Short answer
Close the operating branch only after the listing, trip, hosting, or operational eligibility checks are ready.- Step 13: Understand the insurance and safety layer.
Do next: Step 12: Complete the operations branch.
Step details
Step 12: Complete the operations branch
Platform step 4
What this step settles
Use the DoorDash-specific version of this section:
- Confirm the live Arizona signup page.
- Complete identity verification and background check.
- Confirm your vehicle and Arizona ADOT/MVD branch if using a car.
- Set your payout method and understand transfer timing.
- Confirm your insurance branch with your carrier before you rely on the platform's safety or insurance posture.
- Start with ordinary restaurant delivery.
- Add Shop & Deliver or alcohol only after you understand the extra steps.
Step 13: Understand the insurance and safety layer
Platform step 5
What this step settles
DoorDash's public safety pages reviewed on April 26, 2026 describe in-app safety tools, a 24/7 Trust and Safety line, SafeDash, and an occupational-accident-policy branch.
- DoorDash's public safety pages reviewed on April 26, 2026 describe in-app safety tools, a 24/7 Trust and Safety line, SafeDash, and an occupational-accident-policy branch.
- Those public pages do not eliminate the need to keep your own personal auto insurance current.
- This pack did not treat public DoorDash safety pages as proof that every Arizona Dasher has the same auto-liability result in every delivery phase.
- Re-check the live public help-center insurance page or in-app insurance screens before launch, especially if you will deliver by car.
Official links
04
Chapter 4 of 7
Handle the local and city-specific branches
These local facts can still change the answer even after the state and platform path looks clear.
What this chapter does
Local permits, local taxes, city appendices, and location-specific operating rules.How to move through it
Review phoenix appendix.Only turn this chapter on if your location, city, or operating model changes the answer.
2 parts to review • 11 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Only turn this branch on if it matches your plan
These branch questions keep the main reading path clean. If one matches your situation, the relevant detail blocks below get emphasized.
Matching branch content is now highlighted below.
Chapter parts
Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.
Part 1 of 2
Local permits and location checks
Arizona pushes many permit and zoning questions down to counties and municipalities.
Part 1 of 2
Local permits and location checks
Arizona pushes many permit and zoning questions down to counties and municipalities.
Short answer
Arizona pushes many permit and zoning questions down to counties and municipalities.Do next: Review local permits and location checks.
Why this matters
Local permits and location checks
Main takeaway
Arizona pushes many permit and zoning questions down to counties and municipalities.
Watch for
- For any place where the business will operate:.
- check the state business portal,.
- contact the county clerk if you plan to file a local assumed name,.
- contact the city office if you plan to run a real office from home,.
- ask zoning or planning offices if the activity involves extra vehicles, employees, or visible home-business activity.
- Typical local risk areas:.
- trade names.
- home occupation restrictions.
- dispatch or office activity at home.
- extra vehicle traffic at a residence.
- city tax questions if the facts become more formal than ordinary solo dashing.
Official links
Part 2 of 2
Phoenix Appendix
If the business operates in Phoenix, add one more review layer.
Part 2 of 2
Phoenix Appendix
If the business operates in Phoenix, add one more review layer.
Short answer
If the business operates in Phoenix, add one more review layer.Do next: Review phoenix appendix.
Why this matters
Phoenix Appendix
Main takeaway
If the business operates in Phoenix, add one more review layer.
Watch for
- Phoenix says it does not issue a general business license.
- Phoenix's public privilege-tax business-activities page does not read like a blanket city TPT fit for ordinary light-vehicle property delivery, unlike the broader Arizona state transporting statute.
- That means a solo Dasher should not assume a Phoenix city tax license is automatically required on day one, but should contact Phoenix tax staff if the city asks for licensing or if the facts become more formal.
- Phoenix home-occupation standards still matter if the business grows beyond ordinary solo dashing based from home.
- If the residence turns into a real dispatch, storage, or employee site, re-check Phoenix zoning and use-permit rules before operating.
05
Chapter 5 of 7
Use the hiring and insurance branch only if it matches your plan
This branch matters when you expect to hire, scale, or need the insurance follow-up tied to the business model.
What this chapter does
Hiring, payroll, insurance, and scale-up risk reminders.How to move through it
Review 1. employer registration.Only turn this branch on when hiring, payroll, or coverage questions are close enough to matter.
2 parts to review • 14 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Only turn this branch on if it matches your plan
These branch questions keep the main reading path clean. If one matches your situation, the relevant detail blocks below get emphasized.
Matching branch content is now highlighted below.
Chapter parts
Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.
Part 1 of 2
If you hire, close the employment branch first
The employee registration, payroll, and employment-program branch.
Part 1 of 2
If you hire, close the employment branch first
The employee registration, payroll, and employment-program branch.
Short answer
Use these cards if the business will hire employees or carry payroll responsibilities soon.- Use JT-1/UC-001 for Arizona withholding and unemployment registration.
- Arizona generally requires workers' compensation coverage for employers with at least 1 employee.
- Arizona enforces earned paid sick time rules.
Do next: Review 1. employer registration.
Why this matters
1. Employer registration
Main takeaway
Use JT-1/UC-001 for Arizona withholding and unemployment registration.
2. Workers' compensation
Main takeaway
Arizona generally requires workers' compensation coverage for employers with at least 1 employee.
Watch for
- obtain workers' compensation coverage,.
3. Disability, paid leave, or similar coverage
Main takeaway
Arizona enforces earned paid sick time rules.
Watch for
- As of April 26, 2026, this pack did not identify a separate Arizona statewide disability-insurance program for a standard employer branch.
- follow Arizona earned paid sick time rules,.
4. Exemption certificate if applicable
Main takeaway
This pack did not identify a general Arizona CE-200-style exemption certificate for a standard DoorDash employer branch.
Official links
Part 2 of 2
Keep the insurance branch visible as you scale
The insurance, liability, and scale-trigger branch.
Part 2 of 2
Keep the insurance branch visible as you scale
The insurance, liability, and scale-trigger branch.
Short answer
This is the insurance and liability follow-up tied to hiring, products, services, or growth.- Use JT-1/UC-001 for Arizona withholding and unemployment registration.
- Arizona generally requires workers' compensation coverage for employers with at least 1 employee.
- Arizona enforces earned paid sick time rules.
Do next: Review 1. employer registration.
Why this matters
1. Employer registration
Main takeaway
Use JT-1/UC-001 for Arizona withholding and unemployment registration.
2. Workers' compensation
Main takeaway
Arizona generally requires workers' compensation coverage for employers with at least 1 employee.
Watch for
- obtain workers' compensation coverage,.
3. Disability, paid leave, or similar coverage
Main takeaway
Arizona enforces earned paid sick time rules.
Watch for
- As of April 26, 2026, this pack did not identify a separate Arizona statewide disability-insurance program for a standard employer branch.
- follow Arizona earned paid sick time rules,.
4. Exemption certificate if applicable
Main takeaway
This pack did not identify a general Arizona CE-200-style exemption certificate for a standard DoorDash employer branch.
Official links
06
Chapter 6 of 7
Keep the operating calendar and mistake list close after launch
Once you are live, use the ongoing calendar and the mistake list to keep the business on a safer path.
What this chapter does
The recurring compliance calendar, live-operating routine, and beginner mistakes to avoid.How to move through it
Assuming a retail seller permit is the first Arizona filing for a Dasher.Use the recurring calendar first, then keep the repeated-mistake notes close after launch.
2 parts to review • 28 source touchpoints behind the drawers.
Chapter parts
Open Part 1 when you are ready to start working through this chapter.After you start, only one part stays open at a time and the earlier ones stay easy to revisit.
Part 1 of 2
Use the ongoing compliance calendar
The recurring compliance calendar grouped by timing.
Part 1 of 2
Use the ongoing compliance calendar
The recurring compliance calendar grouped by timing.
Short answer
This groups the recurring checks by when they matter after launch.- Save parking, toll, and support records.
- Reconcile payouts, fees, tips, and expenses.
- Review tax reserves.
Do next: Track mileage.
See checklist
Daily or each dash
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Track mileage.
- Save parking, toll, and support records.
- Watch for account alerts about verification, insurance, or payout issues.
Monthly
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Reconcile payouts, fees, tips, and expenses.
- Review tax reserves.
- Re-check whether your insurer or Arizona registration branch needs an update because your delivery activity changed.
Quarterly
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Review whether estimated federal and Arizona tax payments make sense for your profit level.
- If you become an employer, review payroll and unemployment filing calendars separately.
Annual or periodic
Grouped so the launch order stays easier to scan.
- Renew any trade name if you filed one.
- If you formed an LLC, keep the statutory-agent and address information current.
- Re-check live public DoorDash payout, insurance, and tax-document pages before relying on older screenshots or older help articles.
Official links
Part 2 of 2
Common Mistakes New Operators Make
The most common mistakes from the research pack plus the first-launch recommendation.
Part 2 of 2
Common Mistakes New Operators Make
The most common mistakes from the research pack plus the first-launch recommendation.
Short answer
These are the repeated errors called out in the research pack.- Ignoring the ADOT/MVD for hire question because the vehicle is a personal car.
- Treating platform safety pages as a substitute for talking to your own insurer.
- Mixing personal and business money because payouts feel automatic.
Do next: Assuming a retail seller permit is the first Arizona filing for a Dasher.
Why this matters
Practical first-launch recommendation
- If you are testing part-time with one vehicle and no employees, sole proprietor is usually the cleanest beginner path.
- If you intend to build a more formal shell, separate contracts and banking from day one, or add workers later, single-member LLC is usually the better long-term path.
Key detail
Assuming a retail seller permit is the first Arizona filing for a Dasher
Keep in mind
- Ignoring the ADOT/MVD for hire question because the vehicle is a personal car
- Treating platform safety pages as a substitute for talking to your own insurer
- Mixing personal and business money because payouts feel automatic
- Assuming Shop & Deliver or alcohol delivery is required to start
- Forgetting that city home-business rules are separate from app activation
Official links
07
Chapter 7 of 7
Review your selected steps and open the packet PDF
Use the review screen to decide what belongs in the packet, then open a real PDF preview in a new tab.
Review and print
Review the chapters you kept and make sure the right reminders stay visible.
Use this step to keep only the chapters that match the launch plan now, then keep the local and city reminders close before you treat the packet as final.
Saved setup choice
single-member LLCThat choice stays visible while the rest of the journey gets lighter.
Packet count
4 chapters selectedOptional branches can stay out of the packet until they match the real launch plan.
Still verify locally
6 remindersLocal tax, zoning, insurance, and platform policy changes still need the official check.
Open the working launch packet with fillable tracker rows, then print or download it from the PDF tab.
Choose what stays in the packet
Selected chapters
- Choose setup
Your setup choice, the short safe path, and the money realities that matter before spending deeply. - Arizona registrations
The Arizona and federal registration sequence, tax setup, and state-maintenance checks. - DoorDash setup
DoorDash account setup, operations, and pre-launch readiness. - Local and city checks
Local permits, local taxes, city appendices, and location-specific operating rules. - Hiring and insurance
Hiring, payroll, insurance, and scale-up risk reminders. - Ongoing calendar and mistakes
The recurring compliance calendar, live-operating routine, and beginner mistakes to avoid.
See local verification reminders
- Useful jump page for Arizona business agencies.
- Helpful for statewide navigation and some registration paths.
- Good statewide checklist for entity, trade-name, and registration planning.
- Phoenix says it does not issue a general business license.
- Public activity list is narrower than Arizona's state transporting statute and does not read like a blanket match for ordinary light-vehicle property delivery.
- Use permits are a separate zoning question from tax and platform onboarding.
Change your path
Need a different route into this answer?
Use one of these links if you landed in the wrong platform, wrong state, or want the state-only baseline before you keep reading.