DoorDash channel guide • California launch path

Start DoorDash in California

Decide your setup, get the California registration order straight, and finish the early DoorDash launch steps without losing the official detail behind the answer.

Last verified April 26, 2026 7 chapters

Best for launching on DoorDash in California. Need the full appendix? Open the full reference guide.

On this guide

Follow the path in order.

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.

Core chapter

3 parts, 33 sources

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.

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 California 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 California registrations, DoorDash setup, local checks, and packet review in order.
Official links
Up next Compare setup

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.
  • California does not require a Secretary of State formation filing for a sole proprietor operating under the owner's own legal name.
  • 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.

Saved choice: single-member LLC

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.

Speed to start Quicker start
Owner and business separation Very little separation
Ongoing admin load Lighter upkeep

Best for

single-member LLC

Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

Speed to start More front-loaded paperwork
Owner and business separation Cleaner separation
Ongoing admin load More upkeep
Compare details

Sole proprietor

Best for

Best for

Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.

What it means

  • California does not require a Secretary of State formation filing for a sole proprietor operating under the owner's own legal name.
  • If you use a different public name, California uses a county-level fictitious business name filing.
  • 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.

Main downside

Personal liability

single-member LLC

Best for

Best for

Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

What it means

  • File Articles of Organization [Form LLC-1].
  • File Statement of Information [Form LLC-12] within 90 days.
  • Keep the operating agreement internally.
  • Handle the separate FTB annual-tax and Form 568 branch.

Why someone chooses it

  • Liability protection.
  • Cleaner setup for banking, bookkeeping, and scaling.
  • Better fit if you expect this to become a durable side business or full-time operation.

Main downside

Higher setup friction and cost than a sole proprietorship

Official links
Formation sos.ca.gov
Compare business types

What this page helps with

Official state explanation of sole proprietorships, corporations, and LLCs.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Sole proprietor baseline

What this page helps with

No SOS formation filing is used for the ordinary sole-proprietor path.

Local lavote.gov
County FBN requirements

What this page helps with

Public county rules include notarized affidavit of identity and publication requirements.

Federal irs.gov
EIN overview and online application

What this page helps with

Standard federal EIN path.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Formation hub

What this page helps with

Official state hub for LLC forms and fees.

Formation bpd.cdn.sos.ca.gov
Default entity formation filing

What this page helps with

Main California LLC formation filing.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Immediate post-filing requirement

What this page helps with

The initial LLC-12 is due within 90 days.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Ongoing entity maintenance

What this page helps with

Public state page explains the regular LLC-12 cycle.

Tax ftb.ca.gov
SMLLC tax treatment

What this page helps with

FTB says a disregarded SMLLC must still file Form 568 and is subject to the annual tax and fee rules.

Tax ftb.ca.gov
Due dates and tax forms

What this page helps with

FTB due-date page points to Form 568 and related LLC payment forms.

Up next Money and risk

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 California.
  • California treats gig-driving and app-based delivery income as taxable even if you never receive every tax form you expected.
  • California has a higher public minimum-age gate on DoorDash's signup page than many users expect: 21.
  • If you dash by car, DoorDash's public signup page says you need a valid driver's license and insurance.

Do next: Review california-specific friction.

Why this matters

California-specific friction

Main takeaway

California treats gig-driving and app-based delivery income as taxable even if you never receive every tax form you expected.

Watch for

  • FTB says app-based transportation and delivery drivers are treated as independent contractors for California tax purposes if the specified conditions are met.
  • Los Angeles may add a BTRC and a stricter home-office branch.
  • This pack's baseline is service work, not a seller's-permit or resale-certificate lane.

DoorDash-specific friction

Main takeaway

California has a higher public minimum-age gate on DoorDash's signup page than many users expect: 21.

Watch for

  • Pay is not one flat hourly or percentage model. DoorDash's public pages show base pay, tips, promotions, Earn per Offer, and Earn by Time.
  • Payout method matters operationally: weekly direct deposit, Fast Pay, and DoorDash Crimson each behave differently.
  • DoorDash's public insurance article bodies were not reliably rendering in the public browser on April 26, 2026, so exact live platform-side coverage wording remains a follow-up item.

Insurance reality

Main takeaway

If you dash by car, DoorDash's public signup page says you need a valid driver's license and insurance.

Watch for

  • DoorDash's public help center currently exposes article titles for Understanding Auto Insurance Maintained by DoorDash and Occupational Accident Policy FAQ, but the article bodies were not reliably accessible in the public browser on April 26, 2026.
  • California's Proposition 22 framework still matters. The State Treasurer's public 2026 update says the per-mile compensation rate for app-based transportation and delivery drivers is $0.37.
  • DoorDash's public California Proposition 22 materials also say Dashers keep flexibility and receive benefits and protections such as a healthcare stipend, a minimum earnings guarantee, and enhanced occupational accident insurance.
Official links
Formation sos.ca.gov
Compare business types

What this page helps with

Official state explanation of sole proprietorships, corporations, and LLCs.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Formation hub

What this page helps with

Official state hub for LLC forms and fees.

Formation bpd.cdn.sos.ca.gov
Default entity formation filing

What this page helps with

Main California LLC formation filing.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Immediate post-filing requirement

What this page helps with

The initial LLC-12 is due within 90 days.

Formation sos.ca.gov
Ongoing entity maintenance

What this page helps with

Public state page explains the regular LLC-12 cycle.

Federal irs.gov
EIN overview and online application

What this page helps with

Standard federal EIN path.

Federal irs.gov
EIN paper form

What this page helps with

Paper fallback for EIN applications.

Tax ftb.ca.gov
California gig-income baseline

What this page helps with

FTB says gig income is generally taxable and that app-based transportation and delivery drivers are treated as independent contractors for California tax purposes if specified conditions are met.

Tax cdtfa.ca.gov
Seller-permit boundary for services

What this page helps with

CDTFA says sales and use tax generally does not apply when you provide a service rather than sell tangible goods.

Tax cdtfa.ca.gov
Seller-permit boundary for home services

What this page helps with

CDTFA says when there is no merchandise transferred, there is no sale under California sales and use tax law.

Federal irs.gov
Federal self-employed tax center

What this page helps with

Federal hub for estimated taxes, deductions, and recordkeeping.

Platform help.doordash.com
DoorDash auto-insurance article

What this page helps with

The article title is publicly visible, but the article body was not reliably accessible in the public browser on April 26, 2026; keep exact live coverage wording as retained follow-up.

Platform help.doordash.com
DoorDash occupational-accident article visibility

What this page helps with

The topic index publicly showed Occupational Accident Policy FAQ and Understanding Auto Insurance Maintained by DoorDash on April 26, 2026, but the underlying public article rendering was unstable in this browser session.

Official treasurer.ca.gov
California app-driver rate update

What this page helps with

State Treasurer's 2026 update lists the current per-mile compensation rate at $0.37.

Official dir.ca.gov
Current Prop 22 labor posture

What this page helps with

DIR says Prop 22 created a different test for app-based drivers and that the Labor Commissioner does not enforce rights founded on Prop 22 itself.

Platform about.doordash.com
DoorDash Prop 22 statement

What this page helps with

DoorDash's public July 25, 2024 statement says California Dashers keep flexibility plus benefits and protections such as a healthcare stipend and minimum earnings guarantee under Prop 22.

Local finance.lacity.gov
City business tax registration

What this page helps with

Public city page says all persons or entities conducting business activities in the city must obtain a BTRC.

Local business.lacity.gov
City home-based-business rules

What this page helps with

Public city page limits outside visibility, nonresident employees, deliveries or pickups, client visits, and commercial-vehicle storage.

Local lavote.gov
County FBN requirements

What this page helps with

Public county page requires a notarized affidavit of identity and newspaper publication.

Local lavote.gov
County FBN fees

What this page helps with

Current county public fee table.

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.