If you want to open Facebook Marketplace in Indiana, you usually need to do five things in order:
- Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
- Get your federal and Indiana registrations or registration decision in place before launch, but keep marketplace-only sales, resale, and any future direct or off-platform sales as separate questions.
- Verify local county assumed-name, zoning, and Indianapolis home-occupation branches before using the address operationally.
- Confirm your real Facebook Marketplace account access, choose whether you are starting with direct local sales or shipping and checkout if available, and keep those branches separate.
- Launch only after your product, tax, shipping, and compliance setup are ready.
Practical first-launch recommendation
If you are testing casually with minimal risk, sole proprietor can work.
If you intend to build a real Facebook Marketplace business selling physical goods, single-member LLC is usually the better long-term path in Indiana.
Avoid these first-launch mistakes
- Assuming Indiana marketplace-only relief also answers the RRMC and ST-105 questions for every later sales lane
- Using an Indianapolis home address for inventory or repeated deliveries without clearing home-occupation and zoning limits first
- Treating every Facebook Marketplace sale like a marketplace-facilitated transaction
Indiana-specific friction
Indiana marketplace-only relief does not automatically answer the RRMC, ST-105, or county assumed-name branches once direct sales or supplier resale facts appear.
- Indiana marketplace-only relief does not automatically answer the RRMC, ST-105, or county assumed-name branches once direct sales or supplier resale facts appear.
- If the business is in Indianapolis, the home-occupation, zoning, delivery-traffic, and local personal-property branches can matter before the first listing is ever live.
- Indiana's county-versus-state assumed-name split and conflicting public LLC fee materials make record consistency important from day one.
Facebook Marketplace-specific friction
Facebook Marketplace is not one stable business-seller program in the public record. It still mixes consumer local sales, feature-gated shipping flows, and help pages that are partly account-specific.
- Facebook Marketplace is not one stable business-seller program in the public record. It still mixes consumer local sales, feature-gated shipping flows, and help pages that are partly account-specific.
- Marketplace access runs through the seller's main Facebook profile and can be restricted.
- Public Meta help still says Marketplace is intended for consumers and says businesses that list there may be blocked or have listings removed.
- Shipping, checkout, seller verification, payout setup, protection, and listing limits should be treated as live account and action-date questions rather than permanent certainties.
Insurance reality
Physical-product sellers should think about general liability and product liability coverage early, but no public Facebook Marketplace seller-wide liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance mandate was identified in the reviewed official public sources on April 29, 2026.
- Physical-product sellers should think about general liability and product liability coverage early, but no public Facebook Marketplace seller-wide liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance mandate was identified in the reviewed official public sources on April 29, 2026.
- Separate carrier, landlord, warehouse, payment, or commercial-lease requirements can still create insurance obligations even if Facebook Marketplace itself does not publish a universal threshold.