How to Get a Business License in Nebraska

Analic Mata-Murray
Written & reviewed by
Managing Editor · Communications & Journalism degree, PR and media specialist with 11 years of experience making complex information clear

Nebraska business license guide

Last checked: April 26, 2026

Nebraska does not use one simple license that covers every business in every city. Most businesses need to check a mix of state filings, tax registrations, trade name rules, industry licenses, zoning, and local permits.

The right path depends on what you do, where you operate, whether you sell taxable goods or services, whether you hire workers, and whether your city or county has extra rules.

The short answer

In Nebraska, start by separating four things: your legal business filing, your tax accounts, your industry permits, and your local city or county approvals.

The Nebraska Secretary of State handles many entity filings and trade names. The Nebraska Department of Revenue handles tax registrations such as sales tax and withholding. The Nebraska One Stop License Portal helps identify certain state licenses and inspections, but it says it is a supplemental resource and not a full list of every filing a business may need.

Even after you finish state steps, your city, county, zoning office, building department, health department, or fire authority may still have rules for your location or business activity.

Nebraska licensing snapshot

QuestionNebraska answerWhere to verify
Is there one statewide general business license?Nebraska’s official sources point businesses to separate state filings, tax accounts, state licenses, and local approvals. Do not assume there is one all-purpose state license that covers every business.Nebraska.gov Business Licensing and Nebraska One Stop License Portal
Who handles LLCs, corporations, and many entity filings?The Nebraska Secretary of State Business Services Division records corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, limited liability partnerships, trade names, and trademarks.Nebraska Secretary of State Business Services Division
What does Nebraska call a DBA?Nebraska uses the term “trade name.” A trade name filing has a publication step, and proof of publication must be filed with the Secretary of State within 45 days.Nebraska trade name application
Who handles sales tax permits?The Nebraska Department of Revenue handles Nebraska tax registration. If you indicate that you will collect sales tax, DOR says you will be issued a Sales Tax Permit.Nebraska Department of Revenue starting a business page
Do local rules still matter?Yes. Cities and counties may control zoning, occupancy, health permits, building permits, fire approvals, occupation taxes, short-term rental rules, and local activity permits.Your city, county, planning, zoning, health, building, or fire office

Quick start: the order to check first

  1. Write down your business facts. Include your business type, legal structure, city, county, address or service area, whether it is home-based, whether customers visit, whether you sell products, and whether you will hire workers.
  2. Check whether you need a Nebraska entity filing. LLCs, corporations, limited partnerships, and some other entities file with the Nebraska Secretary of State. A sole proprietor may not need an entity filing just to exist, but may still need tax accounts, local approvals, or a trade name.
  3. Check your business name. If you use a name other than your legal name or entity name, review Nebraska’s trade name rules.
  4. Check Nebraska tax registration. Use the Nebraska Department of Revenue if you will make taxable retail sales, rent or lease tangible personal property, provide taxable services, or have Nebraska employees.
  5. Search for industry licenses. Use the Nebraska One Stop License Portal and the relevant agency, such as Agriculture, DHHS, Liquor Control, Labor, Revenue, or the State Fire Marshal.
  6. Call your city or county before you open. Ask about zoning, home occupation rules, certificate of occupancy, health permits, building permits, fire approvals, sign permits, and local business taxes or occupation taxes.

Federal, state, county, and city layers are different

A Nebraska business may deal with more than one government layer. Do not treat them as the same thing.

LayerWhat it may coverExamples to check
FederalFederal tax ID numbers and federally regulated activities.IRS EIN, federal employment tax, alcohol, firearms, aviation, transportation, radio, or other federally regulated business areas.
State of NebraskaEntity filings, trade names, tax accounts, sales tax permits, withholding, unemployment insurance, contractor registration, and state-regulated industries.Nebraska Secretary of State, Nebraska Department of Revenue, Nebraska Department of Labor, Nebraska Department of Agriculture, Nebraska DHHS, Nebraska Liquor Control Commission.
CountyHealth permits, food permits, zoning in unincorporated areas, local records, and some location-based approvals.County health department, county planning and zoning, county clerk, county building or environmental health office.
City or villageZoning, home occupation rules, certificates of occupancy, local permits, occupation taxes, signs, building, fire, and local activity rules.City clerk, planning and zoning, permits and inspections, finance office, fire marshal, local health office.
Private platformsRules set by marketplaces, payment processors, landlords, insurers, or delivery platforms.Etsy, Amazon, Shopify, Airbnb, DoorDash, commercial lease terms, insurance underwriting rules.

Important: An LLC filing is not the same as a business license. A Nebraska Sales Tax Permit is not the same as a city zoning approval. A trade name is not permission to operate from a specific location.

Nebraska state registration steps

For many businesses, the state-level starting point is the Nebraska Secretary of State. The Secretary of State says its office acts as the recorder of corporate documents. It is not the agency that decides every license, tax, zoning, or industry permit question.

Entity filings

If you form a Nebraska LLC, corporation, professional corporation, limited partnership, limited liability partnership, or similar entity, use the Nebraska Secretary of State’s business services resources.

The Secretary of State’s fee FAQ says new formation filings are generally $100 online or $110 for in-house paper filings, with standard portal fees still applying to online filings. Always check the current fee page before filing because fees and portal charges can change.

Ongoing reports

Nebraska also has ongoing reporting duties for many entities. The Secretary of State’s annual and biennial reporting page says domestic and foreign business corporations and professional corporations file biennial occupation tax reports in even-numbered years. Domestic and foreign LLCs and PLLCs file biennial reports in odd-numbered years. LLPs file annual reports.

Practical tip: Save your Nebraska Secretary of State Business Services account number, filing confirmation, registered agent information, and report due dates. You may need them for renewals, tax accounts, bank accounts, leases, and permit applications.

Nebraska trade names: the DBA-style step

Nebraska uses the term trade name. People often call this a DBA, but the state’s official language is trade name.

You may need to look at trade name registration if you plan to operate under a name that is different from your legal personal name or your registered entity name. A trade name does not create an LLC, protect you from all name conflicts, or give you zoning approval.

Nebraska trade name itemWhat to know
Filing officeNebraska Secretary of State.
State termTrade name.
Publication stepThe trade name registration must be published once in a newspaper of general circulation in the proper city, village, or county.
Proof of publicationThe affidavit or proof of publication must be filed with the Secretary of State within 45 days of the trade name registration date.
TermNebraska statute says a trade name registration is effective for 10 years and may be renewed.

Do not miss the publication step. The Nebraska Secretary of State trade name application says the registration may be canceled if the affidavit is not received within the 45-day timeframe.

Nebraska tax permits and sales tax registration

The Nebraska Department of Revenue says a new business may need to register with DOR if it will have employees, make retail sales, rent or lease tangible personal property, or provide services that are subject to sales tax.

To apply for a Nebraska Identification Number, DOR says businesses can register online or complete the Nebraska Tax Application, Form 20. If you indicate that you will collect sales tax, DOR says you will be issued a Sales Tax Permit.

Nebraska Sales Tax Permit

A Nebraska Sales Tax Permit is for sales and use tax. It is not a general city business license. It does not replace zoning, health permits, building approvals, or industry licensing.

DOR says the sales tax permit must be displayed at each retail location. DOR also says a separate application is required for each Nebraska retail location unless the business is applying through the Streamlined Sales Tax Agreement.

If your business never opens or no longer needs the permit

DOR warns that if you receive a Nebraska Sales and Use Tax and/or Income Tax Withholding Permit and your business never opens, or you later find you do not need the permit, you must contact DOR to cancel it.

If you buy an existing business

DOR also warns buyers of an existing business or business assets that they could be held liable for unpaid taxes owed by the business at the time of sale. Ask DOR and a qualified tax professional before buying a business or its assets.

If you hire workers in Nebraska

Hiring workers adds more steps. These are separate from forming an LLC or getting a sales tax permit.

  • Federal EIN: Get an Employer Identification Number from the IRS when required. The IRS says an EIN is free when obtained directly from the IRS.
  • Nebraska income tax withholding: The Nebraska Department of Revenue handles Nebraska income tax withholding. DOR says a company registering for Nebraska income tax withholding must provide its Federal Employer Identification Number.
  • Unemployment insurance tax: The Nebraska Department of Labor handles unemployment insurance tax accounts. The agency’s employer registration process is used to establish liability and assign the correct tax rate.
  • New hire reporting: Nebraska DHHS says employers and labor organizations doing business in Nebraska must report new, re-hired, re-called, temporary, seasonal, and certain independent contractor workers within 20 days.
  • Workers’ compensation: The Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Court says most Nebraska employers are required to have workers’ compensation insurance, with exceptions listed in state law.

Before hiring: Ask your payroll provider, tax professional, insurer, and the official Nebraska agencies which registrations apply to your exact worker setup.

Industry licenses and regulated activities

Some Nebraska businesses need state licenses or registrations because of what they do, sell, install, serve, or inspect. Use the Nebraska One Stop License Portal as a starting point, then verify with the agency that regulates your activity.

Business type or activityNebraska agency or official source to checkWhat to ask about
Contractors and subcontractorsNebraska Department of Labor Contractor RegistrationContractor registration, employee status, workers’ compensation certificate, and local contractor licensing.
Food, cottage food, agriculture, pesticides, feed, livestock, or food safety programsNebraska Department of Agriculture licensing, permits, and registrationsFood permits, cottage food registration, labeling, inspections, agricultural licenses, and local health rules.
Cottage foodNebraska Department of Agriculture Cottage Food RegistrationRegistration, food safety requirements, labeling, allowed foods, and whether a county, city, or village rule applies.
Health care, child care, professional licenses, and licensed facilitiesNebraska DHHS Licensure UnitProfessional licenses, facility licenses, renewals, license verification, and special business or service licenses.
Alcohol sales, service, manufacturing, or special designated licensesNebraska Liquor Control Commission licensing overviewState liquor license type, POSSE portal, local approvals, renewal, event licenses, and required documents.
Cigarettes and tobacco productsNebraska Department of Revenue tobacco retailer informationRetailer rules, licensed distributors or wholesalers, Nebraska tax stamps, certified brands, and product restrictions.
Fireworks, fire safety, plan review, boilers, elevators, tanks, or certain safety inspectionsNebraska State Fire MarshalPlan review, fire code, licenses, inspection scheduling, and local fire authority requirements.

State license does not always finish the job. A food business, contractor, liquor business, daycare, short-term rental, or mobile vendor may also need city, county, zoning, building, fire, or health approval.

City and county approvals in Nebraska

Local approval is often where new business owners get surprised. Your city or county may not call the requirement a “business license.” It may be a zoning approval, home occupation permit, certificate of occupancy, occupation tax account, food permit, building permit, fire inspection, sign permit, or activity-specific license.

Omaha example

Omaha’s ONEBiz guide says there is no business license requirement with the City of Omaha, but other regulations apply before operating a business in the city. The same page points to local regulations, state registration, IRS registration, and compliance with local, state, and federal agencies.

Omaha also has city processes for items such as certificates of occupancy, permits, inspections, and certain occupational or contractor licenses.

Lincoln example

Lincoln’s official pages point businesses and developers to Planning and Development Services, Building and Safety permits, zoning resources, and occupation taxes for certain business activities, such as restaurant/bar, hotel/motel, car rental, short-term rental, and certain district-based taxes.

Other Nebraska cities and counties

In Bellevue, Grand Island, Kearney, Fremont, Hastings, North Platte, Norfolk, Columbus, and other communities, the details may be different. Start with the city clerk, planning and zoning office, building department, local health department, or finance office.

Home-based businesses in Nebraska

A home-based business may still need approval. The state may handle tax registration or an industry license, but the city or county usually controls whether the business activity is allowed at the home address.

Ask your local planning or zoning office about:

  • Whether your home address allows the business activity.
  • Whether customers, students, clients, deliveries, employees, or signs are allowed.
  • Whether storage, equipment, noise, parking, traffic, or outdoor work is restricted.
  • Whether a home occupation permit, zoning confirmation, or certificate of occupancy is required.
  • Whether food, child care, beauty, repair, vehicle, rental, or health-related work needs extra approval.

Home-based does not always mean exempt. A quiet online business may have fewer local steps than a home bakery, daycare, salon, repair shop, short-term rental, or business with customer visits.

Official Nebraska agency directory for business licensing questions

NeedOfficial Nebraska source
Entity filings, trade names, trademarks, corporate recordsNebraska Secretary of State Corporate and Business
Online business entity servicesNebraska Business Services Online System
State license and inspection searchNebraska One Stop License Portal
Tax registration, sales tax, withholding, Nebraska Tax Application Form 20Nebraska Department of Revenue starting a business page
Unemployment insurance tax and employer registrationNebraska Department of Labor unemployment insurance tax
Contractor registrationNebraska Department of Labor Contractor Registration
Workers’ compensationNebraska Workers’ Compensation Court employers page
New hire reportingNebraska DHHS new hire reporting
Food, agriculture, cottage food, and related permitsNebraska Department of Agriculture licensing, permits, and registrations
Professional and facility licensesNebraska DHHS Licensure Unit
Alcohol licensingNebraska Liquor Control Commission licensing overview
Fire safety, plan review, and fire-related licensesNebraska State Fire Marshal
Federal EINIRS Employer Identification Number page
Federal license and permit overviewU.S. Small Business Administration licenses and permits guide

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Calling everything a business license. In Nebraska, the actual item may be an entity filing, trade name, Sales Tax Permit, withholding account, contractor registration, local zoning approval, certificate of occupancy, or industry license.
  • Stopping after forming an LLC. An LLC is a legal structure. It does not replace state tax registration, city approval, zoning, health permits, or professional licensing.
  • Missing the trade name publication step. Nebraska trade name registration has a newspaper publication and proof filing requirement.
  • Ignoring local zoning. A business can be registered with the state but still not allowed at a specific address.
  • Using the Nebraska One Stop License Portal as the only check. The portal is useful, but it says it is supplemental and not a comprehensive list of every inspection, registration, license, tax identification, or filing.
  • Forgetting employee registrations. Hiring workers can trigger federal EIN, Nebraska withholding, unemployment insurance, new hire reporting, and workers’ compensation duties.
  • Buying a business without checking tax debt. Nebraska DOR warns that buyers of an existing business or assets may be held liable for unpaid taxes owed by the business.

What to ask when you contact the agency

Before you call or email, write down your business type, city, county, address or service area, legal structure, business name, whether you are home-based, whether customers visit, what you sell, and whether you will hire workers.

Phone or email script

Hello, I’m trying to confirm what Nebraska and local approvals I may need for a [business type] in [city] and [county]. The business will be [home-based / mobile / storefront / online] at [address or general location]. I plan to sell or provide [products or services], and [customers will / customers will not] visit the location. Can you tell me which license, permit, zoning approval, tax registration, inspection, or other office I should check before opening?

If the first office cannot answer, ask which office handles the next step. For example, the answer may come from a planning office, finance office, health department, fire department, building department, Department of Revenue, Secretary of State, Department of Labor, or an industry board.

  • Write down the name of the office you contacted.
  • Write down the date and the name or title of the person who responded, if provided.
  • Ask for the exact license, permit, registration, or approval name.
  • Ask whether the rule is state, county, city, or federal.
  • Ask for the official application link or fee page.
  • Ask whether zoning, occupancy, health, building, fire, signage, or home occupation review is needed.
  • Ask whether renewal, posting, inspection, or recordkeeping is required.

What to do next

  1. Use the Nebraska Secretary of State to confirm whether you need an entity filing or trade name filing.
  2. Use the Nebraska Department of Revenue to check whether you need a Nebraska Identification Number, Sales Tax Permit, withholding account, or other tax registration.
  3. Use the Nebraska One Stop License Portal to look for state licenses and inspections tied to your industry.
  4. Contact your city or county before opening, signing a lease, buying equipment, or advertising a location.
  5. If you hire workers, check IRS, Nebraska DOR, Nebraska Department of Labor, DHHS new hire reporting, and workers’ compensation requirements.
  6. Keep copies of confirmations, filings, permits, receipts, emails, and renewal dates in one folder.

Do this now: Search your business type in the Nebraska One Stop License Portal, then call your city or county planning office with your address. Those two checks catch many state and local issues early.

Official sources used for this guide

Review note

This guide was checked against official Nebraska, local, IRS, and SBA sources on the date listed near the top. Agency pages, fees, forms, portals, and deadlines can change. Always confirm important details with the official agency before filing, paying, opening, hiring, or signing a lease.

FAQ

Does Nebraska have one statewide general business license?

Nebraska does not appear to use one all-purpose statewide license for every business. Official Nebraska sources route businesses to separate entity filings, tax registrations, state licenses, inspections, and local approvals. Check the Nebraska One Stop License Portal, Nebraska Department of Revenue, Nebraska Secretary of State, and your city or county before opening.

Is forming an LLC the same as getting a Nebraska business license?

No. An LLC is a legal entity filing with the Nebraska Secretary of State. It does not replace tax registration, a Nebraska Sales Tax Permit, trade name filing, zoning approval, local permits, health permits, employer registration, or industry licenses.

What is a DBA called in Nebraska?

Nebraska uses the term trade name. A trade name registration is filed with the Nebraska Secretary of State. Nebraska trade name rules also include a newspaper publication step and proof of publication filing with the Secretary of State within 45 days.

When do I need a Nebraska Sales Tax Permit?

You may need a Nebraska Sales Tax Permit if you make taxable retail sales, rent or lease tangible personal property, or provide taxable services in Nebraska. The Nebraska Department of Revenue says businesses can register online or use Nebraska Tax Application Form 20, and that a business indicating it will collect sales tax will be issued a Sales Tax Permit.

Do online businesses in Nebraska need local approval?

They might. An online business may still need Nebraska tax registration, a trade name, an industry license, or local zoning approval. If the business is run from home, stores inventory, receives customers, has employees, prepares food, or uses signs or equipment, contact the city or county planning office before operating.

Do home-based businesses in Nebraska need a permit?

Some do. Nebraska state agencies may handle tax or industry registrations, but home occupation and zoning rules usually depend on the city, village, or county. Ask the local planning or zoning office whether your business activity is allowed at your home address.

Where should I start if I do not know which Nebraska agency handles my business?

Start with the Nebraska One Stop License Portal for state license and inspection leads, the Nebraska Department of Revenue for tax registration, the Nebraska Secretary of State for entity or trade name filings, and your city or county for zoning and local permits. If your business is regulated, contact the specific agency for that industry.

Disclaimer

This article is for general information only. It is not legal, tax, financial, insurance, employment, safety, zoning, or professional advice. Business license, permit, tax, zoning, and registration rules can change and may depend on your exact business activity and location. Confirm important details with the official agency or a qualified professional before acting.


Analic Mata-Murray, Managing Editor at businesslicenseguide.com
About the author
Analic Mata-Murray
Managing Editor, businesslicenseguide.com
🎓 BA Communications & Journalism 📋 11+ years in benefits navigation 🌎 Bilingual English / Spanish 🤝 Salvation Army volunteer translator

Analic Mata-Murray holds a Communications degree with a focus in Journalism and Advertising from Universidad Católica Andrés Bello. For over 11 years, she volunteered as a translator for The Salvation Army — sitting across the table from Spanish-speaking families trying to access government programs, emergency housing, and poverty relief when they needed it most.

What she learned in that work shapes everything on this site: most people who don't get help don't miss out because they don't qualify. They miss out because nobody bothered to explain the system in plain English.

As Managing Editor of Business License Guide, Analic oversees every guide published here. Her job is simple — If a guide is vague, jargon-heavy, or out of date, it doesn't go live.