LLCs and Limited Liability Protection (2024)

Find out what type of limited liability protection you and your business get from an LLC.

As the name implies, limited liability companies ("LLCs") are limited liability entities that protect their owners (also called members), managers, and the LLC itself from certain types of legal liability. But just what is this limited liability, and how limited is it really?

In This Article
  • What Type of Liability Protection Do You Get With an LLC?
  • Personal Liability for Your LLC's Debts
  • Personal Liability for Actions by LLC Co-Owners and Employees
  • Personal Liability for Your Own Actions
  • Your LLC's Liability for Members' Personal Debts

What Type of Liability Protection Do You Get With an LLC?

The main reason people form LLCs is to avoid personal liability for the debts of a business they own or are involved in. By forming an LLC, only the LLC is liable for the debts and liabilities incurred by the business—not the owners or managers. However, the limited liability provided by an LLC is not perfect and, in some cases, depends on what state your LLC is in.

Before you get started on your business venture, you'll want to consider the potential liability risks of your business and the protection you'll get from an LLC. Specifically, you should think about the following liability risks you take on as an LLC owner:

1) personal liability for your LLC's debts

2) personal liability for actions by LLC co-owners or employees related to the business

3) personal liability for your own actions related to the business, and

4) the LLC's liability for other members' personal debts.

Personal Liability for Your LLC's Debts

In all states, if you form an LLC to operate your business, and don't personally guarantee or promise to pay its debts, you will ordinarily not be personally liable for the LLC's debts. Thus, your LLC's creditors can go after your LLC's bank accounts and other property, but they can't touch your personal property, such as your personal bank accounts, home, or car. Many creditors, however, don't want to be left holding the bag if your business goes under so they will demand that you personally guarantee any business loans, credit cards, or other extensions of credit to your LLC. In that situation, you would be personally liable if your LLC's assets fall short.

Personal Liability for Actions by LLC Co-Owners and Employees

In all states, having an LLC will protect owners from personal liability for any wrongdoing committed by the co-owners or employees of an LLC during the course of business. If the LLC is found liable for the negligence or wrongdoing of its owner or employee, the LLC's money or property can be taken by creditors to satisfy a judgment against the LLC. But the LLC owners would not be personally liable for that debt. The owner or employee who committed the act might also be personally liable for his or her actions but a co-owner of the LLC who was not involved in the act or wrongdoing would not be.

Example: While making a bread delivery to a local supermarket, Lloyd, an employee of the Acme Bakery, LLC, runs over and kills a brain surgeon in a crosswalk. It turns out Lloyd was driving while drunk. Acme Bakery is sued and found liable for its employee's negligent actions while on the job. All of Acme's business property, assets, money, and insurance can be used to pay the judgment awarded to the surgeon's heirs. Acme LLC's owners, however, are not personally liable for the LLC's employee's actions so their personal assets cannot be taken to pay any judgment against Acme.

Personal Liability for Your Own Actions

There is one extremely significant exception to the limited liability provided by LLCs. This exception exists in all states. If you form an LLC, you will remain personally liable for any wrongdoing you commit during the course of your LLC business. For example, LLC owners can be held personally liable if they:

  • personally and directly injure someone during the course of business due to their negligence
  • fail to deposit taxes withheld from employees' wages
  • intentionally do something fraudulent, illegal, or reckless during the course of business that causes harm to the company or to someone else, or
  • treat the LLC as an extension of their personal affairs, rather than as a separate legal entity.

Thus, forming an LLC will not protect you against personal liability for your own negligence, malpractice, or other personal wrongdoing that you commit related to your business. If both you and your LLC are found liable for an act you commit, then the LLC's assets and your personal assets could be taken by creditors to satisfy the judgment. This is why LLCs and their owners should always have liability insurance.

Example: Assume that two of the three owners of Acme Bakery LLC (from the example above), knew that their driver was drunk, but let him make deliveries anyway. They can be sued and held personally liable for negligence by the brain surgeon's heirs.

Your LLC's Liability for Members' Personal Debts

An LLC's money or property cannot be taken by creditors of an LLC's owner to satisfy personal debts against the owner. However, instead of taking property directly, there are other things that creditors of an LLC owner can do to try to collect from someone with an ownership interest in an LLC. What is allowed varies state by state and includes, in order of severity, the following:

  • getting a court to order that the LLC pay to the creditor all the money due to the LLC owner/debtor from the LLC (this is called a "charging order")
  • foreclosing on the owner/debtor's LLC ownership interest, or
  • getting a court to order the LLC to be dissolved.

None of these actions are good but some are much worse than others. If an LLC interest is foreclosed upon, the foreclosing creditor becomes the permanent owner of all the debtor-member's financial rights, including the right to receive money from the LLC. If a court orders an LLC dissolved, it will have to cease doing business and sell all of its assets.

State LLC laws vary widely on how many of these steps creditors are allowed to take. All states allow creditors to obtain a charging order against an LLC owner's interest. Many states limit creditors remedies to this first step (obtaining a charging order). Other states allow creditors to foreclose on the owner's LLC interest or even can order the LLC dissolved to pay off an owner's debt. For more on charging orders and what personal creditors' of LLC owners can--and can't--do, including the state law variations, see LLC Asset Protection and Charging Orders: An Overview of State Laws.

Single Member LLCs and Asset Protection

In some states, it's not clear whether single member LLCs will receive the same liability protection from personal creditors of the LLC owner as multi-member LLCs. The rationale for limiting an LLC member's personal creditor's remedies to a charging order is to protect other LLC members from having to share management of their LLC with an outside creditor. There are no other LLC members to protect in a single member LLC so the rationale for limiting creditors' remedies to a charging order doesn't apply. For this reason, courts in some states have found that single member LLCs are not entitled to the charging order protection and creditors are entitled to pursue other remedies against the LLC member, including foreclosing on the member's interest or ordering the LLC dissolved to pay off the debt.

Form your own limited liability company today with Nolo's comprehensive Online LLC package.

Further Reading

Single-Member LLCs and Asset Protection: A 50-State GuideUpdated October 17, 2019
Piercing the Corporate Veil: When LLCs and Corporations May be at RiskUpdated October 10, 2011
LLC Asset Protection and Charging Orders: An Overview of State LawsUpdated October 30, 2017
LLCs and Limited Liability Protection (2024)

FAQs

What is liability protection for LLC? ›

What Type of Liability Protection Do You Get With an LLC? The main reason people form LLCs is to avoid personal liability for the debts of a business they own or are involved in. By forming an LLC, only the LLC is liable for the debts and liabilities incurred by the business—not the owners or managers.

Does LLC protect you from getting sued? ›

Generally, creditors can go after only the assets of the LLC, not the assets of its individual owners or members. That means that if your LLC fails, you are risking only the money you invested in it, not your home, vehicle, personal accounts, etc. Being sued can be overwhelming, but you're not alone.

Am I personally liable for LLC debt? ›

The general rule is that members of an LLC enjoy limited liability and cannot be sued personally for activities or debts of the LLC. In other words, the “corporate veil” of the LLC legal structure protects its members from personal liability.

Does an LLC have the same protection as a corporation? ›

An LLC member's risk, as with a corporation, is also limited to loss of investment. However, a chief asset protection advantage of the LLC over the S corporation is that the LLC affords you more protective ownership options.

Can LLC members sue each other? ›

Yes, you may have a cause of action against a business partner for their negligence. If the negligence causes physical injury to you, then that business partner may have personal liability.

Does an LLC protect you from the IRS? ›

For state purposes, an LLC is a business separate from its owner in which the owner is protected from the LLC's acts and debts, such as bankruptcy and lawsuits. For federal tax purposes, it is not regarded as separate from its owner, therefore, the owner is liable for the tax liability of the LLC.

Can personal creditors go after my LLC? ›

Creditors Can Foreclose on California LLC Members

Unlike other states, California's LLC law doesn't say that a charging order is the exclusive remedy of an LLC member's personal creditors. Rather, under California's Revised Uniform LLC Act, a creditor can foreclose on the indebted member's LLC interest.

What are the risks of an LLC? ›

LLC disadvantages
  • Limited liability has limits. A judge can rule that an LLC structure doesn't protect your personal assets. ...
  • Self-employment tax. If an LLC is taxed as a partnership, the government considers members who work for the business to be self-employed. ...
  • Consequences of member turnover.
Mar 11, 2024

Does a single member LLC protect your personal assets? ›

Yes, a single-member LLC will protect your personal assets just as a multi-member LLC will. Forming an LLC is an important step for single-member businesses and will help create the necessary separation between your personal and business assets.

What does LLC not protect? ›

An LLC won't protect a member who commits a wrongful act or is negligent in a way that results in harm to another person, such as fraud or assault.

What happens if you start an LLC and do nothing? ›

Simply put, yes, you can have an LLC with no income, but that still has expenses. An LLC with no income but deductible expenses can offset future income through a net operating loss deduction. However, the IRS will still regard this as business activity, so it must be reported yearly.

What's better than an LLC? ›

One of the main differences between an S corp and a limited liability company is the treatment of self-employment taxes. With an S corp, owners can pay themselves a salary subject to payroll taxes, while the remaining profits are distributed as dividends and not subject to self-employment taxes.

What happens if your LLC fails? ›

In a Chapter 7 business bankruptcy, the LLCs assets are sold and used to pay the LLC's creditors. After the bankruptcy, the LLC's remaining debts are wiped out and the LLC is no longer in business. The LLCs owners are generally not responsible for the LLCs debts.

How to keep LLC separate from personal? ›

Let's look at some easy ways to do it.
  1. Put your business on the map. ...
  2. Open a business checking account and get a business debit card. ...
  3. Get a business credit card. ...
  4. Pay yourself a salary. ...
  5. Separate your receipts and keep them. ...
  6. Track shared expenses. ...
  7. Keep track of when you use personal items for business purposes.

Which scenario may cause an LLC owner to be personally liable? ›

When an LLC member personally guarantees a loan or a lease for the LLC, they become personally liable for that obligation. For instance, if a member signs a personal guarantee for a business loan, the lender can pursue the member's personal assets if the LLC defaults on the loan.

Top Articles
How to Change VPN Location (IP & GPS Spoofing)
How to Clean the Toilet with Everyday Household Cleaning Supplies
Frases para un bendecido domingo: llena tu día con palabras de gratitud y esperanza - Blogfrases
Will Byers X Male Reader
Lowe's Garden Fence Roll
Moon Stone Pokemon Heart Gold
Brady Hughes Justified
Tesla Supercharger La Crosse Photos
Unitedhealthcare Hwp
Flixtor The Meg
Craigslist Parsippany Nj Rooms For Rent
Practical Magic 123Movies
Klustron 9
Elden Ring Dex/Int Build
Tlc Africa Deaths 2021
Learn How to Use X (formerly Twitter) in 15 Minutes or Less
About Goodwill – Goodwill NY/NJ
World Cup Soccer Wiki
Bjork & Zhulkie Funeral Home Obituaries
Craigslist Sparta Nj
Dallas Craigslist Org Dallas
Grimes County Busted Newspaper
Happy Life 365, Kelly Weekers | 9789021569444 | Boeken | bol
Doublelist Paducah Ky
fft - Fast Fourier transform
Cowboy Pozisyon
Pacman Video Guatemala
Maisons près d'une ville - Štanga - Location de vacances à proximité d'une ville - Štanga | Résultats 201
Login.castlebranch.com
Craftsman Yt3000 Oil Capacity
Nurofen 400mg Tabletten (24 stuks) | De Online Drogist
Ilabs Ucsf
"Pure Onyx" by xxoom from Patreon | Kemono
Average weekly earnings in Great Britain
2015 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 for sale - Houston, TX - craigslist
Joplin Pets Craigslist
Exploring TrippleThePotatoes: A Popular Game - Unblocked Hub
Watchdocumentaries Gun Mayhem 2
Keeper Of The Lost Cities Series - Shannon Messenger
Enjoy4Fun Uno
Gun Mayhem Watchdocumentaries
Gravel Racing
Sun Tracker Pontoon Wiring Diagram
Mychart University Of Iowa Hospital
Unit 11 Homework 3 Area Of Composite Figures
Air Sculpt Houston
The Complete Uber Eats Delivery Driver Guide:
Dicks Mear Me
Makes A Successful Catch Maybe Crossword Clue
Treatise On Jewelcrafting
Where Is Darla-Jean Stanton Now
Selly Medaline
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 6532

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.