Affiliate Marketing Home » Business » Every LLC Should Have An Operating Agreement
Every LLC Should Have An Operating Agreement
To maintain the liability protection provided by an LLC and to prevent disagreements between the members, an Operating Agreement is essential. Many serious disputes between family members and friends arise over details of operating a business because nothing was written down when they started out. When that happens, people often have different memories of what they agreed to in the first place.
Adopting (signing) an Operating Agreement helps strengthen the liability protection of the LLC in the sense that it helps demonstrate or prove that your LLC is being operated as a separate legal entity. This is true even though you may only have a one member LLC.
The Operating Agreement is an agreement between each member of the LLC and also between the members and the LLC as a separate legal entity. The Operating Agreement is like the the bylaws of a corporation or the partnership agreement of a general partnership. Each controls the internal management of the entity or business structure. The Operating Agreement itself is not a document that has to be filed with the SFO. However, it should be kept with the other LLC documents and records.
There is no set or required form for an Operating Agreement. They come in many different formats. Some are quite lengthy (anywhere from 10 to 40 pages long) and some are much shorter. The standard Operating Agreement will contain a certain amount of boiler plate language but also some very important provisions with respect to the rights, duties and obligations of the members of the LLC.
A basic Operating Agreement describe the management structure. i.e., whether the LLC will be managed by the members (owners) or by certain other individuals or entities as managers. Furthermore, the Operating Agreement usually establishes the ownership percentages or sharing ratios between the members of the LLC and will set forth such things as the division of profits and the distribution of income.
It is highly advisable for even one person or single member LLC's to have a written operating agreement. Some may wonder why. The first reason is that if a one person LLC doesn't have some fdocumentation, it appears too much like a sole proprietorship which has no liability protection. In addition, it should be remembered that the single member owner is not signing an Operating Agreement with himself. He is signing the Operating Agreement with a separate and distinct legal entity, the LLC.
