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| CRE Online > How-To Articles > The Best Real Estate Invention of the Decade: The LLC |
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As of April 1, 1997, all fifty states have adopted the Limited Liability Company or "LLC."
The IRS has cleared the way
Most conservative attorneys and CPAs (including myself) shied away from LLCs because it was not clear how the IRS would classify such an entity. However, the new IRS rulings make it clear that an LLC will be treated as a partnership, so long as it has at least two members.
Lawsuit protection
The LLC, like a corporation, provides "lawsuit protection" for its owners. The owners (called "members") of an LLC are not personally liable for debts or liabilities of the company. Thus, an LLC which holds real estate will protect its owners from personal liability for lawsuits.
Favorable tax treatment Like a partnership, the LLC provides "pass-through" tax treatment. This means that the company is not taxed on its profits; all profits of the company "pass-through" to its members. A regular corporation (called a "C" corporation) is taxed at the corporate level. The shareholders are taxed again on the income they receive from the company. Asset protection
For many years, the "Family" Limited Partnership was the preferred vehicle for estate planning and creditor protection. The popularity of the FLP was that a creditor could not take partnership property or attach a partner's interest. This limited remedy would force a creditor to settle with a partner for pennies on the dollar.
LARRY LANDLORD, SOLE MEMBER OF EACH LLC
Estate planning features
The LLC can provide a vehicle for passing wealth to younger family members without having to re-title the real estate. Once real estate is transferred into an LLC, the members' interest is converted to personal property, which is represented by their LLC "shares."
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