The California
LLC Guide
A practical, attorney‑written guide for California small businesses—focused on what protects you, what saves you money, and what keeps you compliant.
Executive Overview
What is a California LLC?
An LLC provides corporate‑style liability protection with partnership‑style flexibility. Ownership, management, and tax classification can be tailored to your needs, with far fewer formalities than a corporation.
- Entity Shield: Separates personal assets from business liabilities
- Tax Flexibility: Default pass‑through, with optional S‑Corp/C‑Corp elections
- Governance: Custom Operating Agreement controls decisions and economics
- Capital: Flexible contributions and allocations (with proper drafting)
Templates and filing sites skip the parts that matter: tax elections, ownership structure, operating‑agreement terms, banking/records, deadlines, and licensing. That’s where people lose protection and money.
- We complete the legal formation (Articles, Statement of Information, agent, name clearance).
- We draft a custom Operating Agreement matching your owners, capital, and decision rights.
- If desired, we coordinate with your CPA on tax classification; no elections unless the math shows benefit.
- We stay available—direct attorney access for future changes.
Strategic Decision Framework
When an LLC is Your Optimal Structure
LLCs work well for property investments—debt can increase member basis for loss deductions (subject to at‑risk and passive activity rules). Pass‑through treatment helps avoid double tax on appreciation.
Need special allocations? Want to reward sweat equity differently from capital? Properly drafted LLC agreements allow sophisticated profit/loss arrangements with substantial economic effect.
Skip corporate minutes, formal boards, and officer elections. Maintain liability protection with streamlined governance.
Consider a Different Structure When…
Institutional investors expect a Delaware C‑Corporation for preferred stock and standard governance. Convert before a priced round.
Stock options and RSUs need a corporate framework. LLCs can use profits interests, but they’re more complex and less familiar to employees.
Naming Strategy & Trademark Considerations
California Naming Requirements
- Must be distinguishable on California Secretary of State records
- Include “LLC,” “L.L.C.,” or “Limited Liability Company”
- Cannot imply governmental affiliation or prohibited purpose
- Avoid “corporation,” “incorporated,” or those abbreviations
Trademark Protection Strategy
Formation ≠ trademark rights. Smart sequence:
- Federal search: USPTO database for conflicting marks in your classes
- Common‑law review: Web, industry directories, domain and social handles
- State registration: If operating solely in California
- Federal filing: When interstate commerce is planned
DBA Strategy
Operating under a trade name? File a county‑level Fictitious Business Name Statement. Example: Smith Holdings, LLC dba Premium Coffee Roasters.
Management Architecture
Member‑Managed
Default for closely‑held businesses. All members participate in operations with equal management rights unless the Operating Agreement states otherwise.
Key Characteristics
- Each member can bind the LLC unless limited in the agreement
- Voting typically follows profit interests (unless customized)
- Direct participation in daily operations
- Simpler for small teams
Manager‑Managed
Best where there are passive investors or more complex operations. Authority is centralized in one or more managers.
Strategic Applications
- Silent partners wanting operational separation
- Professional management of investment properties
- Succession planning with next‑generation involvement
- Lender compliance requirements
Always sign in representative capacity to maintain liability protection:
[LLC NAME], a California limited liability company
By: _______________________
[Your Name], [Title]
Formation Process
The Complete Formation Checklist
- Name Clearance: State availability + trademark screening
- Agent for Service of Process: Appoint/accept California agent
- Articles of Organization: File with Secretary of State
- EIN Application: Federal tax identification number
- Operating Agreement: Custom governance document
- Initial Statement: LLC‑12 within 90 days
- Business Banking: Separate accounts mandatory
- Licenses/Permits: City, county, and state requirements
- Tax Elections: Evaluate S‑Corp/C‑Corp if beneficial
- Insurance: General liability minimum
Operating Agreement Architecture
Your Operating Agreement is the constitutional document. Generic templates fail under pressure—we draft to your facts and goals.
Critical Custom Provisions
- Initial contributions and future funding obligations
- Special allocations with substantial economic effect
- Preferred returns and waterfall distributions
- Tax distributions to cover K‑1 obligations
- Major decision thresholds and veto rights
- Manager appointment and removal procedures
- Deadlock resolution mechanisms
- Information rights and reporting obligations
- Buy‑sell triggers (death, disability, divorce)
- Right of first refusal procedures
- Valuation methodologies
- Drag‑along and tag‑along rights
Courts can disregard LLC protection if you treat it as your alter‑ego. Our agreements reinforce:
- Separate accounting and bank accounts
- No commingling or personal use of LLC funds
- Capital adequacy and documented decisions
- Arms‑length related‑party transactions
California Tax Strategy
Federal Tax Classification
Default Classifications
- Single‑Member: Disregarded entity (Schedule C)
- Multi‑Member: Partnership (Form 1065 with K‑1s)
- Elective: S‑Corp (Form 2553) or C‑Corp (Form 8832)
Self‑Employment Tax Considerations
Active LLC members pay SE tax on all profits by default. An S‑Corp election can reduce exposure if a documented, reasonable salary is paid and maintained. We model the current‑year math with your CPA before filing anything.
California State Obligations
Annual Franchise Tax & LLC Fee
- $800 Annual Franchise Tax (FTB 3522): Due each taxable year for LLCs organized, registered, or doing business in CA—payable by the 15th day of the 4th month of the tax year (e.g., April 15 for calendar‑year LLCs). The temporary first‑year waiver applied only to specific past years.
- LLC Fee (Form 568): Applies to LLCs taxed as a partnership or disregarded entity, based on “total income” from CA sources. An estimated fee is due by the 15th day of the 6th month using FTB 3536; reconcile with the annual return.
| Total Income from CA Sources* | LLC Fee (current tiers) |
|---|---|
| Under $250,000 | $0 |
| $250,000 – $499,999 | $900 |
| $500,000 – $999,999 | $2,500 |
| $1,000,000 – $4,999,999 | $6,000 |
| $5,000,000+ | $11,790 |
*”Total income” is defined in the FTB 568 instructions. Always confirm the latest tiers before filing.
Ongoing Compliance Requirements
Critical Filing Deadlines
- Initial Statement (LLC‑12): Within 90 days of formation
- Biennial Statement: Every 2 years during your window
- Franchise Tax: 15th day of the 4th month of tax year
- LLC Fee Estimate: 15th day of the 6th month (FTB 3536)
- License renewals: Vary by jurisdiction
- Agent updates: File updated Statement of Information when agent or agent address changes
Required Records & Documentation
Mandatory Record Retention
- Current member and manager list with addresses
- Articles of Organization and amendments
- Operating Agreement and modifications
- Tax returns and financial statements (retain per CPA guidance)
- Member/manager approvals and written consents
- Capital contribution and distribution records
- Material contracts and agreements
Professional Practice Restrictions
Many state‑licensed professions (for example, physicians, attorneys, and accountants) must use a Professional Corporation under their board rules. We confirm eligibility.
Advanced Tax (Only If It Benefits You)
Does an S‑Corp election lower my taxes?
Sometimes—often for profitable service businesses—if a defensible “reasonable salary” is paid and maintained. The actual savings depend on profit level, payroll mix, and current‑year IRS/FTB thresholds.
We structure California businesses in California. Out‑of‑state “no‑tax” strategies often create California nexus anyway and can increase risk and cost.
Asset Protection (California Perspective)
Creditor Remedies Against an LLC Interest
High‑level summary (education only; we handle the details)
- A judgment creditor can typically obtain a charging order against a member’s transferable interest (distributions, if/when made).
- In California, charging orders are the primary remedy against that interest, but courts may consider additional equitable remedies in limited circumstances.
- Whether an LLC is single‑ or multi‑member affects leverage. Outcomes are fact‑specific—avoid blanket internet claims.
Our job is to tailor ownership, governance, records, and insurance to your facts so protection holds up when tested.
Veil‑Piercing Defense Engineering
The Practical Checklist
- ☐ Adequate initial capital
- ☐ Separate EIN, bank accounts, and cards (no commingling)
- ☐ Document distributions/salary; avoid personal use of LLC funds
- ☐ Sign “LLC Name, LLC — By: [Name], [Title]”
- ☐ Written consents for major actions
- ☐ Market‑rate related‑party transactions
- ☐ Appropriate insurance
- ☐ Timely filings and taxes
Banking & Financial Operations
Business Banking Setup
Day‑1 Banking Checklist
- Bring to bank: EIN letter, filed Articles, Operating Agreement
- Accounts: Operating + reserve + tax accounts
- Vendors: Card processor and ACH/wires
- Credit: Secured card to start; vendor terms within 30 days
The $250K Gross Receipts Threshold
Above $250,000 of California “total income,” the LLC fee applies. Plan timing and structure to stay compliant.
Exit & Succession Planning
Built‑In Exit Strategies
Operating Agreement Exit Provisions
- Buy‑Sell Triggers: Death, disability, divorce, deadlock, desire to exit
- Valuation Methods: Appraisal, formula, or market‑based
- Payment Terms: Insurance‑funded, installment, or earn‑out
- Rights: ROFR, tag‑along, and drag‑along as appropriate
Dissolution & Wind‑Down
Proper Dissolution Sequence
- Member Approval: Document the decision
- Wind Up: Collect receivables, pay debts, liquidate assets
- Tax Clearance: File final returns and pay final taxes
- Distribute Remainder: Per Operating Agreement
- File Certificate: LLC‑3 with Secretary of State
- Cancel Permits: Licenses and seller’s permits
- Close: Close accounts/EIN as directed by your CPA
Warning: Improper dissolution can leave members personally liable for remaining obligations.
Strategic Decision Considerations
| Your Situation | Structure Option | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Consultant | Sole Prop or Single‑Member LLC | Liability protection vs. simplicity |
| Service business with profits | LLC (consider S‑Corp election) | Potential SE‑tax optimization |
| Real estate investor | LLC per property | Liability isolation; loan consent |
| Tech startup planning VC | Delaware C‑Corp | VC‑ready governance |
| Cannabis business | Multiple LLCs | Segment risk & expenses |
| Professional practice | Professional Corporation | Required by licensing rules |
The Ultimate Entity Comparison
| Factor | Sole Prop | LLC | S‑Corp | C‑Corp |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Asset Protection | ❌ None | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| CA Minimum Tax | $0 | $800 | $800* | $800* |
| CA LLC Fee (gross receipts) | No | Yes ($250K+) | No | No |
| Self‑Employment Tax | All profit | All profit | Salary only | Salary only |
| Double Taxation | No | No | No | Yes |
| Debt Increases Owner Basis | N/A | ✅ Often | ❌ Generally no (entity debt) | ❌ No |
| Special Allocations | N/A | ✅ Flexible | ❌ Pro‑rata | ❌ By class |
| Foreign Owners Allowed | Yes | ✅ Yes | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| VC Funding Ready | No | ❌ Rarely | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
| Ownership Limits | 1 person | Unlimited | 100 max | Unlimited |
| Annual Formalities | None | Minimal | Moderate | Extensive |
| Best For | Very small/early | Most CA businesses | $100–500K service | Scaling/raising capital |
*California S‑ and C‑corporations are subject to California franchise tax (e.g., 1.5% for S‑corps)—separate from the LLC fee.
For most California small businesses, the LLC is optimal: strong liability protection with fewer formalities, flexible allocations, and optional S‑Corp election if the math works. Corporations are the right fit for venture‑bound companies.
What We Do Behind the Scenes
Why clients hire us instead of DIY
- Custom governance: Your capital, voting, and distributions—drafted to fit.
- Tax alignment: If desired, we coordinate with your CPA on classification and elections.
- Compliance engine: We calendar filings, tax deadlines, and licensing renewals.
- Risk spotting: We address lender terms, leases, IP, and contractor/employee issues.
- Future‑proofing: Admission/exit mechanics, buy‑sell triggers, and transfer restrictions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Join 5,000+ Businesses
We’ve Formed
Every formation personally handled by an attorney—not a paralegal, not a call center.