MCA Certified Tax Preparers LLC Bookkeeping, Taxes and Payroll - One Company Fits All! |
|
|
|
|
A Limited Liability Company, or LLC, is not a corporation, although it offers many of the same advantages. An LLC is best described as a combination of a corporation and a partnership. LLCs offer the limited liability of a corporation, while allowing more flexibility in managing the business and organization. An LLC does not pay any income tax itself. It's a "flow through" entity that allows profits and losses to flow through to the tax returns of the individual members. Avoiding the double taxation of C-Corporations. While setting up an LLC can be more difficult than creating a partnership (or sole proprietorship), running one is significantly easier than running a corporation. Here are the main features of an LLC: Limited Personal
Liability While LLC owners enjoy limited personal liability for many of their business transactions, it is important to realize that this protection is not absolute. See Exceptions to Limited Liability. LLC Taxes While an LLC itself doesn't pay taxes, co-owned LLCs must file Form 1065, an informational return, with the IRS each year. This form, the same one that a partnership files, sets out each LLC member's share of the LLC's profits (or losses), which the IRS reviews to make sure the LLC members are correctly reporting their income. LLC Management The alternative management structure -- somewhat
awkwardly called "manager management" -- means that you designate one or
more owners (or even an outsider) to take responsibility for managing the
LLC. The non-managing owners (sometimes family members who have invested
in the company) simply sit back and share in LLC profits. In a
manager-managed LLC, only the named managers get to vote on management
decisions and act as agents of the LLC.
|
||