| A Limited liability company (denoted by L.L.C. or LLC) is a type of legal entity which has only relatively recently been made possible to establish in the United States and many other, mainly anglophone, countries. An LLC is similar to a corporation
and a limited liability partnership.
The concept of an LLC was apparently modelled after the German GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung; LLC is a broad translation of the
term). These have existed in German-speaking countries for some time—in Germany itself since 1892. The concept was adopted by many English-speaking countries because LLCs have some advantages over corporations.
It is sometimes said that an LLC is "kind of a 'light' version of an Inc. or Ltd." This is a generalisation, however, and may be
misleading or wrong in some cases.
Basically, an LLC allows for the flexibility of a partnership structure
within the framework of limited liability, such as that granted
to corporations. Another advantage of an LLC over a limited partnership is that the formalities required for creating and
registering LLCs are much simpler than the requirements most states place on forming corporations; often they are no more complex than creating a corporate structure.
LLC v. LLP
A limited liability company (LLC) differs from a limited liability partnership (LLP) in that the LLP has the organizational flexibility of a
partnership and is taxed as such, and in that all partners of the LLP remain liable for the other partners' debts and
obligations.
LLC vs. Inc. & Ltd.
Advantages of an LLC
- Simpler to set up
- No requirement of an annual general meeting for shareholders
- No double taxation
- Limited liability
- (LLCs can sometimes be held liable, usually in the cases of personal injury, fraud, or negligence by the owner.)
- Profits taxed personally
- Can be set up with just one natural person involved
Disadvantages of an LLC
- It may be more difficult to raise capital for an LLC, as investors may be wary of submitting funds to an entity whose
liability is limited
- The possible lack of any operating agreement requirement can cause problems
External links
- LLC
History (http://www.llc-reporter.com/16.htm)
- Nolo
site on LLCs (http://www.nolo.com/lawcenter/ency/index.cfm/catID/19B45DBF-E85F-4A3D-950E3E07E32851A7#BAAE1B67-F54A-41B4-91943A51F56C3F79)
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