Nevada LLCs
Nevada Limited Liability
Companies
One of the key aspects of your LLC is the need for multiple
shareholders. If you are the only shareholder of the LLC (an
LLC shareholder is called a member), the LLC does not afford the
maximum asset protection. If the business is sued, all the
creditor can take is the business assets. However, if you
are sued personally (ie a car accident, etc.)-- the creditor can
take your membership (shares) in the LLC. Courts have ruled
that a "single member" LLC is not afforded the same protections.
Therefore, it is strongly recommended that you have at least two
members for your LLC. Your spouse cannot be the 2nd member
to satisfy the test, as you are considered the same "legal" person
in a lawsuit. You need to find an unrelated party
(non-spouse, non-child) to hold the shares. Of course, the
2nd shareholder (member), can holder a very small proportion of
the shares-- they just have to hold something.
An LLC is a relatively new form of a corporate structure in the
United States. In Europe, it has existed for over 100 years.
The LLC or Limited Liability Company blends characteristics of a
partnership with the liability characteristics of a corporation.
Most notably, you can choose to have your LLC taxed as a sole
proprietorship, partnership, C or S corporation. At the same
time, your LLC retains the asset protection benefits (ie limited
liability) just like a corporation. LLC's were first
authorized by Wyoming in 1974; Nevada in 1991; and
California in 1995.
When you have a multi-member LLC, and you are personally sued,
the creditor can only get what is called a "charging order".
A charging order entitles the creditor only to the DISTRIBUTED
profits of the LLC. Since you control the LLC, you may find
that when a creditor arrives-- that the LLC might earn profits,
but distribute very little or no profits. This is called
charging order protection.
In addition, the record keeping requirements for LLCs are
somewhat less time consuming than for corporations. We still
recommend thorough record keeping for your LLC, but it is not
carved in stone as much as corporate record keeping.
In summary, the LLC is an easy-to-form corporate structure that
will protect your assets and allow you to structure your tax
affairs to your best advantage. The use of Nevada to form
your LLC allows for many benefits not available in other states as
described in the table below.
Why is Nevada one of the
most popular states for LLC incorporations? Because
corporations located in Nevada have a number of unique benefits.
When these benefits are packaged together, they make Nevada
the
best place to incorporate your business.
| No
state income tax |
| No
tax on corporate shares |
| No
franchise tax |
|
Minimal annual fees |
|
One-person corporation is allowed |
|
Stockholders are not revealed to the state. |
|
Bearer stock can be used. |
|
Nominee shareholders are allowed. |
| No
minimum capital requirements. |
|
Meetings may be held anywhere. |
|
Officers, directors, employees, and agents are protected by
state statue. |
|
Doesn't collect corporate income tax information to share with
Internal Revenue Service (I.R.S.) |