More than 2.7 million LLCs were formed in the United States in 2025 — yet industry estimates suggest that fewer than 40% of them have a proper operating agreement in place. The remaining 60% are governed by their state's default LLC statutes, which may not reflect the members' actual intentions for profit sharing, decision-making, transfer restrictions, or dissolution.
The consequences of operating without a tailored agreement range from inconvenient to catastrophic. Without one, a 50/50 two-member LLC has no tie-breaking mechanism for management disputes. A multi-member LLC defaults to equal profit sharing regardless of unequal capital contributions. A single-member LLC may lose its liability protection if a court finds insufficient separation between the owner and the entity (known as "piercing the veil").
This guide explains what an LLC operating agreement should contain, how provisions differ between single-member and multi-member structures, what each key clause protects against, and how to execute and maintain the agreement properly. Whether you're forming a new LLC or realizing your existing one is running on defaults, this is your comprehensive reference.
What an LLC Operating Agreement Covers
An LLC operating agreement is the internal governing document that defines the relationship between members, outlines how the business is managed, and establishes the rules for financial operations. Think of it as the LLC's private constitution.
Members and Membership Interests
The agreement must identify:
- Initial members: Names, addresses, and membership interest percentages
- Capital contributions: What each member has contributed or agreed to contribute (cash, property, services, or promissory notes)
- Membership interest classes: Whether all interests are equal or if the LLC has different classes with different rights (voting vs. non-voting, preferred vs. common)
- Future capital calls: Whether the LLC can require additional capital contributions from members, and what happens if a member fails to contribute
Profit and Loss Allocation
How profits and losses are divided is one of the most important provisions:
- Pro rata by membership interest: The simplest approach — a member with 40% ownership receives 40% of profits
- Special allocations: Different from ownership percentages, but must have "substantial economic effect" under IRS Section 704(b) to be respected for tax purposes
- Preferred returns: Some members (often investors) may receive a preferred return on their investment before remaining profits are split among all members
- Guaranteed payments: Members who work in the business may receive guaranteed payments for services rendered, regardless of the LLC's profitability
Distribution Timing and Conditions
The agreement should address when and how cash distributions are made:
- Frequency: Monthly, quarterly, annually, or at the manager's discretion
- Tax distributions: Mandatory distributions to cover members' tax liabilities on LLC income (essential for pass-through entities where members owe taxes on income they may not have received in cash)
- Reinvestment priority: Whether the LLC reserves cash for operations before making distributions
- Distribution restrictions: No distributions if they would make the LLC insolvent or violate loan covenants
Management Structure and Decision-Making
LLCs offer more flexibility in management structure than any other business entity. The operating agreement must establish the chosen structure clearly.
Member-Managed vs. Manager-Managed
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Member-managed: All members participate in day-to-day management decisions. Appropriate for small LLCs where all members are active in the business. Each member typically has authority to bind the LLC in ordinary business transactions.
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Manager-managed: One or more designated managers (who may or may not be members) handle day-to-day operations, while non-manager members function more like passive investors. This structure is essential when:
- Some members are passive investors
- The LLC has many members and can't operate by committee
- Professional management expertise is needed
- External managers or management companies are engaged
Voting and Approval Thresholds
The agreement should establish clear voting rules:
- Ordinary business decisions: Simple majority (over 50%) of membership interests is standard
- Major decisions requiring supermajority: Sale of substantially all assets, admission of new members, change in business purpose, amendment of the operating agreement, taking on debt above a threshold — these typically require 66.7% or 75% approval
- Unanimous consent: Merger, conversion to a different entity type, voluntary dissolution, and other fundamental changes often require all members to agree
- Deadlock resolution: For two-member LLCs with equal ownership, include a deadlock resolution mechanism — mediation, arbitration, shotgun buy-sell clause, or designated tie-breaking authority
Officer Roles
Even in member-managed LLCs, the operating agreement can designate officers (CEO, CFO, Secretary) with defined authority. This is practical for banking relationships, signing contracts, and managing daily operations without requiring member votes for every action.
Transfer Restrictions and Exit Provisions
Transfer restrictions protect existing members from unwanted new partners and provide orderly exit mechanisms.
Right of First Refusal (ROFR)
Before any member can sell their interest to a third party, the remaining members (or the LLC itself) have the right to purchase that interest on the same terms offered by the outside buyer. This prevents unwanted third parties from entering the LLC and gives existing members the opportunity to increase their ownership.
Tag-Along and Drag-Along Rights
- Tag-along (co-sale): If a majority member sells their interest, minority members can "tag along" and sell their interest on the same terms. Protects minority members from being left in a reconfigured LLC.
- Drag-along: If members holding a supermajority (typically 75-80%) agree to sell the entire LLC, they can "drag along" minority members and force them to sell on the same terms. Prevents minority members from blocking a deal.
Buy-Sell Provisions
Buy-sell provisions define what happens when a member wants to leave, dies, becomes disabled, goes bankrupt, gets divorced, or is removed:
- Triggering events: Death, disability, voluntary withdrawal, involuntary withdrawal (termination for cause, bankruptcy, felony conviction), retirement
- Valuation method: Agreed-upon formula (book value, multiple of earnings, independent appraisal, average of multiple methods). The valuation method is often the most contentious provision in the entire operating agreement.
- Payment terms: Lump sum, installments over 2-5 years (with interest), or funded by life insurance for death triggers
- Funding mechanisms: Cross-purchase agreement (other members buy), entity purchase (LLC buys), or hybrid approaches
Transfer Restrictions
Most operating agreements restrict transfers to prevent members from assigning their interests freely:
- Any proposed transfer requires written consent of members holding a majority (or supermajority) of interests
- Transfers to family members or family trusts may be exempted from consent requirements
- Economic interest vs. membership interest: Even if a transfer is permitted, the transferee may receive only economic rights (distributions) without management rights (voting) unless admitted as a full member
Dissolution, Amendments, and Execution
Events Triggering Dissolution
The operating agreement should specify when the LLC dissolves:
- A vote by the required majority or supermajority of members
- Expiration of a fixed term (if the LLC was created for a specific project or time period)
- An event specified in the operating agreement (e.g., loss of a key member without a buy-sell resolution)
- Judicial dissolution ordered by a court
- Administrative dissolution for failure to file annual reports or maintain a registered agent
Winding Up Process
Upon dissolution, the LLC must wind up its affairs in a specific order:
- Pay creditors (including members who are creditors through loans to the LLC)
- Set aside reserves for contingent or future obligations
- Distribute remaining assets to members according to their capital account balances or as specified in the operating agreement
Amendment Process
The operating agreement is a living document that should evolve with the business:
- Specify the approval threshold for amendments (supermajority is recommended)
- Require all amendments to be in writing and signed by the required members
- Certain provisions (member consent rights, distribution priorities) may be made non-amendable without the consent of affected members
Execution and Record-Keeping
Every member should sign the operating agreement, and any amendment should be executed with the same formality:
- Date of execution and effective date (if different)
- Signatures of all initial members
- Notarization (not required in most states but helpful for authenticating signatures)
- Storage in a secure location with the LLC's organizational documents
Electronic signatures are fully valid for LLC operating agreements under the ESIGN Act and UETA. Platforms like ZiaSign enable members to execute the agreement remotely with identity verification, automatic audit trails, and secure document storage — particularly valuable when members are in different states or countries.
Execute your LLC operating agreement with ZiaSign →
Review Checklist Before Signature
Before sending llc operating agreement guide : what founders should put in writing early, confirm the commercial terms, fallback positions, signature blocks, notice language, and any clause that becomes expensive only when the relationship changes.