Why every District of Columbia LLC needs an Operating Agreement.
District of Columbia does not always require an LLC to file an Operating Agreement with the state, but every LLC needs one. It governs ownership, management, profit allocation, and what happens when things change. Without it, District of Columbia default rules apply, and they rarely match what you actually want.
Get a District of Columbia Operating Agreement →What an Operating Agreement does
- Defines ownership percentages . who owns what, and how much.
- Sets profit + loss allocation rules, which can differ from ownership percentages.
- Establishes management structure . member-managed vs manager-managed.
- Governs voting and decision-making rights, including unanimous-consent items.
- Spells out transfers + buyouts when a member leaves.
- Provides dissolution procedures if the LLC winds up.
- Preserves limited liability by documenting the separation between owner and entity.
Single-member vs multi-member Operating Agreements
Simpler agreement focused on liability separation, banking authority, succession, and intent to remain disregarded for federal tax (or elect Corp/S taxation).
More involved. Adds capital contributions, profit/loss allocations, decision-making thresholds, buy-sell provisions, valuation methods, and deadlock procedures.
Frequently asked questions
Does District of Columbia require an Operating Agreement?
Do I need an Operating Agreement for a single-member LLC in District of Columbia?
How much does a District of Columbia Operating Agreement cost?
Do I file my Operating Agreement with the DC DLCP Corporations Division?
Can I change my District of Columbia Operating Agreement later?
What happens if my District of Columbia LLC has no Operating Agreement?
Does File.Business draft Operating Agreements for District of Columbia LLCs?
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Disclosure. File.Business is a private business filing and compliance service. We are not a government agency and are not affiliated with the DC DLCP Corporations Division or any Secretary of State office. You may file directly with the DC DLCP Corporations Division. Information on this page is for general guidance only and is not legal, tax, or accounting advice. Fees and deadlines verified against the DC DLCP Corporations Division as of June 2026 and may change. For entity-specific guidance, consult a licensed District of Columbia attorney or CPA.