What a family LLC in Georgia actually does.
Generational membership transfer
Parents form the family LLC and contribute assets in exchange for membership interests. Over time, parents gift membership interests to children using the annual federal gift exclusion ($18,000 per recipient per year as of 2025) and lifetime exemption. Children become co-owners gradually without triggering gift tax above the exclusion.
Valuation discounts
Minority and lack-of-marketability discounts can reduce the gift-tax value of transferred membership interests by 20 to 40 percent. A $1M asset transferred as a minority membership interest may be valued for gift purposes at $600K to $800K. Requires defensible appraisal at the time of transfer.
Georgia estate-tax environment
Georgia has no state estate tax and no state inheritance tax. Federal estate tax still applies to estates above the federal exemption ($13.99M per individual in 2025, scheduled to drop to roughly $7M after 2025 absent extension).
Operating Agreement governs control
The Operating Agreement defines who manages the LLC, who votes on distributions, and what restrictions apply to membership transfers. Parents typically retain management while gifting non-voting or minority membership interests to children, preserving control while transferring economic ownership.
Federal tax treatment
Multi-member family LLCs default to partnership taxation for federal purposes (Form 1065 with K-1s to members). Income passes through to members on their personal returns proportional to membership interests. S-Corp election generally unavailable for family LLCs with non-US-citizen members or trusts.
Asset protection layered in
Family LLCs also provide charging-order protection: a personal creditor of a member generally cannot reach the LLC's underlying assets, only the member's distributional interest. Pairs well with family-business or family-real-estate holdings where asset protection matters across generations.
A clean handoff, in 7 steps.
Pick the formation state
Form the family LLC in the state where the assets are held or where the primary family residence is. Georgia is reasonable for most family LLCs; estate-tax-aggressive states (CT, DC, HI, IL, ME, MD, MA, MN, NY, OR, RI, VT, WA) may push some families to form in a no-estate-tax state like Wyoming, Nevada, South Dakota, or Florida — but the LLC has to actually operate there for the choice to matter.
Decide on structure
Most family LLCs are member-managed with parents holding both management authority and a majority interest initially. The Operating Agreement defines voting rights, distribution rules, transfer restrictions, and successor management. Get this drafted by an attorney familiar with family-LLC structures.
File the Georgia Articles of Organization
We prepare and file with the Georgia Secretary of State. State fee passes through. Our service fee is $0.
Draft the Operating Agreement
This is the most important document for a family LLC. It defines membership classes (voting vs non-voting), distribution rights, transfer restrictions, valuation methodology, dispute resolution, and management succession. Generic Operating Agreements do not work for family LLCs.
Contribute assets
Transfer family-held assets (real estate, business interests, marketable securities) into the LLC in exchange for membership interests. Each contribution gets valued and documented. Real estate transfers may require deed filings and may trigger transfer tax where applicable.
Begin gifting membership interests
Parents gift minority membership interests to children annually using the federal annual gift exclusion ($18,000 per recipient per year as of 2025; this changes with inflation). Larger transfers use the lifetime gift/estate exemption. Each gift gets a written assignment and (for larger gifts) a defensible appraisal applying valuation discounts.
Maintain books, file annual returns
Family LLCs file Form 1065 federal partnership return annually with K-1s to all members. State annual report filed per the Georgia calendar. Family-LLC bookkeeping needs to track capital accounts, distributions, and membership changes carefully — this is the most common source of audit issues for family LLCs.
Formation is free. Everything else is optional.
We do not charge a service fee to form your LLC or Corporation. State filing fees still apply and pass through at cost. Add the Compliance Bundle to handle the year-one filings everyone needs.
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Common questions.
What is a family LLC?
A family LLC consolidates family-held assets (real estate, business interests, marketable securities) under a single entity. Parents typically form the LLC, contribute assets, and gift membership interests to children over time. The structure facilitates generational wealth transfer, asset consolidation, and estate planning.
Why use a family LLC in Georgia for estate planning?
Georgia has no state estate tax and no state inheritance tax. Federal estate tax still applies to estates above the federal exemption ($13.99M per individual in 2025, scheduled to drop to roughly $7M after 2025 absent extension). Family LLCs let parents transfer wealth to the next generation through gifted membership interests, often with valuation discounts that reduce the gift-tax value below the underlying asset value.
Does Georgia have a state estate tax?
No. Georgia does not impose a state estate tax. Georgia has no state estate or inheritance tax.
Does Georgia have an inheritance tax?
No. Georgia does not impose an inheritance tax.
How do valuation discounts work for family LLC transfers?
When you gift a minority, non-controlling, non-marketable membership interest in a family LLC, the gift's appraised value can be discounted 20 to 40 percent below the proportional value of the underlying asset. So a member receiving 10 percent of a family LLC holding $10M in assets is not getting a $1M gift for tax purposes — they're getting a $600K to $800K gift after discounts. The IRS does scrutinize these discounts; get a qualified appraisal at the time of each transfer.
Can I be the manager of my family LLC while gifting membership interests to my children?
Yes. The most common family LLC structure has parents as both managing members and majority economic owners initially, gradually gifting non-voting or minority membership interests to children while retaining management control. The Operating Agreement explicitly preserves parent voting authority through the transition.
How is a family LLC taxed in Georgia?
Federally, multi-member family LLCs default to partnership taxation (Form 1065 with K-1s to members). Income passes through to members proportionally. Georgia state tax follows the federal classification. The LLC itself generally pays no entity-level income tax (some states levy a franchise tax or minimum LLC tax regardless of activity — California $800, Rhode Island $400, others).
Can a family LLC own real estate in multiple states?
Yes. The family LLC is formed in one state (the home state) and registers as a foreign LLC in any other states where it holds real estate. Each registered state imposes its own filing obligations on the foreign LLC. For real-estate-heavy family LLCs, this paperwork adds up across multiple states.
How long does it take to set up a family LLC in Georgia?
Formation itself takes 1 to 4 weeks at the Georgia SOS. The Operating Agreement drafting and asset contribution paperwork typically takes 4 to 12 weeks depending on asset complexity. Many family LLCs are set up over a 3 to 6 month engagement with an attorney and CPA team.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here — we keep the rest tracked.