LLC vs Partnership: the liability shield, again.
A side-by-side comparison of structure, tax treatment, liability protection, cost, and use cases. The decision usually comes down to a few specific factors; this guide walks through each.
Form a multi-member LLC instead of a partnership in almost every case. Same tax treatment, far better liability protection. Use a Limited Partnership (LP) only when raising from passive investors who legally require LP structure.
Which fits your situation.
- You are forming a fund or syndicate where the structure specifically requires LP/LLP (e.g., real estate syndicates with passive investors)
- State law mandates partnership (some professional services in some states)
- You have a temporary joint venture for a single project
- You want maximum operational simplicity and accept the liability risk
- Almost every other case
- Two or more co-founders going into business together
- Family businesses with multiple owners
- Real estate investors pooling for one property
- Professional service firms (often PLLC variant)
- Holding company with multiple investor members
Every factor that matters.
| Factor | Partnership | LLC |
|---|---|---|
| Setup | General Partnership: none required, you are partners by handshake. LP/LLP: state filing required. | State filing required ($35-$520) plus Operating Agreement |
| Liability shield | GP: none. Partners liable for business debts AND for partner misconduct. LP: limited partners shielded; general partner liable. LLP: limited shield, varies by state. | Yes. All members shielded from business debts and other members' misconduct |
| Tax treatment | Pass-through; Form 1065 partnership return; Schedule K-1 to each partner | Same: pass-through; Form 1065; Schedule K-1 by default |
| Self-employment tax | Active partners pay SE tax on share | Same for active members; passive members may avoid (fact-specific) |
| Operating Agreement | Partnership Agreement; not always written | Operating Agreement; written and signed by all members |
| Joint liability for partner misconduct | Yes (GP). One partner's contract bind all partners. | No. Members are not liable for other members' separate misconduct |
| S-Corp election available | No. Partnerships cannot elect S-Corp. | Yes. LLC can elect S-Corp via Form 2553 if all members eligible |
| Adding a new owner | Vote per Partnership Agreement; tax basis adjustments | Vote per Operating Agreement; transfer of membership interest |
| Owner leaves | Dissolution by default unless Partnership Agreement specifies otherwise | Continues; departing member buyout per Operating Agreement |
| Lender / investor preference | Lenders cautious; many will not lend | Standard; lenders prefer entities for clarity |
| Estate planning | Complex; partnership interest passes per partnership terms | Cleaner; membership interest can pass per will or operating agreement |
How each is taxed.
Multi-member LLCs and partnerships are taxed identically by default for federal income tax: as a partnership. The entity files Form 1065 and issues Schedule K-1 to each member/partner. Each member reports their share of income, deductions, and credits on their personal return.
Differences arise in specific elections. Multi-member LLCs can elect S-Corp tax treatment (Form 2553) if all members are eligible (US individuals or certain trusts, 100 members max, single class of stock). Partnerships cannot elect S-Corp.
For pass-through income, the math is the same. The structure difference is liability, not tax.
What each costs.
General Partnerships cost nothing to form. You are partners by mutual intent. The cost shows up later: drafting a Partnership Agreement after the fact, paying for personal liability that should have been entity liability, untangling joint debts.
Limited Partnerships and LLPs cost state filing fees similar to LLCs ($50 to $200+ in most states). Plus annual fees.
Multi-member LLCs cost state filing fees ($35 to $520) plus annual reports ($25 to $300 depending on state). Our service fee is $0.
Protection differences.
This is the most important difference. In a General Partnership, every partner is personally liable for all partnership debts AND for the wrongful acts of any other partner (in scope of partnership). Partner A signs a contract; Partner B is on the hook. Partner A causes a tort; Partner B's home is at risk.
In an LLC, members are not liable for other members' misconduct. Member A causes a tort; the LLC is liable (its assets); Member B's personal assets are protected. Member A signs a contract that the LLC cannot pay; the LLC defaults; Member B's assets stay separate.
This is the central reason almost every multi-owner business operates as an LLC instead of a partnership. The only meaningful exceptions are LP structures for passive investors and certain professional partnerships mandated by state law.
The File.Business Promise
If we miss a filing deadline on a service you pay us to manage, we pay the state penalty. If you change your mind in the first 60 days, we refund our service fee in full.
Common questions.
What is the difference between General Partnership, LP, and LLP?
Why would anyone form a partnership instead of an LLC?
Is a multi-member LLC a partnership?
Can a partnership become an LLC?
Do partnerships pay federal income tax?
What is the deadline for Form 1065?
Can a partnership have a single owner?
Do partnerships need an EIN?
Is a Partnership Agreement legally required?
Why do most multi-owner businesses choose LLC over partnership?
Ready to start?
5 minutes to file. $0 service fee. Pay only the state fee. 60-day money-back guarantee.
Related searches: llc vs partnership, llc or partnership, general partnership vs llc, limited partnership vs llc, llp vs llc, multi member llc vs partnership, partnership tax vs llc, partnership liability
On the $129/yr Compliance Annual Filings plan, we cover state late fees.
When you autofile your annual report through the $129/yr plan and we miss the deadline, we pay the state's late fee. The guarantee applies to that specific plan and the filings it includes. Other File.Business services are billed at the prices on this page.