What changes when you pick one structure over the other.
Member-managed: flat structure
Every member has authority to bind the LLC and participate in management decisions. Simpler for small LLCs where members are also operators. Default in most states if the Articles are silent.
Manager-managed: designated authority
One or more managers (who may or may not be members) bind the LLC. Non-manager members are passive economic participants: they vote on major decisions per the Operating Agreement but do not handle day-to-day operations.
California default + disclosure
California Statement of Information (filed within 90 days of formation) requires manager or member identification.
When manager-managed makes sense
When you have passive investor members who provide capital but not labor; when one or two members will run operations and others are silent; when you want to separate management authority from economic ownership; or when outside investors require a defined management layer.
Fiduciary duties shift
In member-managed LLCs, every member owes fiduciary duties (loyalty, care) to the LLC and other members. In manager-managed LLCs, only the managers owe full fiduciary duties; non-manager members owe only contractual duties under the Operating Agreement.
Can switch later via amendment
You can switch from member-managed to manager-managed (or vice versa) by filing an amendment to the Articles of Organization with the California SOS. State fee passes through. Operating Agreement should be updated to match.
A clean handoff, in 6 steps.
Decide who will run the LLC day-to-day
If every member is active in operations: member-managed. If one or two members will manage while others are passive investors: manager-managed.
Pick the structure in the Articles
California Statement of Information (filed within 90 days of formation) requires manager or member identification.
Draft the Operating Agreement to match
Member-managed: define what decisions require all members vs. majority. Manager-managed: define manager powers, manager removal, member voting on major matters, fiduciary duty waivers (where state law allows).
Identify managers (if manager-managed)
Name them in the Articles where required. Many states allow non-members to be managers (someone you hire to run the LLC); others require managers to be members. Check California statute.
Set up signing authority
Member-managed: any member can sign. Manager-managed: only managers can sign unless the Operating Agreement extends authority. Banks, vendors, and counterparties will ask for documentation of signing authority.
Update if you take on investors
When passive investors come in, the typical move is to switch to manager-managed so investors get economic participation without operational authority.
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.
- LLC or Corporation formation (any state)
- EIN application with the IRS
- Articles of Organization or Incorporation drafted and filed
- Free BOS dashboard for ongoing visibility
- Filing receipts to your document vault
- Everything in Free Formation (no add-on fee)
- Registered Agent service in your state (1 entity)
- Annual Report AutoFile, filed every year on time
- Certificate of Good Standing (1 included per year)
- 1 Amendment included per year (address, member, name)
- Operating Agreement (LLC) or Bylaws (Corp)
- Deadline monitoring across all your filings
Common questions.
What is the default LLC governance in California?
Unless you specify otherwise, California treats an LLC as member-managed by default, meaning every member has authority to run the business and bind the company. If you want a different setup, managers running it while others stay passive, you must choose manager-managed in your formation documents. We make sure your California filing and Operating Agreement state the structure you actually want.
Should I pick manager-managed or member-managed?
Member-managed fits small LLCs where all owners are active; manager-managed fits LLCs with passive investors, many members, or an owner who wants a designated person, even an outsider, running day-to-day while others stay hands-off. The choice is about who has authority, not who owns what. We help you match the California structure to how your business is really run.
Can a non-member be a manager of a California LLC?
Yes: in a manager-managed LLC, you can appoint a manager who is not an owner, such as a hired professional or an outside operator, giving them authority to run the company without a membership stake. This is one of the main reasons to choose manager-managed. We draft your California Operating Agreement so a non-member manager's authority and limits are clearly defined.
Do non-manager members in a California LLC have any say?
Yes, but a limited one: in a manager-managed LLC, non-manager members typically keep voting rights on major decisions, selling the company, admitting members, amending the agreement, while day-to-day authority sits with the managers. Exactly which decisions require member approval is set in the Operating Agreement. We define those California thresholds so passive members are protected without hamstringing the managers.
How do fiduciary duties differ between the two?
In a member-managed LLC, the managing members generally owe fiduciary duties, loyalty and care, to the company and each other; in a manager-managed LLC, those duties fall mainly on the managers, and passive members usually owe fewer. California sets the baseline, which a well-drafted agreement can adjust within limits. We flag how California allocates these duties so everyone knows their exposure.
Can I switch from member-managed to manager-managed?
Yes: you amend the Operating Agreement and, where California requires, update the formation record to reflect the new structure and named managers. Businesses often switch when they take on investors or when owners step back from operations. We handle the California amendment so the governance change is legally real, not just an informal arrangement.
Does the public record show who manages my California LLC?
It depends on California: some states require you to name managers or managing members on the public formation document or annual report, while others keep it private in the Operating Agreement. This affects owner privacy. We tell you what California discloses so you know whether choosing manager-managed puts a name on the public record.
Does the governance choice affect federal tax?
No. Whether your LLC is member-managed or manager-managed does not change how the IRS taxes it; that is driven by your entity elections, default pass-through or an S-corp or C-corp election. Governance is about control; taxation is separate. We keep the two decisions distinct so a management choice does not get confused with a tax one.
Can a California LLC have multiple managers?
Yes: a manager-managed LLC can name several managers, and the Operating Agreement sets how they share authority, whether they act jointly or individually, what needs a majority, and how disputes resolve. Vague multi-manager terms cause deadlock. We draft the California agreement so multiple managers' powers and tie-breakers are spelled out clearly before a conflict tests them.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here: we keep the rest tracked.