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Step-by-stepNo state requires an operating agreement be filed publicly. It is an internal document. But banks and counterparties frequently request it, and courts use it to determine ownership structure in disputes.
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How-to guide
How to write an operating agreement · plain-English guide

How to write an LLC operating agreement.

The operating agreement is the LLC equivalent of corporate bylaws. It governs ownership, voting, distributions, and member transitions. Even single-member LLCs benefit from having one (it strengthens the liability shield and satisfies bank account requirements). This guide covers required sections, common variations, what to avoid, and our free attorney-reviewed templates.

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The process

Step by step.

01
Identify the basics

Legal name of LLC, formation state, formation date, principal address, Registered Agent, term (perpetual or fixed), purpose.

02
Define members and ownership

List each member by name, address, percentage interest, capital contribution. Distinguish member-managed vs manager-managed structure.

03
Capital contribution rules

Initial contributions from each member (cash, property, services). Rules for additional contributions if needed.

04
Allocation and distributions

How profits and losses are allocated (typically by ownership percentage). Distribution rules (when and how cash is paid out). Tax distributions to cover member tax liability on allocated income.

05
Voting and decision-making

Decision thresholds: majority for ordinary business, supermajority or unanimity for major actions (admitting new members, dissolution, sale of substantially all assets).

06
Management structure

Member-managed (all members run business) vs manager-managed (designated managers, who may or may not be members, run the business).

07
Transfer restrictions

Right of first refusal on member sales. Drag-along, tag-along rights. Restrictions on transfers to non-family or non-existing-members.

08
Buy-sell provisions

What happens on death, disability, bankruptcy, divorce, or voluntary withdrawal of a member. Valuation method and payment terms.

09
Dissolution provisions

Events triggering dissolution. Wind-up process. Asset distribution priority.

10
Sign and store

All members sign. Keep the original in company records. Provide copy to banks and counterparties on request.

Common mistakes

What to avoid.

Mistake
Skipping the operating agreement

State default rules govern in the absence. Defaults rarely match what members actually want. Plus banks and courts expect to see one.

Mistake
Generic template without customization

Industry-specific provisions (e.g., professional ethical rules for PLLCs, real estate special allocations) need tailoring.

Mistake
Vague distribution rules

"Distributions when the members agree" causes disputes. Specify timing, thresholds, and tax-distribution rules.

Mistake
No buy-sell

When a member dies, divorces, or wants out, the absence of buy-sell triggers expensive negotiation or litigation. Almost every multi-member LLC needs buy-sell terms.

Mistake
Inconsistent with state filings

If the operating agreement says manager-managed but Articles of Organization say member-managed, the inconsistency creates ambiguity. Align the two.

FAQ

Common questions.

How do I write an operating agreement?
You define ownership percentages, profit and loss splits, management structure, voting, how members join or exit, and dissolution, then have all members sign it and keep it with the company records. It is not filed with the state. Rather than start from a risky template, we draft an agreement custom to your LLC and state.
What should an operating agreement include?
Ownership and capital contributions, profit and loss allocation, member- or manager-management, voting thresholds, transfer and buy-out provisions, deadlock resolution, and what happens on a member's death or exit. Leaving these out means the state's defaults decide, often unfavorably. We include the terms that actually prevent disputes.
Can I use a free template?
You can start with one, but generic templates often miss state-specific rules and the provisions that matter for your ownership and management, and a bad agreement is worse than none in a dispute. We draft one fitted to your LLC and state so it holds up when it is needed.
Does a single-member LLC need one?
Yes: it is key evidence the company is separate from you personally, which preserves the liability shield if challenged, and it directs the bank and succession. Skipping it because it is just you is the common mistake, and we prepare one with your formation.
Do all members need to sign it?
Yes: the agreement binds the members once they sign, so every member should sign and keep a copy with the company records. An unsigned or partial agreement is weak evidence. We prepare it so all members execute it properly and the LLC has a valid governing document.
Does it need to be notarized?
Generally no: most states do not require notarization for an operating agreement to be valid; the members' signatures make it binding, though some owners notarize for extra proof. What matters is that everyone signs and keeps a copy. We prepare it so it is properly executed.
Can I change it later?
Yes: you amend it through the process it specifies, usually a member vote, documenting the change in writing and keeping it with the original, without refiling with the state. We prepare amendments that fit your existing agreement as ownership or management changes.
What if members disagree on something not covered?
Then the state's default statute decides, and its answer may be one nobody wanted, which is exactly the gap a thorough agreement closes with voting, deadlock, and exit terms. If you are already there, we can amend the agreement to add the missing terms before it becomes a lawsuit.
Can File.Business write my operating agreement?
Yes: we draft an operating agreement custom to your entity, members, and management structure, coordinated with your formation, so the private governance is solid and consistent with your public filing rather than a generic template that may not fit.
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