
Every serious real estate investor eventually asks the same question: should I hold my properties in an LLC? The answer involves tax considerations, liability protection, financing realities, and administrative costs — and it’s not the same for every investor.
The Primary Purpose: Liability Protection
The most important reason investors use LLCs is asset protection, not tax savings. If a tenant is injured on your property and sues, a properly structured LLC can limit the judgment to assets inside that LLC — protecting your personal bank accounts, home, and other investments. “Properly” is critical: the LLC must be correctly formed, maintained with separate finances, and not commingled with personal funds.
Tax Treatment: Pass-Through by Default
By default, a single-member LLC is a “disregarded entity” — taxed exactly like a sole proprietorship. Rental income and expenses flow directly to your personal return (Schedule E). A multi-member LLC files a Form 1065 as a partnership. Either way, LLC rental income is not subject to self-employment tax — a significant advantage over active business income.
The Financing Problem
Here’s the reality most asset protection advisors don’t emphasize: conventional mortgage financing is difficult or impossible for properties titled in an LLC. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac require that the borrower be an individual. If you transfer a conventionally financed property to an LLC, you may technically trigger the “due on sale” clause — allowing the lender to demand immediate full repayment. Investors who want LLC protection typically either accept this risk, use portfolio lenders that permit LLC borrowers, or rely on an umbrella liability insurance policy instead.
One LLC per Property vs. All in One
- One LLC per property: Maximum liability protection — a judgment on one property can’t reach another. More administrative overhead and cost.
- Single LLC for all: Simpler and cheaper. A large judgment could potentially reach all properties in the same LLC.
- Series LLC: Available in some states (Delaware, Texas, Wyoming, Illinois), this allows one LLC to contain multiple series each with separate liability protection.
The Umbrella Policy Alternative
A personal umbrella liability insurance policy ($1–5 million in coverage) costs $200–500/year and provides significant protection against the lawsuits most landlords actually face. For early-stage investors with one to three financed properties, an umbrella policy is often more practical than an LLC structure. As your portfolio grows and equity accumulates, LLC structuring becomes increasingly worth the complexity and cost.
📊 Work With a Real Estate Tax Specialist
The right CPA identifies strategies you’re missing — cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REP status. These strategies are worth far more than standard tax prep fees.
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