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A limited liability partnership (LLP) is a type of business structure where some or all partners have limited personal liability for the financial obligations of the business.
In general, it is a structure that combines elements of general partnerships and corporations.
To better understand LLPs, it may be helpful to first describe general partnerships.
General partnerships describe any entity established as the result of an agreement between two or more parties. The agreement may be formal or informal, but regardless, each partner in the business has unlimited liability for its financial obligations as well as the actions of other partners.
Liability in an LLP is “apportioned” differently, such that each partner can work on the business without fear of being liable for another partner’s actions.
Not all Australian states recognise LLPs under the relevant Acts, but NSW (which calls them limited partnerships) and QLD dictate that such structures must have:
It should also be noted that a partner can be an individual or a legal entity such as a company.
LLPs are administered based on a partnership agreement which, ideally, should be created before the business is registered.
These agreements serve as a contract between each partner that clarifies the purpose and scope of their working arrangement. In some cases, it may be wise to seek legal advice when drafting the agreement.
In any case, partners will need to discuss and incorporate:
LLPs come with many advantages, such as:
There are also some disadvantages to establishing a limited liability partnership:
LLPs in the United States emerged in response to a crash in energy and real estate prices in the 1980s.
The collapse caused a wave of bank failures, but since the amounts recovered from the banks were minuscule, lawyers and accountants who advised the banks were targeted by debt collectors.
With the potential for such action to bankrupt these individuals, the first LLP-related laws were passed in Texas in 1991.
The laws were enacted to protect innocent partners in professional service firms from liability, but today, LLPs are also favoured by consulting firms, medical practices and finance businesses to name a few.
In many ways, limited liability partnerships serve much the same purpose as they do in Australia. They are formal structures that require a partnership agreement and, depending on the state, annual reporting.
LLPs also protect each partner from another partner’s misconduct, which can be beneficial in some professional services industries.
What’s more, LLP formation is dictated by state legislation. In many states, there is no law that dictates who can start an LLP. But in states like New York and California, for example, only professional services firms may do so.
However, there are two key differences to keep in mind.
The most obvious difference lies in the way the business is managed.
In Australian states where they are recognised, LLPs must have a general partner and a limited partner with duties and responsibilities distributed as each sees fit.
In the United States, management duties are equally divided between the partners by default. This means that LLPs more closely resemble general partnerships (but without the unlimited liability).
If partners in a U.S. LLP do not want to share equal management responsibility, their specific roles and duties can be delineated in a partnership agreement.
Limited liability partnerships in the United States are also taxed by the IRS as pass-through entities. In other words, partners pay personal income tax on their share of the profits instead of the LLP itself paying tax.
This is similar to how tax is treated for limited liability companies (LLCs).
In Australia, taxation is similar but not the same. LLPs are not taxable entities, but in most cases, the partner with the most interest in a business has to submit a partnership tax return with the ATO at the end of the financial year.
Partners are taxed on their respective shares of the profits, and each is likewise entitled to claim deductions on their personal tax returns if the partnership makes a loss.
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