Free LLC Operating Agreement Template
Download a lawyer-reviewed LLC operating agreement template customized for your state. Protect your personal assets, define member roles, and keep your LLC in good standing — all in one document.
What Is an LLC Operating Agreement?
The single most important internal document for any limited liability company.
An LLC operating agreement is a legal document that defines how your limited liability company is owned, managed, and operated. It establishes each member’s ownership percentage, voting rights, profit and loss allocations, and the procedures for adding or removing members. Without one, your LLC defaults to your state’s generic LLC statutes — which almost never reflect what you actually want.
While not every state legally requires an operating agreement, every LLC needs one. Banks require it to open a business account. Courts look at it to confirm your LLC is a legitimate entity (not just a personal alter ego). And if a dispute arises between members, the operating agreement is the document that governs the outcome.
Why Every LLC Needs an Operating Agreement
Even single-member LLCs benefit from having a formal operating agreement in place.
Protect Your Personal Assets
An operating agreement reinforces the legal separation between you and your LLC. Without one, courts may “pierce the corporate veil” and hold you personally liable for business debts — especially if your LLC looks like a sole proprietorship on paper.
Prevent Member Disputes
Who makes decisions? How are profits split? What happens if a member wants to leave? An operating agreement answers these questions upfront — before disagreements turn into lawsuits. It’s far cheaper to draft an agreement than to litigate one.
Open a Business Bank Account
Most banks require a signed operating agreement before opening an LLC bank account. It proves who owns the LLC, who has authority to act on its behalf, and confirms the LLC is a properly organized entity — not a shell.
Override Default State Rules
Without an operating agreement, your LLC is governed by your state’s default LLC act. In many states, that means equal profit splits regardless of capital contributions, and unanimous consent required for major decisions. Your agreement lets you set your own rules.
Attract Investors & Partners
Serious investors and business partners expect a formal operating agreement. It shows your LLC is professionally structured and that ownership, governance, and exit procedures are clearly documented — reducing risk for everyone involved.
Stay Compliant in Required States
States like New York, California, Missouri, and Maine either require or strongly recommend operating agreements for LLCs. Even where not legally mandated, having one is considered standard practice and may be required to maintain your LLC’s legal protections.
What’s Inside the Template
Our operating agreement template covers every clause a properly organized LLC needs — customized for single-member and multi-member structures.
📋 Article I — Formation & Purpose
LLC name, state of formation, principal office address, registered agent, date of organization, and the business purpose clause. Establishes the legal identity of your LLC and its authority to operate.
👥 Article II — Members & Ownership
Names and addresses of all members, ownership percentages, initial capital contributions, and procedures for admitting new members. Defines who owns the LLC and in what proportion.
💰 Article III — Capital Contributions
Initial contributions (cash, property, or services), additional contribution requirements, capital account maintenance, and rules for returning capital. Protects members who invest more upfront.
📊 Article IV — Profits & Distributions
Allocation of profits and losses among members, distribution timing and frequency, tax distribution provisions, and special allocation rules. Defines how money flows to members.
⚙️ Article V — Management & Voting
Member-managed vs. manager-managed structure, voting rights and thresholds, officer appointments, day-to-day authority, and matters requiring supermajority or unanimous consent.
🔄 Article VI — Transfer of Interests
Right of first refusal, permitted transfers, restrictions on assignment, buy-sell provisions, and valuation methods. Controls who can become a member and how interests change hands.
🚪 Article VII — Withdrawal & Dissolution
Voluntary withdrawal procedures, events triggering dissolution, winding up and liquidation, distribution of remaining assets, and continuation provisions if a member departs.
📝 Article VIII — General Provisions
Amendment procedures, indemnification clauses, governing law, dispute resolution (mediation/arbitration), severability, entire agreement clause, and signature blocks.
Single-Member vs. Multi-Member Operating Agreements
The right template depends on how many owners your LLC has. Here’s how they differ.
Single-Member LLC
A single-member operating agreement is simpler but no less important. It establishes that your LLC is a separate legal entity — not just an extension of you personally. Key provisions include sole member authority, succession planning, and dissolution triggers.
- Sole member retains full management authority
- Simplified profit/loss allocation (100% to single member)
- Succession and incapacity provisions
- Critical for piercing-the-veil protection
Multi-Member LLC
A multi-member operating agreement is more detailed because it governs the relationship between two or more owners. It must address voting, profit splits, dispute resolution, buyouts, and what happens when a member wants to leave or passes away.
- Ownership percentages and capital contributions
- Voting rights, quorum, and decision thresholds
- Buy-sell provisions and right of first refusal
- Dispute resolution and deadlock procedures
Not sure which you need? If your LLC has one owner, use the single-member template. If you have two or more owners — even if one owns 99% — use the multi-member template. Married couples filing jointly can use either, but the multi-member version is recommended for clarity.
How to Customize Your Operating Agreement
Download the template, fill in your details, and sign. Here’s the process from start to finish.
Download & Choose Your Version
Select the single-member or multi-member template. Both are available in Word (.docx) format so you can edit every clause to match your LLC’s structure and your state’s requirements.
Fill In Your LLC Details
Replace the bracketed placeholders with your LLC name, member names, ownership percentages, capital contributions, management structure, and state of formation. Customize profit splits and voting thresholds as needed.
Sign, Store & Share
All members sign and date the agreement. Keep a copy with your LLC records, provide one to your bank, and store a digital backup. Update the agreement anytime your LLC structure or membership changes.
Operating Agreement Requirements by State
Most states don’t legally require an operating agreement — but every LLC should have one regardless. These states have specific rules.
🗽 New York
Required by law. NY LLC Act §417 mandates that every LLC adopt a written operating agreement. Failure to have one doesn’t invalidate the LLC but may expose members to liability.
🌴 California
Required by law. CA Corp Code §17701.10 requires an operating agreement (oral or written). Written is strongly recommended — oral agreements are nearly impossible to enforce in court.
🏛️ Delaware
Required by law. Delaware LLC Act §18-101(7) defines the LLC agreement broadly. Can be oral, written, or implied — but a written agreement is essential for any serious business.
🌲 Maine
Required by law. Maine’s LLC Act requires a written operating agreement. One of the few states where failure to have one can create direct legal consequences for the LLC and its members.
🏞️ Missouri
Required by law. Missouri LLC Act §347.081 mandates an operating agreement for all LLCs. The agreement governs the LLC’s internal affairs and member relationships.
🤠 Texas
Not required, but critical. Texas defaults apply if you don’t have one — including equal profit splits regardless of capital invested. Most Texas LLC attorneys consider it mandatory in practice.
🏔️ Wyoming
Not required, but recommended. Wyoming’s LLC Act is member-friendly, but default rules may not match your intentions — especially for profit allocation and management authority.
🌸 Florida
Not required, but recommended. Florida’s Revised LLC Act provides default rules, but they’re generic. An operating agreement lets you customize governance to fit your business.
State requirements may change. Consult an attorney for specific legal advice in your state. See all 50 state formation guides.
Key Clauses Explained
The provisions that matter most — and why you should customize them carefully.
💰 Profit & Loss Allocation
By default, most states split profits equally among members — regardless of how much each person invested. Your operating agreement can allocate profits proportionally to ownership, based on capital contributions, or using any custom formula the members agree to. This is one of the most commonly customized clauses.
⚙️ Management Structure
Member-managed: All members participate in daily decisions. Best for small LLCs where all owners are active. Manager-managed: One or more designated managers run the business; passive members have limited say. Required if you have silent investors or want to delegate operations.
🔄 Buy-Sell Provisions
What happens when a member wants to sell their interest, retires, becomes incapacitated, or dies? Buy-sell clauses define the process — including right of first refusal for remaining members, valuation methods (book value, appraised value, formula), and payment terms. Without this, transitions become messy and expensive.
🗳️ Voting & Decision-Making
Define which decisions require a simple majority, supermajority (e.g., 66% or 75%), or unanimous consent. Typical unanimous-consent matters include admitting new members, selling major assets, changing the operating agreement, and dissolving the LLC. Day-to-day decisions usually require only manager or majority approval.
📤 Distribution Policy
Distributions are payments from the LLC to its members. Your agreement should specify the frequency (quarterly, annually, at manager discretion), minimum reserve requirements, tax distribution provisions (so members can pay their income taxes), and priority of distributions if the LLC has preferred and common members.
⚖️ Dispute Resolution
Require mediation before litigation. Many operating agreements include a mandatory mediation clause followed by binding arbitration if mediation fails. This keeps disputes private, faster, and far less expensive than going to court. Specify the governing law (usually the state of formation) and the arbitration forum.
Get Your Free Operating Agreement Template
Download a lawyer-reviewed, state-compliant operating agreement in minutes. Available for single-member and multi-member LLCs in all 50 states.
Free download • No credit card • Word (.docx) format
Common Operating Agreement Mistakes to Avoid
These errors cost LLC owners thousands in legal fees, tax penalties, and lost protections every year.
Not Having One at All
The number one mistake. Without an operating agreement, your LLC runs on default state rules — which rarely match your actual intentions. Courts may also question whether your LLC is a legitimate separate entity, weakening your liability protection.
Using a Generic Template
Copy-pasting a one-size-fits-all template without customizing it for your state, your members, and your business model is almost as bad as having no agreement. Every LLC is different — your operating agreement should reflect your specific structure.
Ignoring Buy-Sell Terms
Multi-member LLCs without buy-sell provisions face chaos when a member wants out, gets divorced, or passes away. Defining transfer restrictions, valuation methods, and buyout timelines upfront prevents forced sales and member deadlocks.
Vague Profit-Sharing Terms
“We’ll split it fairly” isn’t a legal clause. Specify exact percentages, allocation methods, distribution frequency, and what happens with retained earnings. Ambiguity here is the leading cause of LLC member lawsuits.
Forgetting Tax Distributions
LLC members owe income tax on their share of profits — even if no cash is distributed. A tax distribution clause ensures the LLC distributes enough cash for members to cover their tax liabilities. Without it, members pay taxes out of pocket on “phantom income.”
Never Updating the Agreement
Your operating agreement should be a living document. Update it when you add or remove members, change ownership percentages, switch management structure, or when state law changes. An outdated agreement can be worse than none at all.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about LLC operating agreements and our free template.
Is an operating agreement legally required?
It depends on your state. New York, California, Delaware, Maine, and Missouri require operating agreements by law. In all other states, it’s technically optional but considered essential — banks require it to open a business account, and courts look for it when evaluating liability protection. Every LLC attorney in the country recommends having one.
Does a single-member LLC need an operating agreement?
Yes. A single-member operating agreement is critical for maintaining your LLC’s legal separation from you personally. Without one, courts may disregard your LLC structure (pierce the corporate veil) and hold you personally liable for business debts. It’s also required by most banks to open an LLC bank account.
Can I write my own operating agreement?
Yes. You can draft your own operating agreement using our free template as a starting point. For single-member LLCs and straightforward partnerships, a well-written template is often sufficient. For complex arrangements — multiple member classes, investor rights, or unusual profit allocations — consider having an attorney review your customized agreement.
Does an operating agreement need to be notarized?
No. In all 50 states, operating agreements do not need to be notarized or filed with any government agency. They are internal documents — simply signed by all members and stored with your LLC records. That said, having the signatures witnessed adds an extra layer of protection if the agreement is ever challenged.
What’s the difference between an operating agreement and bylaws?
Operating agreements are for LLCs. Bylaws are for corporations. They serve a similar purpose — governing internal operations — but use different terminology and legal frameworks. If you formed an LLC, you need an operating agreement. If you incorporated a C-Corp or S-Corp, you need corporate bylaws. Learn more about corporations.
Can I change my operating agreement later?
Yes. Operating agreements can be amended at any time — typically by a vote of the members as specified in the agreement itself. Most agreements require majority or unanimous consent to amend. Document all changes in a formal written amendment signed by all members, and attach it to the original agreement.
What happens without an operating agreement?
Your LLC defaults to your state’s LLC statute. In most states, that means: equal profit/loss splits regardless of capital invested, unanimous consent required for most decisions, any member can bind the LLC to contracts, and no restrictions on transferring ownership. These defaults rarely match what members actually intend — and can cause serious problems.
Is the BusinessFormations.com template free?
Yes — completely free. Our operating agreement template is available for download in Word (.docx) format at no cost and with no credit card required. Both single-member and multi-member versions are included. The template is lawyer-reviewed and covers all essential provisions for a properly organized LLC.
Related Guides & Resources
Everything you need to form, manage, and protect your LLC.
How to Start an LLC
Step-by-step guide to forming your LLC — benefits, costs, state requirements, and post-formation essentials.
Read the guide →Operating Agreements Explained
In-depth walkthrough of every clause — what it means, why it matters, and how to customize it for your LLC.
Read the guide →LLC vs. S-Corp
When to add S-Corp tax status to your LLC — the $60K break-even point, SE tax savings, and payroll requirements.
Read the comparison →Registered Agent Renewal
How registered agent renewals work, what they cost, and why maintaining continuous service keeps your LLC in good standing.
Read the guide →Compliance Monitoring
Annual reports, franchise taxes, and filing deadlines — our compliance tools track everything so you never miss a deadline.
Read the guide →Post-Formation Checklist
Everything you need to do after your LLC is approved — bank account, EIN, bookkeeping, licenses, and compliance filings.
Read the checklist →About This LLC Operating Agreement Template
The BusinessFormations.com LLC Operating Agreement Template is a comprehensive, lawyer-reviewed document designed for entrepreneurs forming limited liability companies in any of the 50 United States. Available in both single-member and multi-member versions, the template covers every essential provision: formation and purpose, member identification and ownership structure, capital contributions, profit and loss allocations, management and voting, transfer restrictions, withdrawal and dissolution, and general provisions including indemnification and dispute resolution.
When to Use This Template
This template is appropriate for most standard LLC structures — including freelancers and consultants forming single-member LLCs, business partners forming multi-member LLCs, real estate investors creating property-holding LLCs, and small business owners establishing their first company. For complex structures involving multiple member classes, preferred returns, waterfall distributions, or sophisticated investor rights, we recommend having a business attorney customize the agreement based on this template.
How Operating Agreements Work with State Law
LLC operating agreements interact with state law in an important way: most state LLC acts are “default” statutes, meaning they provide rules that apply only if the operating agreement is silent on a topic. Your operating agreement overrides these defaults on nearly every internal matter — ownership, management, voting, distributions, and dissolution. This makes the operating agreement the most powerful governance tool available to LLC members. The few provisions that cannot be overridden by agreement (such as the duty of good faith in some states) are noted in the template where applicable.
For more information on choosing the right entity type, visit our guides on LLC formation, C-Corp incorporation, and S-Corp election. Compare structures with our detailed analyses: LLC vs. S-Corp, LLC vs. C-Corp, and C-Corp vs. S-Corp. This template is provided for informational and educational purposes. For legal advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney in your state. See our terms and disclosures.
Download Your Free Operating Agreement
Protect your LLC, define your member roles, and stay compliant — all in one document. Free for single-member and multi-member LLCs.
Free download • Word (.docx) format • All 50 U.S. states