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Every Georgia LLC owner should have an operating agreement in place to safeguard their company’s operations. While an operating agreement is not legally needed by the state, it will create clear norms and expectations for your LLC while also establishing your legitimacy as a legal company.

WHAT IS A GEORGIA LLC BUSINESS AGREEMENT?

An operating agreement is a legal document that describes an LLC’s ownership structure and operational practises.

Whether you form a single-member or multi-member LLC, your operating agreement should include all of the following subjects. Some of these requirements will have little impact on the day-to-day operations of a single-member LLC, but they must be included for legal purposes.

Organization: When the LLC was created, who its members are, and how ownership is distributed. Multi-member LLCs may have an equal ownership structure or allocate different “units” of ownership to different members.
Management and Voting: Whether the LLC will be governed by its members or by an appointed manager, as well as how members will vote on business concerns. Each member typically has one vote, but you may want to give certain members greater voting power than others.

Capital Contributions: The amount of money invested in the firm by each member. This is also where you should plan how you can raise extra cash in the future.
Distributions: How revenues and losses are distributed among members. The most typical approach is to disperse earnings in an equal distribution. If you want them distributed differently, make that clear in your operating agreement.

Membership Structure Changes: How positions and ownership will be transferred if a member departs the firm. The method for buying out and/or replacing a member must be outlined in the LLC’s governing agreement.
Dissolution: Dissolution: If all of the members of your LLC decide that you no longer want to do business, you need formally dissolve it. An essential component of your operating agreement is outlining the hypothetical process of dissolving your firm.

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