Delaware LLC Act: Difference between revisions
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Delaware's LLC Act has generated substantial economic benefits for the state through franchise taxes, registered agent fees, and the expansion of corporate services industries concentrated in Wilmington and surrounding areas. The Division of Corporations processes more than one million business filings annually, and as of 2023, more than 1.8 million business entities were active in Delaware — a number that exceeds the state's human population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware Division of Corporations Annual Report |url=https://corp.delaware.gov/ |work=Delaware Division of Corporations |access-date=2024-11-01}}</ref> LLCs constitute a substantial and growing portion of those registrations. Revenue generated from business entity filings represents a meaningful portion of Delaware's state budget — estimated at roughly 25 to 30 percent of total state revenues in recent years — | Delaware's LLC Act has generated substantial economic benefits for the state through franchise taxes, registered agent fees, and the expansion of corporate services industries concentrated in Wilmington and surrounding areas. The Division of Corporations processes more than one million business filings annually, and as of 2023, more than 1.8 million business entities were active in Delaware — a number that exceeds the state's human population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Delaware Division of Corporations Annual Report |url=https://corp.delaware.gov/ |work=Delaware Division of Corporations |access-date=2024-11-01}}</ref> LLCs constitute a substantial and growing portion of those registrations. Revenue generated from business entity filings represents a meaningful portion of Delaware's state budget — estimated at roughly 25 to 30 percent of total state revenues in recent years — | ||
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Latest revision as of 13:25, 12 May 2026
```mediawiki The Delaware LLC Act is the statutory framework governing the formation and operation of limited liability companies (LLCs) in Delaware. Formally codified in the Delaware Code, Title 6, Chapter 18, the act has become one of the most widely adopted LLC statutes in the United States and serves as a model for LLC legislation in other jurisdictions. Since its enactment in 1992, the Delaware LLC Act has established Delaware as a primary jurisdiction for LLC formation, contributing significantly to the state's economy through registered agent fees, franchise taxes, and related corporate services. The act's flexibility, well-developed case law, and business-friendly provisions have made it the preferred choice for entrepreneurs, institutional investors, and large enterprises seeking to establish LLCs. The statute provides comprehensive rules regarding LLC formation, management, taxation, and dissolution, while allowing members wide latitude to customize their operating agreements according to their specific business needs.
History
The Delaware LLC Act was enacted in 1992, representing a significant development in American business law during a period when LLC structures were gaining recognition as viable alternatives to traditional corporate and partnership entities.[1] Prior to this legislation, LLCs existed in only a handful of states, with Wyoming being the first jurisdiction to adopt an LLC statute in 1977. Delaware's decision to enact comprehensive LLC legislation reflected the state's long-standing commitment to maintaining competitive advantages in corporate law and business formation. The legislation was carefully drafted to incorporate principles from existing Delaware corporate law while addressing the unique characteristics and needs of the LLC business structure, and the act's original provisions drew upon successful models from other states while incorporating innovations designed to attract businesses to Delaware.
The passage of the Delaware LLC Act was instrumental in legitimizing the LLC as a preferred business structure across the United States. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the Delaware statute served as a template for LLC legislation adopted by other states and influenced federal tax policy regarding LLC treatment. The act has been amended multiple times — with notable revisions in 2004, 2010, and 2018 — to reflect evolving business practices, changes in federal law, and developments in case law interpretation. Significant amendments have addressed issues such as manager liability, member withdrawal rights, and the treatment of series LLCs, demonstrating the legislature's responsiveness to the needs of the business community. The state's Division of Corporations has maintained active engagement with business attorneys and practitioners to ensure that Delaware's LLC framework remains contemporary and responsive to evolving business needs.
Delaware's approach to LLC legislation has consciously diverged from the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (ULLCA), promulgated by the Uniform Law Commission and adopted in whole or in part by a number of states. While the ULLCA imposes certain mandatory fiduciary duties and restricts the degree to which operating agreements can limit member rights, Delaware's statute is grounded instead in principles of contractual freedom, allowing members to modify or even eliminate default fiduciary duties within the bounds of good faith.[2] This deliberate divergence has been a defining feature of Delaware's competitive position in LLC law.
Statutory Framework and Key Provisions
The Delaware LLC Act establishes a flexible statutory framework that allows significant customization through operating agreements while providing default rules for matters the members have not addressed. The act permits LLCs to be managed either by their members or by designated managers, depending on the structure chosen at formation.[3] This flexibility distinguishes Delaware law from more prescriptive statutory schemes and has contributed substantially to the act's popularity among business planners.
Section 18-101 provides foundational definitions, including the definitions of "limited liability company," "member," "manager," and "operating agreement" that govern interpretation throughout the statute. Section 18-201 establishes the formation requirements: an LLC is formed upon the filing of a certificate of formation with the Delaware Secretary of State, a document that must include the LLC's name and the name and address of its registered agent. The filing fee is minimal, and the Secretary of State's office processes expedited filings within hours for an additional fee, making Delaware one of the fastest jurisdictions for entity formation.
The act's most commercially significant feature is Section 18-1101, which enshrines freedom of contract as the statute's central organizing principle. Under Section 18-1101(b), it is the policy of Delaware to give maximum effect to the principle of freedom of contract and to the enforceability of limited liability company agreements. Members may, by agreement, expand, restrict, or eliminate the fiduciary duties that would otherwise apply. However, Section 18-1101(c) imposes a floor: the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing cannot be waived or disclaimed by the operating agreement, regardless of what other duties the members choose to eliminate.[4] Courts interpreting this covenant have held that it fills contractual gaps to ensure parties act consistently with the reasonable expectations of the agreement, but it does not override express terms and is not a vehicle for rewriting a deal after the fact.
The statute provides clear rules regarding the duties and responsibilities of managers and members, establishing the fiduciary obligations owed to the LLC and other stakeholders in the absence of contrary agreement. Members have considerable latitude in defining the distribution of profits and losses, establishing procedures for decisions following a member's withdrawal or death, and setting voting thresholds for major business decisions. Delaware law recognizes both "membership interests" and "economic interests" as distinct concepts, allowing members to transfer economic rights — meaning rights to distributions — without necessarily transferring management or voting rights. This separation is commonly used in private equity and venture capital structures, where investors may hold economic interests while founders or managers retain governance control.
The act contains detailed provisions addressing member rights to obtain information regarding LLC operations under Section 18-305. Unless restricted by the operating agreement, members may inspect and copy LLC records, including the certificate of formation, operating agreement, financial statements, and tax returns. These information rights are subject to modification by the operating agreement, and Delaware courts have consistently held that sophisticated parties negotiating at arm's length may restrict them substantially.
The statute establishes procedures for the dissolution and winding up of LLCs under Sections 18-801 through 18-806, requiring proper notice to creditors and adequate provision for payment of outstanding obligations. Section 18-804, which governs the distribution of assets upon winding up, was the subject of significant litigation in 2025 when a Delaware court addressed the nullification of a certificate of cancellation filed in violation of the operating agreement, reinforcing the principle that statutory mechanics do not override contractual rights among members.[5] The liability shield provided by the LLC structure protects individual members from personal liability for the debts and obligations of the entity. That protection is subject to the equitable doctrine of veil-piercing, which Delaware courts apply narrowly and only where the LLC form has been used as a fraud or to evade a specific statutory obligation.
Default Rules and Operating Agreements
When members have not addressed a matter in their operating agreement, the act's default rules control. Under the default management structure, an LLC is member-managed, meaning all members have equal rights to manage and conduct the business. Default voting rights are allocated per capita — one vote per member — rather than in proportion to capital contributions, which is the opposite of the default under many state corporate statutes. Profits and losses are allocated equally among members by default as well. These defaults are intentionally designed to be simple and equitable; in practice, most LLCs of any complexity adopt an operating agreement that overrides them.
Delaware does not require LLCs to have a written operating agreement, and an LLC without any agreement operates entirely under the statutory defaults. The act defines an "operating agreement" broadly under Section 18-101(7) to include any agreement — written, oral, or implied — among the members concerning the affairs of the LLC and the conduct of its business. Courts have held that a course of dealing or even informal understandings may constitute an operating agreement, though parties relying on unwritten agreements face obvious evidentiary challenges. For this reason, legal practitioners uniformly recommend that Delaware LLCs adopt comprehensive written operating agreements.[6]
Series LLCs
Section 18-215 of the Delaware LLC Act authorizes the formation of series LLCs, a structure unique to Delaware at the time of its introduction and since adopted in modified form by a smaller number of states. A series LLC is a single LLC that contains within it separate "series" — sometimes called cells or sub-series — each of which may have its own distinct assets, liabilities, members, managers, and business purposes. Crucially, if the operating agreement establishes the necessary record-keeping and notice requirements, the debts and liabilities of one series are enforceable only against the assets of that series, not against the assets of the LLC as a whole or any other series. This internal liability segregation makes the series LLC particularly attractive for real estate investors holding multiple properties, private equity funds managing distinct investment portfolios, and businesses operating multiple lines of business with different risk profiles.
The formation of a series LLC requires the certificate of formation to include notice that the LLC may have one or more series. Each series is not required to file its own certificate of formation, which means the filing costs associated with creating multiple series are far lower than forming multiple separate LLCs. Delaware courts have not yet been asked to rule comprehensively on every aspect of series LLC liability separation, and some legal practitioners recommend additional caution when using series structures in transactions involving counterparties in states that do not recognize the series form, since the liability segregation may not be respected by foreign courts applying their own law.[7]
Case Law and Judicial Interpretation
Delaware's Court of Chancery has developed an extensive body of published opinions interpreting the LLC Act. The court's specialized expertise in business law — it has no jury and its judges are lawyers appointed for their commercial sophistication — provides a quality and consistency of analysis unavailable in most general civil courts. This developed jurisprudence gives businesses predictability when structuring LLCs and resolving disputes, which is itself a material reason why sophisticated parties choose Delaware.
The foundational case on the freedom of contract principle is Haley v. Talcott, 864 A.2d 86 (Del. Ch. 2004), in which the Court of Chancery confirmed that the operating agreement is the governing instrument of a Delaware LLC and that courts will enforce it as written without importing corporate-law fiduciary principles that the parties did not adopt. The court emphasized that the contractual structure of the LLC form requires courts to look first to the agreement, and only then to default statutory rules, before considering whether any equitable intervention is warranted. This principle has been applied consistently in subsequent decisions.
Delaware courts have also addressed the limits of contractual freedom under Section 18-1101(c). The implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing applies to fill gaps in the operating agreement — situations the parties did not anticipate and did not address — but it does not override the express terms of the agreement even when those terms produce outcomes that seem harsh in hindsight.[8] Delaware courts have declined to use the implied covenant to rescue a party from a bad bargain, holding sophisticated commercial parties to the exact terms of the agreements they negotiated.
In mergers and acquisitions involving Delaware LLCs, the Court of Chancery has been called upon to interpret earnout provisions and other contingent consideration structures. The Delaware Supreme Court has clarified in recent decisions that disputes over earnout calculations are governed closely by the contract's specific definitions and measurement standards, applying the same contractual-freedom principles that animate the LLC Act generally.[9] The 2025 decision addressing Section 18-804 and the nullification of a certificate of cancellation filed in breach of the operating agreement further illustrates the court's consistent approach: statutory formalities do not override contractual rights, and parties who circumvent agreed procedures do so at their peril.[10]
The availability of experienced legal counsel specializing in Delaware business law has created competitive advantages for Delaware-formed entities in securing financing, pursuing mergers and acquisitions, and resolving governance disputes. Professional service providers have built substantial businesses around Delaware business formation and compliance services, with many national firms maintaining significant Delaware practices.
Federal Law Considerations
The Delaware LLC Act governs state-law formation and internal governance, but federal law imposes significant additional requirements on Delaware LLCs. For federal income tax purposes, a domestic LLC with two or more members is classified as a partnership by default under Treasury Regulation § 301.7701-3, meaning its income and losses pass through to members and are taxed at the individual level. A single-member LLC is disregarded as a separate entity by default, meaning it's treated as a sole proprietorship for federal tax purposes. Members may elect to have the LLC taxed as a corporation by filing Form 8832 with the IRS, and many LLCs with specific compensation or exit strategies elect S corporation status by filing Form 2553.
The Corporate Transparency Act (CTA), enacted in 2021 and enforced beginning in 2024, imposes beneficial ownership reporting requirements on most LLCs formed or registered in the United States, including those organized under the Delaware LLC Act.[11] Under the CTA, covered LLCs must report to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) the names, birth dates, addresses, and identifying document numbers of all individuals who own 25% or more of the entity or who exercise substantial control over it. Penalties for willful non-compliance include civil fines and criminal prosecution. The CTA has significant practical implications for Delaware LLC formation because Delaware's historical attraction — the ability to form an LLC with minimal public disclosure of ownership — is now supplemented by a federal reporting requirement that, though not publicly accessible, creates a federal registry of beneficial owners. Litigation over the constitutionality of the CTA was ongoing as of mid-2025, with conflicting federal court rulings creating uncertainty about enforcement timelines for some categories of entities.
Economic Impact and Business Formation
Delaware's LLC Act has generated substantial economic benefits for the state through franchise taxes, registered agent fees, and the expansion of corporate services industries concentrated in Wilmington and surrounding areas. The Division of Corporations processes more than one million business filings annually, and as of 2023, more than 1.8 million business entities were active in Delaware — a number that exceeds the state's human population.[12] LLCs constitute a substantial and growing portion of those registrations. Revenue generated from business entity filings represents a meaningful portion of Delaware's state budget — estimated at roughly 25 to 30 percent of total state revenues in recent years —