The Most Common LLC Mistakes That Let Tenants’ Lawyers Come After Your Personal Assets
Learn six common LLC mistakes landlords make — from commingling funds to weak leases — and how to protect your personal assets.
Home » Blog
Learn six common LLC mistakes landlords make — from commingling funds to weak leases — and how to protect your personal assets.
Centralize rent checks, leases, notices, and legal mail with searchable PDFs, remote check deposit, role-based access, and secure time-stamped archives.
Existing LLC records can’t be fully anonymized. For real estate privacy, form a new LLC in a privacy state or use a holding company to shield ownership.
Each rental-property LLC should have its own bank account to protect liability, simplify Schedule E taxes, and make bookkeeping easier; single account fits only tiny portfolios.
Move a rental into an LLC without triggering due-on-sale or voiding insurance. Obtain lender approval, pick the right deed, update insurance, leases, and taxes.
How a holding company LLC can protect assets, isolate property risk, simplify financing, and offer tax benefits — and when it’s worth forming.
LLCs won’t automatically hide your home address. State filings, deeds, registered agents and federal records can reveal it — use registered agents, virtual mailboxes, or land trusts.
How out-of-state landlords use LLCs, registered agents, and virtual mail scanning to protect assets, meet state filings, and manage remote rentals.