Limited liability companies (LLCs) are the most common business structure affected by BOIR requirements. Whether you have a single-member LLC or a complex multi-member structure, understanding how BOIR applies to your LLC is essential for compliance.
Do LLCs Need to File BOIR?
Yes. Most LLCs must file Beneficial Ownership Information Reports with FinCEN.
LLCs are “reporting companies” under the Corporate Transparency Act because they’re created by filing documents with a state. This applies to:
- Single-member LLCs
- Multi-member LLCs
- Manager-managed LLCs
- Series LLCs
- Professional LLCs (PLLCs)
The only LLCs exempt from BOIR are those meeting specific exemption criteria (discussed below).
Single-Member LLC BOIR Filing
Single-member LLCs are the simplest BOIR scenario.
Who Is the Beneficial Owner?
The sole member is the beneficial owner. They own 100% and have substantial control over the company.
What Information to Report
| Field | What to Provide |
|---|---|
| Company name | Legal name of LLC |
| Company address | Principal business address |
| State of formation | Where you filed Articles of Organization |
| EIN | Your LLC’s EIN |
| Beneficial owner | Single member’s information |
Member’s Information Required
- Full legal name
- Date of birth
- Residential address (home, not business)
- Government ID (driver’s license, passport, or state ID)
- Copy of ID document
Company Applicant
If your LLC was formed January 1, 2024 or later, also report company applicant information—the person who filed your Articles of Organization.
Multi-Member LLC BOIR Filing
Multi-member LLCs require careful analysis of who qualifies as beneficial owners.
Ownership-Based Beneficial Owners
Any member who owns 25% or more of the LLC is a beneficial owner based on ownership.
Example:
- Member A: 40% ownership → Beneficial owner
- Member B: 35% ownership → Beneficial owner
- Member C: 25% ownership → Beneficial owner
- Member D: Beneficial owner is based on 25% or more, so even exactly 25% qualifies
Control-Based Beneficial Owners
Even without 25% ownership, individuals with substantial control are beneficial owners.
Substantial control includes:
- Managing members (in manager-managed LLCs)
- Anyone who directs important decisions
- Senior officers if the LLC has them
Common Multi-Member Scenarios
Scenario 1: Equal 50/50 LLC
- Two members each own 50%
- Both are beneficial owners (each owns 25%+)
Scenario 2: 80/20 Split
- Member A owns 80%
- Member B owns 20%
- Member A is beneficial owner (ownership)
- Member B may be beneficial owner if they have substantial control
Scenario 3: Manager-Managed LLC
- Four members each own 25%
- One external manager runs the company
- All four members are beneficial owners (ownership)
- Manager is beneficial owner (substantial control)
Manager-Managed LLCs
Manager-managed LLCs have additional complexity.
When Members Are Beneficial Owners
Members who own 25% or more are beneficial owners regardless of management structure.
When Managers Are Beneficial Owners
Managers are beneficial owners if they have substantial control. This typically includes:
- Authority to make important company decisions
- Power to direct company operations
- Control over financial matters
Professional Managers
If you hire a professional management company or outside manager, the individuals who exercise control through that arrangement are beneficial owners—not the management company itself.
Series LLCs
Some states (including Delaware) allow series LLCs with separate “series” that have distinct assets and liabilities.
Filing Requirements
FinCEN treats each series that files separate formation documents as a separate reporting company. A series LLC might need to file:
- One report for the parent LLC
- Separate reports for each separately filed series
State-Specific Considerations
Series LLC rules vary by state. Consult state-specific guidance for your situation.
LLCs with Complex Ownership
LLC Owned by Another LLC
If your LLC is owned by another LLC (or corporation), you must identify the individuals who ultimately own or control through that structure.
Example:
- Operating LLC is owned by Holding LLC
- Holding LLC is owned by John Smith
- John Smith is the beneficial owner of Operating LLC
Trust Ownership
If a trust owns 25% or more of your LLC, identify the individuals who:
- Have power to dispose of trust assets
- Are beneficiaries receiving most of the trust’s income
- Have rights to demand trust distributions
- Retain grantor powers
Corporate Ownership
If a corporation owns part of your LLC, identify the individuals who own or control through that corporation.
LLC Exemptions
Most small LLCs don’t qualify for BOIR exemptions. The most relevant exemption for LLCs is the Large Operating Company exemption.
Large Operating Company Requirements
To qualify, your LLC must meet ALL THREE criteria:
- 20+ full-time U.S. employees
- More than $5 million gross receipts (prior year tax return)
- Physical operating presence in the U.S.
| Common LLC Type | Likely Exempt? |
|---|---|
| Single-member LLC (consultant) | No |
| Small retail LLC | No |
| Real estate holding LLC | No |
| Professional practice LLC | Usually no |
| LLC with 25+ employees, $8M revenue | Possibly yes |
Subsidiary Exemption
If your LLC is wholly owned by an entity that qualifies for another exemption (like a registered public company), your LLC may also be exempt.
BOIR Timeline for LLCs
LLCs Formed Before 2024
Deadline: January 1, 2025
If your LLC was formed before January 1, 2024, your initial filing deadline has passed. File immediately if you haven’t already.
LLCs Formed in 2024
Deadline: 90 days after formation
LLCs Formed in 2025 and After
Deadline: 30 days after formation
Plan for BOIR filing as part of your LLC formation process.
Ongoing Compliance for LLCs
Membership Changes
When LLC membership changes, update your BOIR within 30 days:
- New member joins
- Existing member leaves
- Ownership percentages change
- Member addresses change
Operating Agreement Considerations
Your LLC operating agreement should address BOIR compliance:
- Require members to provide necessary information
- Establish who’s responsible for filing
- Create procedures for update notifications
Annual Review
Review your BOIR filing annually to ensure accuracy, even if you don’t think anything changed.
Common LLC BOIR Mistakes
1. Thinking Single-Member LLCs Are Exempt
They’re not. Single-member LLCs must file unless they meet specific exemption criteria (which most don’t).
2. Only Listing Managing Member
In multi-member LLCs, all members with 25%+ ownership are beneficial owners, not just the managing member.
3. Using Business Address for Member
Report members’ residential addresses, not the LLC’s business address.
4. Forgetting About Minority Members with Control
A member with 20% ownership who serves as the only manager is still a beneficial owner based on substantial control.
5. Missing Ownership Through Other Entities
If ownership passes through holding companies or trusts, trace to the ultimate individual owners.
Florida LLC BOIR Considerations
Florida LLCs follow the same federal BOIR requirements as LLCs in other states.
Florida-specific notes:
- Formation documents are filed with the Florida Division of Corporations
- Your formation date is on your Articles of Organization
- Annual report filings are separate from BOIR (still required)
Get BOIR Help for Your LLC
Whether you have a simple single-member LLC or complex multi-member structure, Critical Compliance Services helps Florida LLC owners meet their BOIR obligations.
Our services include:
- Beneficial owner identification
- Information gathering
- Filing completion
- Update tracking
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my single-member LLC need to file BOIR?
Yes. Single-member LLCs must file unless they meet an exemption (which requires 20+ employees, $5M+ revenue, and a physical office).
What if my LLC is owned by a trust?
Identify the individuals associated with the trust who qualify as beneficial owners—typically trustees, beneficiaries, or grantors with certain powers.
Can my LLC’s registered agent file BOIR for me?
Registered agents aren’t automatically responsible for BOIR. You need to separately engage someone (registered agent, attorney, or compliance service) to file.
What if one member refuses to provide information?
You’re still required to file accurate information. Operating agreements should require members to cooperate with BOIR compliance.
Do I need to file BOIR and my Florida annual report?
Yes. BOIR (federal) and Florida annual reports (state) are separate requirements. Both are mandatory.