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Transfer Texas LLC Ownership

Transferring LLC ownership in Texas involves selling or assigning membership interests. Under Texas Business Organizations Code, the rules depend on whether you are transferring economic rights only or full membership rights (including voting and management).

Understanding Membership Interests

LLC ownership consists of two components:

  1. Economic rights — share of profits, losses, and distributions
  2. Governance rights — voting, management participation, access to records

Under Texas Business Organizations Code, a member can freely assign economic rights, but transferring full membership (governance rights) typically requires consent of other members.

Types of Transfers

Full Transfer (Sale of Membership Interest)

The transferring member sells their entire interest — both economic and governance rights. This requires:

Partial Transfer (Assignment)

Assignment of economic rights only does NOT make the assignee a member. The assignee receives distributions but cannot vote or participate in management until admitted as a member.

Step-by-Step Process

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Step 1: Review Operating Agreement Restrictions

Most operating agreements include:

Step 2: Determine Fair Market Value

Common valuation methods:

Step 3: Draft Transfer Documents

Step 4: Obtain Required Consents

Per your operating agreement and Texas Business Organizations Code:

Step 5: File with the State

If your formation documents or state records list members:

Step 6: Handle Tax Obligations

Tax Implications

No state income tax. Franchise tax applies only if revenue exceeds $2.47M (2025 threshold).

For the seller:

For the buyer:

Special Situations

Death of a Member

The operating agreement should address what happens to a deceased member's interest — typically the estate inherits economic rights, and other members may have a buyout option.

Divorce

Texas IS a community property state. LLC membership interests acquired during marriage are presumed community property unless a partition agreement exists.

Involuntary Transfer (Charging Order)

Under the Texas Business Organizations Code, a creditor of a member can obtain a charging order against that member's economic interest, but cannot seize governance rights or force dissolution.

FAQ

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Can I transfer my interest without other members' approval?

You can assign economic rights (distributions) without consent. But transferring FULL membership rights (voting, management) typically requires consent under Texas Business Organizations Code unless your operating agreement provides otherwise.

Do I need a lawyer to transfer ownership?

While not legally required, an attorney is strongly recommended for transfers involving significant value, multiple members, or complex tax situations.

What if there is no operating agreement?

Texas Business Organizations Code's default rules apply — which generally require unanimous consent of all other members for a transferee to become a full member.

For more about Texas LLC management, see our formation guide and how-to overview.

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