LLC Governance
Operating Agreement Attorney in Tampa, Florida
A well-drafted operating agreement is the difference between a business that runs smoothly and one that collapses over a dispute. FL Patel Law drafts custom operating agreements for Florida LLCs - single-member, multi-member, manager-managed, and Series LLC structures.
An operating agreement is the internal governance document for a Florida LLC. It defines who owns the business and in what proportions, how decisions are made, how profits and losses are allocated, what happens when a member wants to leave, and how disputes are resolved. For partnerships, the equivalent document is a partnership agreement. For most business owners, the operating agreement is the most important legal document in their company.
Florida does not legally require an LLC to have an operating agreement. But without one, your company is governed by the Florida Revised LLC Act (Chapter 605) default rules - a set of statutory provisions written for the average LLC, not your specific business. Those defaults often produce results that surprise business owners: equal voting regardless of ownership percentage, unclear distribution timing, and no mechanism for a partner buyout. The statute was written as a fallback, not a business plan.
FL Patel Law drafts custom operating agreements - not templates downloaded from the internet or filled-in forms. Every agreement is written to reflect your actual business: ownership structure, management arrangement, distribution preferences, transfer restrictions, and exit strategy. We work with single-member LLCs, co-founder partnerships, investor-backed businesses, family enterprises, and multi-entity holding structures. Pricing is available on both a flat-fee and hourly basis depending on complexity.
Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation to discuss a custom operating agreement for your Florida LLC.
Relying on Florida's Default LLC Rules Is a Mistake
Agreement Types
Operating Agreements for Every LLC Structure
A single-member LLC operating agreement establishes that the LLC is a separate legal entity from its sole owner. This distinction matters enormously for liability protection. Without a written operating agreement, a creditor or plaintiff may argue the LLC is merely an extension of the individual owner - known as the alter ego doctrine - and seek to pierce the corporate veil to reach the owner's personal assets.
Single-member operating agreements also serve a practical function: most banks and financial institutions require a copy before opening a business bank account or extending credit. The agreement confirms who has authority to bind the LLC and conduct financial transactions on its behalf.
For single-member LLCs, we include: sole member authority provisions, succession instructions for death or incapacity, capital contribution terms, and clear statements that the LLC is a separate legal entity from the individual. See our Florida LLC formation service for a complete formation package including the operating agreement.
Management Structure
Member-Managed vs Manager-Managed LLC
Member-Managed
- ◆All members participate in management decisions
- ◆Each member has authority to bind the LLC in the ordinary course of business
- ◆Best for small LLCs where all owners are active in the business
- ◆Simpler management structure - no separate manager appointment needed
- ◆Voting rights and management authority go hand-in-hand
- ◆Florida default if the operating agreement is silent
- ◆Risk: passive or minority members have management authority they may not be suited to exercise
Manager-Managed
- ◆One or more designated managers handle day-to-day operations
- ◆Non-managing members are passive investors without operational authority
- ◆Managers may be members or outside parties (professional managers)
- ◆Appropriate when some members are capital contributors only
- ◆Operating agreement defines the line between manager authority and member approval
- ◆Common for real estate LLCs, investment funds, and businesses raising outside capital
- ◆Requires careful drafting of manager authority, removal, and succession provisions
The right structure depends on your ownership arrangement. FL Patel Law advises on which structure fits your business before drafting the agreement.
What to Include
Key Provisions Every Operating Agreement Should Cover
A template operating agreement covers the minimum. A custom agreement covers the provisions that matter most when things get complicated - and includes the items most commonly omitted.
Ownership percentages and capital contribution requirements
Profit and loss allocation (may differ from ownership %)
Voting rights and required approval thresholds
Management structure: member-managed or manager-managed
Distribution timing, priority, and tax distribution requirements
Transfer restrictions and right of first refusal
Buyout provisions and valuation methodology
Death, disability, or departure of a member
Deadlock resolution mechanism
Non-compete and non-solicit provisions among members
Dissolution and winding-up procedures
Amendment procedures and required consent thresholds
Relying on Florida Chapter 605 default rules
Using an online template without customization
Leaving voting rights ambiguous in a multi-member LLC
Omitting buyout provisions for a multi-member business
Common Situations
Operating Agreement Considerations by Situation
The right operating agreement provisions depend on your specific situation. These are the most common scenarios FL Patel Law encounters and the governance issues each one raises.
Our Process
The FL Patel Law Operating Agreement Drafting Process
A custom operating agreement is not a form. It is a document built around your business - drafted by an attorney who understands Florida LLC law and the governance issues specific to your ownership structure.
Initial Consultation
We discuss your business, ownership structure, management preferences, and any specific concerns - passive vs active members, future investor plans, exit strategy, or family succession. This drives every provision in the agreement. No two agreements are the same because no two businesses are the same.
Draft Preparation
We draft a custom operating agreement tailored to your specific LLC - not a fill-in-the-blank template. Every section is written to reflect the actual business arrangement: ownership percentages, voting rights, distribution mechanics, management structure, transfer restrictions, buyout triggers, and dissolution procedures.
Review and Revision
We walk you through the draft section by section, explain what each provision means in plain language, and revise based on your input. We flag common issues - ambiguous voting thresholds, inadequate buyout language, missing deadlock provisions - before they become disputes.
Execution and Integration
Once finalized, we coordinate execution by all members and ensure the agreement is properly integrated with your entity records. If we formed your LLC, we confirm all documents - Articles of Organization, EIN, operating agreement - are consistent and complete.
Ongoing Updates
Operating agreements should be updated when ownership changes, new members are admitted, the business pivots significantly, or a major transaction is on the horizon. FL Patel Law handles amendments and restatements as your business evolves. We also offer outside general counsel engagements for ongoing governance support.
Custom vs Template
Why a Custom Operating Agreement Matters
Online templates and legal form services offer LLC operating agreements for a fraction of the cost of a custom-drafted agreement. For a single-member LLC with simple needs, a basic template may provide a starting point - but it will not address your specific situation, industry, or ownership arrangement.
For multi-member LLCs, templates are dangerous. They use generic voting thresholds that may not reflect the actual power arrangement between members. They omit buyout triggers or use vague valuation language that becomes contested in practice. They do not address deadlock, which is the scenario that destroys 50/50 partnerships. They do not include non-compete or non-solicit provisions that protect the business if a member leaves to start a competing company.
FL Patel Law charges flat-fee pricing for standard operating agreements and hourly for more complex structures (multi-entity arrangements, investor-backed LLCs, Series LLCs). The cost of a custom agreement is a fraction of what a single disputed buyout or member dispute costs in litigation. We work with business owners across Tampa Bay and all of Florida.
Related services: Operating agreements are typically drafted alongside business formation and Florida LLC formation. For ongoing governance - annual meetings, resolutions, amendments, and compliance - see our corporate law practice.
Ready to Get Your Operating Agreement Drafted?
Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation. We handle single-member and multi-member LLC agreements, manager-managed structures, Series LLCs, and partnership agreements for Florida businesses. Flat-fee and hourly pricing available.
FAQ
Operating Agreements: Frequently Asked Questions
LLC GOVERNANCE
Custom Operating Agreements for Florida LLCs
Schedule a consultation to discuss a custom operating agreement for your Florida LLC. Serving Tampa Bay and all of Florida.
