Holding LLCs
The limited-liability company is the default holding vehicle for U.S. luxury assets. Tax-transparent by default, liability-shielding by design, and administratively light, the LLC carries almost every yacht, aircraft, art collection, and trophy property held outside personal title.
What the structure is
A limited-liability company is a state-law entity authorized by every U.S. state, originally introduced in Wyoming in 1977 and now uniform in availability if not in detail. It provides limited liability to its members for company debts; it admits flexible governance through an operating agreement; and it elects its federal tax classification on Form 8832 (or accepts the default classification).
The default federal classifications under the check-the-box regulations (Treas. Reg. §301.7701-3): a domestic LLC with one member is disregarded as a separate entity from its owner; a domestic LLC with two or more members is a partnership. Either classification can be elected away by filing Form 8832 to elect corporate status.
The tax problem it addresses
Three concerns drive LLC adoption for luxury assets: (a) liability separation between the asset and the personal estate of the owner; (b) ease of estate-planning transfer (gifts of LLC interests are simpler and may carry valuation discounts compared to gifts of fractional interests in the underlying asset); and (c) tax transparency, which avoids the double taxation of a C corporation while preserving the legal separation.
The structure does not, by itself, change the substantive tax character of the underlying asset. A yacht held by an LLC is the same yacht for income-tax characterization purposes; the LLC is transparent in either disregarded or partnership form.
Mechanics
Single-member: the LLC files no separate federal income-tax return. Income and expense are reported on the member's individual return (Schedule C, E, F, or other as applicable). State income-tax treatment may differ; some states tax single-member LLCs as separate entities even when disregarded federally.
Multi-member: the LLC files Form 1065 as a partnership. Schedule K-1s are issued to each member. Allocations of income, deduction, gain, and loss follow the operating-agreement provisions consistent with §704(b) substantial-economic-effect requirements.
For luxury-asset operations:
- Yacht charter business: LLC operating the charter, with bookings, crew employment, and revenue flowing through the entity. Depreciation passes through; §469 passive-activity rules apply at the member level.
- Aircraft ownership: Single-member LLC titles the aircraft. Operations under Part 91 by owner or under Part 135 by a charter operator. State sales-tax-favorable formation (Montana, Delaware) common.
- Art holding: LLC owns the collection; estate-planning gifts of LLC interests may produce valuation discounts.
- Real estate: LLC for each property; permits §1031 exchanges at the entity level and isolates liability among properties.
The applicable statutes and authorities
- 26 U.S.C. §7701 and Treas. Reg. §§301.7701-1 through -3 (entity classification).
- 26 U.S.C. §704(b) (partnership allocations).
- 26 U.S.C. §469 (passive activity at member level).
- 31 U.S.C. §5336 and 31 C.F.R. §1010.380 (Corporate Transparency Act BOI reporting).
- State LLC statutes — Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, 6 Del. C. ch. 18; Wyoming Limited Liability Company Act; analogous statutes in other states.
Substance and audit risk
The LLC does not insulate the owner from liability or tax if it is operated as the owner's alter ego. Veil-piercing under state law and §6901 transferee liability are the principal vulnerabilities. Audit attention focuses on:
- Formality of operation (separate bank accounts, recorded transactions, contemporaneous records).
- Adequate capitalization for the operations conducted.
- Absence of commingling between personal and entity funds.
- For Montana-LLC vehicle titling and similar substance-driven planning: the actual situs of use, control, and operating decisions.
- For estate-tax discount claims on family LLCs: the §2036 retained-enjoyment doctrine as developed in Strangi, 417 F.3d 468 (5th Cir. 2005), Powell, 148 T.C. 392 (2017), and Bongard, 124 T.C. 95 (2005).
Cost and complexity
Formation: filing fee in the formation state (under $200 in Delaware, Wyoming, and most other states). Annual franchise tax or annual report fee. Operating agreement drafting. Registered agent.
Ongoing: separate tax return for multi-member LLC; nominal cost for single-member disregarded LLC. State-level annual reports. CTA beneficial-ownership reporting through FinCEN where applicable. Bookkeeping appropriate to the scale of operations.
Complexity scales with the operating intensity of the underlying business. A passive LLC holding a single painting requires almost no ongoing administration. A charter LLC operating an aircraft requires substantive operational records, crew employment, and ongoing tax compliance.
Common combinations
- LLC owned by a dynasty trust. The trust holds the LLC interests; the LLC holds the assets. Estate-tax exclusion through the trust; liability shield through the LLC.
- LLC owned by a family partnership. Intermediate-level partnership receives LLC interests from family members; offers valuation-discount opportunities on gifts and estate inclusion.
- Series LLC. Available in Delaware, Texas, Illinois, and several other states. Permits multiple "series" within a single LLC, each with its own assets and liabilities. Useful for multi-property real-estate holdings.
- Cross-border LLC. A U.S. LLC may hold a foreign asset; or a foreign entity may hold a U.S. LLC interest. Each pattern presents different income-tax and reporting consequences.
Recent developments
The Corporate Transparency Act, effective January 1, 2024, requires most U.S.-formed LLCs and foreign LLCs registered to do business in the U.S. to report beneficial-ownership information to FinCEN. The CTA's constitutionality and applicability have been the subject of continuing litigation; FinCEN has issued interim final rules. See beneficial-ownership reporting.
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act enacted §199A's qualified business income deduction, which can apply to certain pass-through LLC income. The deduction has limited application to passive luxury-asset holding but can matter for active charter and rental businesses.
Primary Sources
- Treas. Reg. §§301.7701-1, -2, -3 (entity classification).
- 26 U.S.C. §§701, 702, 704(b), 705, 706, 707, 731-737 (partnership tax).
- 26 U.S.C. §469 (passive activity loss).
- 31 C.F.R. §1010.380 (CTA BOI reporting).
- Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, 6 Del. C. ch. 18 — delcode.delaware.gov.
- Estate of Strangi v. Commissioner, 417 F.3d 468 (5th Cir. 2005).
- Estate of Powell v. Commissioner, 148 T.C. 392 (2017).
- Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner, 124 T.C. 95 (2005).
Reviewed May 2026