Protect your most valuable assets—rental properties—with our flexible LLC strategies. Choose between a streamlined single-entity structure or our dual-layer protection, combining a Wyoming holding company with individual property LLCs. Both options offer robust asset protection, allowing you to scale as your portfolio grows.
When you invest in real estate, you'll want to have a structure that will guard your wealth for generations to come. Our RealShield package does this, and it comes with the following benefits:
Superior Asset Protection
Our proven experts implement strategic structures to shield your real estate holdings from tenant lawsuits and creditor claims, creating a robust legal barrier between your personal wealth and investment properties.
Adaptable Protection Framework
Our entity structures evolve with your investment journey—start simple and seamlessly scale your protection as you acquire additional properties. We design your framework with built-in flexibility to accommodate portfolio expansion without restructuring completely.
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Protect your assets with Armor8®, leveraging Wyoming and Nevada’s strong protection laws. By certifying your LLC membership interests under Article 8 of the UCC and storing them in Wyoming or Nevada, Armor8® ensures those states’ superior protections govern your ownership, not weaker laws elsewhere.
By holding your LLC certificates in Wyoming or Nevada, you gain the advantage of their superior asset protection laws, shielding your ownership from the weaker remedies of other states.
Your LLC membership certificates are securely stored in Wyoming or Nevada, out of the reach of unfavorable court jurisdictions elsewhere.
Find answers to our most commonly asked questions about business formation and asset protection here. If you have additional questions, schedule your free 15-minute consultation with our experts.
In most cases, the best entity to use is an LLC. The first benefit is that the LLC offers limited liability protection. Second, they can provide favorable tax treatment when title is held through an LLC.
There are two steps you'll need to follow. First, you'll need to form the LLC in the state where the property is located. Second, you'll need to transfer title of the property into the name of the LLC.
You should form an LLC at least one month before you close on the property. This is because it may take a few weeks for the Secretary of State to form your LLC. In addition, this will also put everyone on notice that title to the property will be held through an LLC.
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