Page 1
Page 1
Started By
Message

Forming an LLC

Posted on 9/30/25 at 2:22 pm
Posted by bnh
Earth
Member since Feb 2011
1526 posts
Posted on 9/30/25 at 2:22 pm
Family member is about to get some land leased to an oil and gas company. Is forming an LLC beneficial in anyway?
Posted by b-rab2
N. Louisiana
Member since Dec 2005
12799 posts
Posted on 9/30/25 at 3:15 pm to
probably not
Posted by Twenty 49
Shreveport
Member since Jun 2014
20718 posts
Posted on 9/30/25 at 5:46 pm to
quote:

Family member is about to get some land leased to an oil and gas company.


What does that mean?

Family member is about to acquire (buy, inherit, etc.) some land that is already leased to an O&G company? Or family member owns some land and is about to lease it to an O&G company? Is the lease a mineral lease or an ordinary lease? Something else is going on?
Posted by bnh
Earth
Member since Feb 2011
1526 posts
Posted on 9/30/25 at 5:54 pm to
Owns the land. About to lease it to an o&g company for possible drilling
Posted by REB BEER
Laffy Yet
Member since Dec 2010
17601 posts
Posted on 10/1/25 at 9:06 am to
My mom has O&G leases on 2 pieces of property and no LLC. My grandmother had a lease on 1 of the properties for years with no LLC.

Don't know if that helps, but I do know you don't necessarily need one.
This post was edited on 10/2/25 at 8:40 am
Posted by IT_Dawg
Georgia
Member since Oct 2012
26064 posts
Posted on 10/1/25 at 9:44 am to
Would he put the land under the LLC and then lease through the LLC?

There could be some benefits, tax or lawsuit, but really depends on how much he is profiting on the lease.

I’m guessing it’s probably not a boatload, so he should just take the money each month to his personal account
Posted by lsujro
north of the wall
Member since Jul 2007
4080 posts
Posted on 10/1/25 at 10:54 am to
This is a question for a CPA. No benefit that I can logistically. LLC could be used for estate planning purposes or for possible tax benefits. If you concerned with former, get a lawyer. If latter, get a CPA.
Posted by Tsw
Member since Dec 2020
103 posts
Posted on 10/1/25 at 11:02 am to
From a tax perspective, a solo member LLC will be treated as a disregarded entity and flow through to Schedule E (Rental & Royalty Income) in this case. However, he would still get all of the legal benefits of the LLC assuming the corporate veil remains unpierced.
Posted by AllbyMyRelf
Virginia
Member since Nov 2014
3985 posts
Posted on 10/2/25 at 8:27 am to
Since the LLC would almost certainly be a disregarded entity, no tax reason for putting the land there unless you want to sell the land later. In that case, it depends on the jurisdiction, but if you sell the LLC interests rather than the underlying land, you can avoid property transfer tax.

The real reason you’d want to put it in an LLC is environmental concerns. I’m not an environmental lawyer, and I haven’t seen your lease agreement, but if there’s any wiggle room on who’s liable for land remediation in the event they screw something up, you do not want that liability in your personal capacity. The state and fed government can require you to remediate environmental damage which will bankrupt you.
Posted by lsuconnman
Baton rouge
Member since Feb 2007
4378 posts
Posted on 10/2/25 at 8:38 am to
quote:

The real reason you’d want to put it in an LLC is environmental concerns.


It’s not worth the time for most people because their residence is also on the property. If it’s a separate parcel it never hurts to partition it so that your cap on liability is the property itself.

If there’s an environmental issue, you can bet the energy company will try to just close shop, and then the property owner is left naked for indemnification.
Posted by AllbyMyRelf
Virginia
Member since Nov 2014
3985 posts
Posted on 10/2/25 at 8:48 am to
quote:

It’s not worth the time for most people because their residence is also on the property. If it’s a separate parcel it never hurts to partition it so that your cap on liability is the property itself. If there’s an environmental issue, you can bet the energy company will try to just close shop, and then the property owner is left naked for indemnification.
To me, this makes it seem *more* worth it.

Separate your house from the O&G lease (if possible) so that if there’s a judgment/ foreclosure, it doesn’t mess with the residence.

Really, most of the protection should come from the lease agreement—which a competent attorney should review thoroughly. These corporate protections are just back-stops.
Posted by Reagan80
Earth
Member since Feb 2023
1663 posts
Posted on 10/2/25 at 4:19 pm to
The family member might want to see if that impacts taking the depletion allowance.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookXInstagram