Loudon LLC Lawyer

LLC lawyer Loudon, TN

Trusted LLC and small business lawyers serving clients in Loudon and the surrounding area for over 37 years.

If you’re forming a business in Loudon or working through a transaction involving an existing one, the decisions you make at the start can shape how the business holds up later, both legally and financially. Our Loudon, TN LLC lawyer can help you choose the right structure, put the right documents in place, and handle the legal side of buying or selling a business. Carpenter & Lewis PLLC has worked with small business owners across East Tennessee for over three decades. Contact us to schedule a free consultation.

LLC Lawyer Loudon, TN

A limited liability company is one of the most widely used business structures in Tennessee, and the reasons aren’t hard to understand. It separates personal assets from business liabilities, allows members to divide ownership and management in ways that fit their actual arrangement, and can be structured with an eye toward what happens when things change — a partner exits, the business gets sold, or an owner passes away. But forming an LLC correctly takes more than filing paperwork with the state.

An LLC attorney in Loudon helps business owners get the foundation right. That means choosing the appropriate entity type, drafting an operating agreement that actually governs the business, and thinking through what happens when the circumstances around the business shift. The legal documents you put in place at formation are the same documents you’ll rely on when something doesn’t go according to plan.

Types of LLC and Business Law Matters We Handle in Loudon

Carpenter & Lewis PLLC works with business owners throughout Loudon on LLC formation, transactions, and governance matters. Our work in this area includes the following.

  • LLC formation. We help clients form LLCs in Tennessee, including choosing the right structure for the business, reviewing how ownership should be divided, and making sure the entity is properly organized from day one.
  • Operating agreements. The operating agreement controls everything — how profits are split, how decisions get made, and what happens when a member wants to leave or passes away. We draft operating agreements that reflect the actual arrangement between members. How operating agreements work is something most people haven’t thought through before they start asking about formation, and that’s a problem.
  • Business governance. Multi-member LLCs need clear rules around voting rights, capital contributions, and management authority. Without them, disagreements between members become much harder to resolve. We help clients establish those rules upfront and revisit them when the business changes.
  • Buying a business. Purchasing an existing business has a legal side that buyers frequently underestimate. We handle the structure of the transaction and make sure you’re not taking on liabilities that weren’t disclosed. Legal due diligence during a purchase is a step buyers skip at their own risk.
  • Selling a business. We work with business owners on the legal side of a sale, including structuring the transaction and handling the transfer of ownership correctly. Going without legal help through that process regularly creates problems that were avoidable.
  • Trusts. What happens to the business when you step back, become incapacitated, or pass away? Those questions don’t have obvious answers unless you’ve addressed them in writing. In cases where a trust is the right vehicle for passing along the business, this work connects directly to the owner’s broader estate plan.
  • Risk minimization. Structure and documentation reduce exposure. We help clients think through how liability flows between the entity and its members, identify gaps in protection, and get the business organized in a way that actually shields personal assets.

Why Choose Carpenter & Lewis PLLC for LLC Matters in Loudon, TN?

Tennessee Business Law Experience

Stephen L. Carpenter is the founding attorney of Carpenter & Lewis PLLC and has been practicing business and tax law in Tennessee for over 37 years. His credentials include a Doctor of Jurisprudence and a Master of Laws in Taxation, both from William & Mary School of Law. This is a level of formal tax training that directly shapes how the firm approaches LLC formation, ownership structures, and transactions where the tax treatment of a deal matters. Stephen is licensed in both Tennessee and Virginia and holds memberships with the Tennessee Bar Association and the Knoxville Bar Association. He has also delivered lectures and seminars on small business startup strategies across the region.

Jon McMurray Johnson also handles LLC and small business matters for the firm. Licensed in Tennessee since 2007, Jon was selected as a Rising Stars attorney by Super Lawyers for 2019 through 2021, a peer-selected designation given to a limited number of attorneys in each state. He’s a member of the Knoxville Bar Association, the Tennessee Bar Association, and the Monroe County Bar Association.

Between the two, the firm brings substantial combined experience to LLC and business law matters in Loudon and across East Tennessee. 

Formation and Transactions, Together

Some business owners come in needing help with formation. Others arrive mid-transaction and need legal guidance on a purchase or sale. And some are dealing with governance disputes or succession questions that came up after the business was already running. Carpenter & Lewis PLLC handles all of these. Stephen Carpenter has personally assisted thousands of clients over the course of his career, including estates and businesses involving multimillion-dollar assets and complex legal disputes. That depth of experience matters when a situation is anything other than routine, and our Loudon LLC attorney has handled most of what comes through the door.

Understanding LLC Matters in Loudon

Key LLC Concepts and Formation Basics

For business owners forming an LLC in Loudon, TN, a few foundational concepts apply to almost every situation.

  • Limited liability. Members of an LLC are generally not personally responsible for the debts and obligations of the business, provided the LLC is properly maintained and personal and business finances are kept separate.
  • Member-managed vs. manager-managed. LLCs can be governed directly by their members or by a designated manager. Which option fits depends on the size of the business and how the owners want day-to-day decisions handled.
  • Pass-through taxation. By default, an LLC doesn’t pay taxes at the entity level. Income and losses pass through to the members, who report them on individual returns. How the LLC is taxed can be adjusted by election, and there are situations where that makes sense.
  • Operating agreement vs. articles of organization. The articles create the LLC with the state. The operating agreement governs how the LLC actually functions. Both documents need to be accurate and consistent with each other.
  • Single-member vs. multi-member distinctions. A single-member LLC is treated differently than a multi-member LLC for both tax and governance purposes. That distinction affects what the documents need to say and how the arrangement should be structured.

For business owners who want to dig further into the underlying statutes, the firm has covered Tennessee’s LLC law in more detail.

What Are Important Aspects of an LLC Matter?

The two things that shape most LLC matters are the number of members involved and what the business actually does.

Single-member LLCs are simpler to document and operate. Multi-member arrangements require a more detailed operating agreement: one that addresses what happens when members disagree, when someone wants out, and when ownership needs to transfer. Business owners who address succession before it becomes urgent consistently end up in a better position than those who don’t.

The nature of the business also affects how the LLC should be structured. A real estate holding company has different liability and governance needs than a service business with multiple employees, or a business that’s being purchased rather than built from scratch.

What Is the LLC Timeline?

Filing the articles and finalizing an operating agreement typically takes a few weeks once the necessary information is in hand. Transactions take longer. Buying or selling a business involves due diligence, document review, negotiation, and final document preparation that can span months depending on the size and complexity of the deal.

A typical LLC engagement moves through several stages:

  • Initial consultation to discuss structure, ownership, and goals
  • Drafting and review of articles of organization and operating agreement
  • Filing with the Tennessee Secretary of State and obtaining a federal employer identification number if needed
  • Additional documentation for transactions, including purchase or sale agreements
  • Review of any succession or trust arrangements tied to the business

What Should You Bring to Your LLC Consultation?

What to bring depends on where you are in the process. Generally, it helps to come with:

  • Any existing business documents, including prior formation records or agreements
  • A general picture of who is involved and what ownership percentages will look like
  • Financial statements or business overview information, particularly if a transaction is involved
  • Information about any real property the business owns or plans to own
  • Questions about how you eventually want the business transferred or sold

The consultation is also a good time to talk about how the business fits into your overall financial and estate planning. Those two areas overlap more than most business owners expect, and addressing them together from the start tends to save time and expense later.

What Are Important Tennessee Legal Resources for LLC Matters?

A few resources are worth having on hand for business owners in Loudon, TN.

  • The Tennessee Secretary of State handles LLC filings, name availability searches, and registered agent requirements for businesses organized in Tennessee.
  • Tennessee’s LLC statutes sit within the Tennessee Code Annotated, which business owners can search through the Tennessee Code.
  • Federal tax classification and treatment of LLCs is addressed on the IRS website, including information on default tax classifications and elections available to LLC members.

Reach Out to Carpenter & Lewis PLLC to Schedule a Consultation

Whether you’re forming a new LLC in Loudon, buying or selling a business, or trying to get a governance issue sorted out, Carpenter & Lewis PLLC offers free initial consultations. Contact us to set up a time to talk through your situation.

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Client Review

“We own several businesses and have had the pleasure of working with Stephen and his team for over 9 years now. He always comes through in a pinch. They have assisted us with leases, estate planning, company formations and even landlord issues. I highly recommend them for all your business attorney needs!”
Mary Ellen Nichols
Client Review

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[email protected]

10413 Kingston Pike, Suite 200

Knoxville, Tennessee 37922

New Clients:  (865) 509-9600

Existing Clients:  (865) 690-4997

Facsimile:   (865) 690-4790