Does Georgia Allow Series LLCs?
Georgia does not currently have a Series LLC statute. You cannot form a Series LLC directly in Georgia.
Business owners with a Georgia base who want Series LLC-like liability separation typically consider two options: (1) forming a Series LLC in a state that authorizes them — most commonly Wyoming, Delaware, or Texas — and then registering as a foreign LLC in Georgia; or (2) forming separate standard LLCs for each asset or venture in Georgia, which achieves liability separation at a higher per-entity filing cost.
Note: Even if you form a Series LLC in another state, Georgiacourts may not fully recognize the liability separation between series for activities conducted within Georgia. Consult a Georgia-licensed attorney before choosing this structure.
What Are the Alternatives in Georgia?
- Multiple standard LLCs — the most legally certain approach in Georgia; each asset or venture has its own filing, its own liability shield, and its own tax identity
- Holding company structure — form a parent LLC that owns subsidiary LLCs, keeping assets in separate entities while centralizing management
- Foreign Series LLC — form a Series LLC in Wyoming or Delaware, register it as a foreign LLC in Georgia, and conduct business here — but note that Georgia's recognition of the inter-series liability shield is untested
Form an LLC in Georgia
LLC Attorney forms standard LLCs in Georgia — including operating agreement drafting and registered agent service. We can also help you structure multi-entity arrangements for asset separation.
Georgia Series LLC — FAQs
No. Georgia does not currently have a Series LLC statute. You cannot form a Series LLC directly in Georgia. Business owners who want Series LLC-like liability separation must either form a Series LLC in an authorizing state (such as Wyoming, Delaware, or Texas) or use separate standard LLCs for each asset.
A Series LLC is a master LLC with multiple legally separate "series," each holding its own assets and liabilities. In states that authorize them, debts and claims against one series cannot reach the assets of another. They are popular with real estate investors and multi-business owners.
Yes — you can form a Series LLC in Wyoming or Delaware and register it as a foreign LLC in Georgia. However, Georgia courts have not confirmed that they will respect the inter-series liability separation for activities conducted within Georgia. This creates legal uncertainty that a standard multi-LLC structure avoids.
The most legally certain alternative in Georgia is forming a separate standard LLC for each asset or venture. Another option is a holding company structure — a parent LLC that owns subsidiary LLCs — which achieves asset separation with cleaner legal clarity. LLC Attorney can help you choose and implement the right structure.
As of June 2026, Georgia has not enacted Series LLC legislation. Legislative developments vary; consult the Georgia Secretary of State or a Georgia attorney for the most current information.
Yes. LLC Attorney forms standard LLCs in Georgia — including operating agreement drafting and registered agent service. We can also advise on multi-entity structures for asset protection and business separation.
