Key Takeaways
- There is no legal limit on how many LLCs a single owner can hold in Texas.
- $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) is the state-level annual cost driver per Texas LLC, paid to the Secretary of State.
- Registered agent service adds $100 to $300 per LLC per year per LLC per year, though one agent can serve all entities.
- Texas permits Series LLCs, which may reduce formation and compliance costs for multi-asset portfolios.
- A holding company structure adds one LLC to the count but centralizes management and creates an additional liability buffer.
Texas Multiple LLC: At a Glance
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Number of LLCs allowed | No statutory limit |
| Annual cost per LLC | Each Texas LLC costs $750 to $1,800 per year, combining the $0 Public Information Report fee, registered agent service ($100 to $300), and bookkeeping plus tax preparation ($600 to $1,500); Texas imposes no franchise tax on entities with annualized revenue at or below the $2. |
| Annual report / compliance deadline | May 15 each year (Public Information Report filed with the TX Comptroller of Public Accounts) |
| Series LLC available | Yes - Texas authorizes series LLCs under Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code Chapter 101, Subchapter M, including protected and registered series tiers added by SB 1523 (effective June 1, 2022). |
| Same registered agent for all LLCs | Yes - one registered agent can serve all Texas LLCs |
| Filing authority | Secretary of State |
| Filing portal | sos.texas.gov |
Texas places no statutory limit on the number of LLCs one person may own. Every additional entity you form, however, carries its own annual compliance cost of $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) paid to the Secretary of State, plus registered agent fees and bookkeeping. Each Texas LLC costs $750 to $1,800 per year, combining the $0 Public Information Report fee, registered agent service ($100 to $300), and bookkeeping plus tax preparation ($600 to $1,500); Texas imposes no franchise tax on entities with annualized revenue at or below the $2.65 million no-tax-due threshold (2026), so most small LLCs carry no entity-level state tax cost. Texas permits Series LLCs, which can reduce total entity count for multi-asset portfolios, though the structure carries caveats discussed below.
The practical question is not whether you can hold multiple LLCs but how to structure them so the liability protection each entity provides is worth its annual cost. This guide walks through the structures, costs, and compliance rules specific to Texas.
Do You Need Multiple LLCs?
Before adding entities, confirm that a second LLC is actually the right tool. Three options exist for expanding under your current structure:
- Add a DBA to your existing LLC. A DBA (doing business as) lets your current LLC operate under a second trade name at a fraction of the cost of forming a new entity. In Texas, DBA registration is handled at the Secretary of State level. The tradeoff: a DBA adds no liability protection because the same LLC and its assets stand behind every name it operates under.
- Expand the scope of your operating agreement. If the second business line is closely related to the first, your existing LLC may be able to accommodate it under a broader purpose clause. Consult an attorney before this approach if the second activity carries materially different liability exposure.
- Form a separate LLC. The right choice when you need actual liability isolation between business activities or assets. If one business fails, gets sued, or accumulates debt, its creditors cannot reach the assets held by your other LLC. Each Texas LLC costs $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) in annual state fees plus $100 to $300 per LLC per year for registered agent service.
If your second activity carries meaningful liability risk that differs from your first, a separate LLC is the defensible choice. If it is simply a different brand name with the same underlying risk profile, a DBA is usually sufficient and far cheaper.
Pros and Cons of Owning Multiple LLCs in Texas
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Each LLC creates a legal firewall between business activities | Each Texas LLC adds $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) in annual state compliance cost |
| A failed business in one LLC does not drag down the others | Separate bookkeeping, bank accounts, and tax returns required per entity |
| Different LLCs can have different ownership structures and investors | Registered agent fee of $100 to $300 per LLC per year applies per entity (though one agent can serve all) |
| Easier to sell or transfer a single business unit without unwinding everything | Veil-piercing risk increases if any one LLC is not maintained properly |
| Centralized management possible via a holding company structure | No Series LLC option in Texas (available) |
Common Texas Multi-LLC Use Cases Beyond Real Estate
Real estate is the most visible use case, but multiple LLCs serve other portfolios equally well. Four patterns appear repeatedly among Texas business owners paying $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) per entity per year:
- Operating company plus IP-holding company. One LLC runs the business. A second LLC holds trademarks, software, or other intellectual property and licenses them to the operating LLC. Keeps the most valuable assets out of reach of the operating company's creditors.
- Multiple service lines with different liability profiles. A consulting firm and a construction company owned by the same person should be separated. A lawsuit against the high-risk construction entity should not reach the lower-risk consulting business.
- E-commerce brands in separate LLCs. Each brand or product line in its own entity allows separate P&L tracking, independent sale to buyers, and clean liability isolation if a product triggers a claim.
- Partnership ventures. When you partner with different people on different projects, separate LLCs with different ownership stakes are far cleaner than a single multi-member LLC tracking everything. At $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) per entity annually in Texas, the cost is predictable and manageable for most portfolios.
The Four Structures for Owning Multiple LLCs
Owners who hold multiple LLCs typically use one of four structural approaches. The right one depends on asset count, liability diversity, and how much administrative overhead you want to centralize.
1. Standalone Parallel LLCs
Each LLC exists independently, owned directly by the same individual. Simple to set up and understand, but administrative complexity grows linearly with each entity added. No central management layer. Three standalone Texas LLCs cost approximately $2,250 to $5,400 per year (3 LLCs x $750 to $1,800 per LLC) to operate annually.
2. Holding Company Structure
A single parent LLC owns membership interests in multiple operating or asset-holding LLCs. You own the holding company; the holding company owns everything else. This adds one entity to your count but creates a second layer of protection and centralizes management authority. Three operating LLCs plus one holding LLC costs approximately $3,000 to $7,200 per year (4 total LLCs: 3 property + 1 holding, each $750 to $1,800) annually in Texas.
3. Series LLC (where available)
Texas authorizes Series LLCs, which allow one master LLC to hold multiple asset classes as separately designated series, each with statutory liability separation. Formation costs are lower than running fully separate entities, though practical limitations in federal proceedings and across state lines apply. See the Series LLC section below for Texas-specific details.
4. Tiered Holding Structure
Multiple holding LLCs organized by category (real estate, operating businesses, IP) each own a subset of lower-tier LLCs. Used by larger portfolios where clean separation by asset class matters for financing, estate planning, or future sale. Each LLC in the chain pays its own $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) annual fee in Texas.
How to Operate Multiple LLCs Under One Name
Two mechanisms let multiple LLCs present a unified public-facing brand while maintaining legal separation behind the scenes.
DBA Registration
Each Texas LLC can register a trade name (DBA) with the Secretary of State. This allows, for example, "Main Street Holdings LLC" to operate publicly as "Harbor Properties" without forming a new entity. DBA registration in Texas does not create a new legal entity and provides no additional liability protection. Use it for branding, not isolation. If you need isolation, the DBA approach is not a substitute for a separate LLC.
Centralized Management via a Holding Company
A holding company structure lets you consolidate day-to-day management, banking relationships, and vendor contracts at the holding LLC level while the individual asset-holding or operating LLCs retain their separate legal identity. The holding LLC signs contracts and manages operations; the underlying LLCs hold the assets and generate the liability walls. This approach scales more cleanly than maintaining every vendor relationship and bank account at the individual LLC level.
Our Recommendation by Portfolio Size
- One to two assets or business lines: Standalone parallel LLCs. No need for a holding company at this scale. Keep each entity properly capitalized and separately documented.
- Three to five assets: Evaluate a holding company structure. The administrative centralization benefits start outweighing the cost of the additional entity, particularly if you are seeking financing or anticipate adding more assets.
- Six or more assets: A holding company or tiered structure is strongly recommended. Managing six or more standalone entities without a parent creates compounding administrative complexity and increases the risk of compliance lapses that can threaten the liability shield.
- Series LLC consideration: Texas permits Series LLCs. For real estate investors holding multiple Texas properties, a series structure may reduce formation and ongoing costs. However, consult counsel before relying on cross-series liability isolation, given the relatively limited case law in Texas courts.
Annual Cost of Multiple LLCs in Texas
The tables below reflect the annual recurring cost of operating aTexas LLC portfolio. The primary cost driver is $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) per LLC in annual state fees, combined with registered agent service and bookkeeping. Formation fees are excluded as one-time costs.
Standalone LLC Portfolio (no holding company)
| Portfolio Size | Estimated Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| 3 LLCs | $2,250 to $5,400 per year (3 LLCs x $750 to $1,800 per LLC) |
| 5 LLCs | $3,750 to $9,000 per year (5 LLCs x $750 to $1,800 per LLC) |
| 10 LLCs | $7,500 to $18,000 per year (10 LLCs x $750 to $1,800 per LLC) |
Holding Company Structure (operating LLCs + 1 holding LLC)
| Operating LLCs | Total Entities | Estimated Annual Cost |
|---|---|---|
| 3 operating | 4 total | $3,000 to $7,200 per year (4 total LLCs: 3 property + 1 holding, each $750 to $1,800) |
| 5 operating | 6 total | $4,500 to $10,800 per year (6 total LLCs: 5 property + 1 holding, each $750 to $1,800) |
| 10 operating | 11 total | $8,250 to $19,800 per year (11 total LLCs: 10 property + 1 holding, each $750 to $1,800) |
Texas franchise tax (0.375% to 0.75% of taxable margin) may apply to individual LLCs with annualized revenue above the $2.65 million no-tax-due threshold (2026); cost tables above exclude any franchise tax obligation and assume each LLC stays at or below that threshold. Registered agent costs assume $100 to $300 per LLC per year; bookkeeping and tax preparation costs assume $600 to $1,500 per LLC per year.
How to Form Multiple LLCs in Texas
Each Texas LLC you form follows the same process. The steps below apply to every new entity in your portfolio.
- Choose a distinct legal name for each LLC. Every Texas LLC must have a name distinguishable from all other entities registered with the Secretary of State. If you are forming multiple related entities, plan your naming convention before you file.
- Designate a registered agent for each LLC. Yes - one registered agent can serve all Texas LLCs. Using a professional registered agent service reduces per-entity cost to the lower end of the $100 to $300 per LLC per year range.
- File Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State. The Texas formation fee is $300 per entity. File online at sos.texas.gov.
- Draft a separate operating agreement for each LLC. Even if the ownership of every LLC is identical, each entity needs its own operating agreement. This document defines membership, management authority, and profit allocation for that specific entity.
- Obtain a separate EIN for each LLC. The IRS treats each LLC as a distinct taxpayer. Apply free at irs.gov/ein for each entity.
- Open a dedicated bank account for each LLC. One of the most common reasons courts pierce the LLC liability shield is commingling funds between entities. Each LLC must have its own account with no personal or cross-entity transactions without proper documentation.
- Set annual compliance reminders for each Texas LLC. Each LLC must independently file its Public Information Report and pay the $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) by May 15 each year (Public Information Report filed with the TX Comptroller of Public Accounts). Missing a deadline for any one entity puts that LLC at risk of administrative dissolution by the Secretary of State.
What Managing Multiple LLCs Actually Looks Like
Forming multiple LLCs is the easy part. Keeping them compliant is where most owners run into problems. The following checklist applies to every active Texas LLC in your portfolio.
| Obligation | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Public Information Report filing | Annual | Fee: $0 (Public Information Report, no fee). Deadline: May 15 each year (Public Information Report filed with the TX Comptroller of Public Accounts). Filed with the Secretary of State. |
| Registered agent maintenance | Ongoing | Keep current Texas address on file for each LLC. Cost: $100 to $300 per LLC per year per entity. |
| Separate bank account activity | Ongoing | No commingling between LLCs or with personal funds. Each entity must transact independently. |
| Separate bookkeeping and tax filing | Annual | Each LLC files its own federal tax return (Schedule C, Form 1065, or Form 1120-S depending on elections made). |
| Operating agreement updates | As needed | Amend each LLC's operating agreement when ownership, management structure, or purpose changes. |
| Separate contracts and documentation | Ongoing | Contracts signed by each LLC must identify that specific entity. Do not mix entity names on legal documents. |
| State tax registration | At formation | Register each LLC with the TX Comptroller of Public Accounts for applicable state taxes as required. |
The Liability Firewall: How It Works and When It Fails
Each LLC creates a legal boundary between itself and every other entity you own. A creditor of LLC A generally cannot reach the assets of LLC B. This is the core reason to hold assets in separate entities rather than one large LLC. Courts call it the liability firewall.
The firewall holds only if you maintain each LLC as a genuine, separate entity. Courts apply a doctrine called "veil-piercing" to collapse the legal separation between entities when an owner treats them as one. The five conditions most commonly cited by courts to pierce the LLC veil are:
- Commingling funds. Depositing money from one LLC into another LLC's account, or into a personal account, without proper documentation.
- Failure to maintain separate records. Using the same bookkeeping file, bank statement, or general ledger for multiple entities.
- Undercapitalization. Forming an LLC to hold assets or conduct business but not actually funding it adequately to meet its foreseeable obligations.
- Failure to follow formalities. Not having an operating agreement, not documenting decisions, and not treating the entity as legally distinct from yourself.
- Using one LLC to defraud creditors of another. Shifting assets between entities to put them out of reach of a specific creditor is fraudulent transfer, not asset protection.
YOU (individual owner)
|
┌───────────────────┐
│ Holding LLC │ ← owns membership interests below
└───────────────────┘
/ | \
/ | \
LLC A LLC B LLC C
(rental) (business) (IP/brand)
Each LLC: separate bank account, EIN,
operating agreement, and annual filing.
Creditor of LLC A cannot reach LLC B or LLC C.The diagram above shows a basic holding company structure in Texas. The holding LLC owns the operating and asset-holding LLCs. The individual owner sits above the holding company, one additional layer removed from direct creditor exposure.
Series LLC in Texas
Texas enacted a two-tier series LLC framework effective June 1, 2022, aligning with concepts from the Uniform Protected Series Act. A protected series is created within the master LLC's operating agreement without a separate SOS filing, while a registered series files a Certificate of Registered Series with the Texas Secretary of State and receives its own entity identifier. Both types provide statutory liability separation, meaning debts and obligations of one series are enforceable only against the assets of that series - not against the master LLC or any other series. The 2022 amendments also created the concept of ordinary series for pre-existing arrangements formed before June 1, 2022. Practical limitations exist: Texas has limited case law testing cross-series liability isolation in contested litigation, and federal bankruptcy courts have not uniformly enforced series separation. For real estate investors holding multiple Texas properties, a series LLC can significantly reduce formation and annual compliance costs compared to fully separate LLCs, but the structure should be reviewed with counsel given the relative newness of the registered series tier and uncertainty in federal proceedings.
A Series LLC is most relevant for Texas owners who hold multiple real estate assets within the same state and want to reduce total entity count and annual compliance cost. It is less useful when assets are spread across multiple states, because other states may not recognize the liability separation between series.
Recommendation: If you are a Texas owner holding three or more similar assets in the state, a Series LLC is worth evaluating with an attorney who has direct experience with the structure. If your assets are in multiple states, a traditional holding company or standalone LLC approach is usually more reliable.
Holding Company Structure in Texas
A Texas holding company is itself an LLC registered with the Secretary of State. It owns membership interests in one or more subsidiary LLCs. The holding company adds $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) to your annual compliance cost but provides a second layer of separation between your personal assets and the operating entities.
A three-property portfolio using a holding company structure involves four Texas LLCs total. At $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) per entity per year in state fees, the annual state compliance cost is the $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) figure multiplied by four entities, plus registered agent and bookkeeping costs for each. The full estimated range is $3,000 to $7,200 per year (4 total LLCs: 3 property + 1 holding, each $750 to $1,800) per year.
Lender Considerations
Some lenders require loans to be held at the LLC level that directly owns the asset, not at the holding company level. This affects how you structure title and mortgage documentation. Before finalizing a holding company structure, confirm that your lender will underwrite the loan to an LLC subsidiary and not require the holding company to be the borrower of record.
Out-of-State Owners
If you are a non-Texas resident, you can still form and own Texas LLCs. You must designate a registered agent with a physical Texas street address for each entity. You cannot be your own registered agent if you do not have a Texas address. A professional registered agent service resolves this requirement for all entities in your portfolio at the lower end of the $100 to $300 per LLC per year per-entity range.
Tax Implications of Owning Multiple LLCs in Texas
Federal Tax Treatment
By default, a single-member LLC is treated as a disregarded entity for federal income tax purposes: the LLC's income flows through to the owner's personal return on Schedule C. A multi-member LLC defaults to partnership tax treatment, requiring a Form 1065 partnership return. Either type of LLC can elect to be taxed as an S-corporation or C-corporation by filing the appropriate IRS forms.
When you own multiple LLCs, each entity files its own federal return (or is reported on your Schedule C if it is a single-member disregarded entity). There is no automatic consolidation at the federal level simply because the same person owns multiple LLCs. If you want consolidated reporting, you must structure ownership through a C-corporation holding company, not an LLC.
Texas State Tax Treatment
Each Texas LLC is independently subject to Texas's LLC tax obligations. The Public Information Report fee of $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) applies to every active entity. The TX Comptroller of Public Accounts administers state-level tax requirements. Consult a Texas-licensed CPA before finalizing your multi-LLC structure to confirm your exposure under current Texas tax law for the number of entities and revenue levels you are projecting.
Multi-State LLC Ownership
If you own LLCs in multiple states, each LLC must comply with the laws of the state where it is formed. If a Texas LLC conducts business in another state, it may need to register as a foreign LLC in that state and pay that state's annual fees. If an LLC formed in another state conducts business in Texas, it must register as a foreign LLC with the Secretary of State and pay Texas's applicable fees.
"Doing business" is defined differently in each state. Generally, regularly selling goods or services in a state, employing people there, or holding real estate there triggers the foreign registration requirement. Owning a single rental property in a state typically counts as doing business in that state for foreign LLC registration purposes.
Multi-state portfolios can quickly accumulate significant annual compliance costs because each LLC may owe fees in its home state plus every state where it is registered as a foreign entity. Mapping out these obligations before forming entities across state lines is essential to accurate cost modeling.
When to DIY vs. When to Use an Attorney
- DIY-appropriate: Single-owner LLC for a simple business line or single rental property. No outside investors, no complex profit-sharing, no multi-state operations. You understand the operating agreement terms and can maintain the entity properly.
- Attorney-recommended: Multi-member LLCs with unequal ownership, profit-sharing arrangements, or investor capital. Any LLC that will be funded by outside equity. Multi-state portfolios. Holding company structures with four or more entities where the intercompany agreements need to be airtight to survive lender scrutiny.
- Always use an attorney for: Entities that will hold significant assets and where the liability firewall must be litigation-proof. Complex estate planning integrations. Any structure where the answer to a legal question materially changes the economics.
How LLC Attorney Helps With Multiple LLCs
LLC Attorney handles multi-entity Texas portfolios through a three-step framework:
- Structure consultation. A Business Success Advisor reviews your asset count, entity goals, and risk profile to recommend the right structure before you form anything. No retainer. No engagement letter. Included with LLC Attorney formation packages.
- Entity formation for each LLC. LLC Attorney files Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State for each entity in your portfolio, drafts a customized operating agreement, and handles EIN applications. Same-day filing available at no markup on the $300 state fee.
- Ongoing compliance management. Annual report reminders, registered agent service, and mail scanning across all entities in your portfolio from a single account. One view, all entities, no dropped deadlines.
When Multiple LLCs Do NOT Make Sense
Multiple LLCs are not the right tool for every situation. Consider whether the liability isolation benefit justifies the cost before adding entities to your portfolio.
- When the assets do not carry different liability risks. If your two business lines face identical liability exposure, separating them into two LLCs at $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) each per year may not be worth it. A single LLC with a comprehensive operating agreement and proper insurance may be sufficient.
- When you cannot maintain both entities properly. An LLC that is not properly funded, documented, and maintained is vulnerable to veil-piercing. It is better to run one LLC correctly than two LLCs poorly. If you cannot keep up with the compliance requirements for multiple entities, consolidate until you can.
- When the annual cost exceeds the risk value. At $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) per year per entity in state fees alone, plus registered agent and bookkeeping costs, you should be able to articulate a specific liability scenario the second LLC is protecting against. If you cannot, the cost may not be justified.
- When insurance is a better tool. For some liability risks, an umbrella liability policy or professional liability insurance is cheaper and more effective than a separate LLC. Consult both an insurance broker and an attorney before defaulting to entity structure as your primary risk management tool.
Compare Multi-LLC Costs in Nearby States
Annual compliance costs vary significantly by state. The table below compares Texas against two neighboring states for multi-LLC planning purposes.
| State | Annual LLC Fee | Franchise Tax | Series LLC | Formation Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Texas | $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) | None | Yes | $300 |
| Oklahoma | $25 per LLC per year (Annual Certificate filed with the Oklahoma Secretary of State) | No franchise tax - Oklahoma repealed its corporate franchise tax effective tax year 2024; the $25 Annual Certificate is the only mandatory state-level filing cost per entity | Yes - Oklahoma authorizes two-tier series LLCs under 18 O.S. § 2054.4 (protected series) and § 2054.5 (registered series, added by SB 649 in 2024) | $100 |
| Louisiana | $30 per LLC per year (Annual Report filed with the Louisiana Secretary of State) | No franchise tax - Louisiana repealed its corporation franchise tax effective January 1, 2026; no capital-based or franchise tax applies to pass-through LLCs | No - Louisiana has not enacted a series LLC statute as of 2026 | $100 |
Forming an LLC in a lower-cost state does not eliminate your Texas tax and registration obligations if the business actually operates in Texas. A Wyoming or Nevada LLC that owns Texas real estate or employs Texas workers must register as a foreign LLC in Texas and pay Texas's applicable fees. The per-state comparison above is most useful for owners who genuinely operate across state lines and are choosing where to form and domicile each entity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Texas imposes no statutory limit on how many LLCs a single person may own. Each LLC must independently satisfy Texas formation, registered agent, and annual compliance requirements.
Each Texas LLC costs $750 to $1,800 per year, combining the $0 Public Information Report fee, registered agent service ($100 to $300), and bookkeeping plus tax preparation ($600 to $1,500); Texas imposes no franchise tax on entities with annualized revenue at or below the $2.65 million no-tax-due threshold (2026), so most small LLCs carry no entity-level state tax cost.
A holding company adds one LLC to your count but centralizes management, simplifies banking, and adds an additional liability layer between your operating entities. For portfolios of three or more LLCs, the holding company structure typically becomes cost-neutral because administrative savings offset the extra entity cost. For one or two LLCs, standalone structures are usually simpler.
Texas enacted a two-tier series LLC framework effective June 1, 2022, aligning with concepts from the Uniform Protected Series Act. A protected series is created within the master LLC's operating agreement without a separate SOS filing, while a registered series files a Certificate of Registered Series with the Texas Secretary of State and receives its own entity identifier. Both types provide statutory liability separation, meaning debts and obligations of one series are enforceable only against the assets of that series - not against the master LLC or any other series. The 2022 amendments also created the concept of ordinary series for pre-existing arrangements formed before June 1, 2022. Practical limitations exist: Texas has limited case law testing cross-series liability isolation in contested litigation, and federal bankruptcy courts have not uniformly enforced series separation. For real estate investors holding multiple Texas properties, a series LLC can significantly reduce formation and annual compliance costs compared to fully separate LLCs, but the structure should be reviewed with counsel given the relative newness of the registered series tier and uncertainty in federal proceedings.
No. Yes - one registered agent can serve all Texas LLCs. Using the same professional registered agent across all entities reduces per-entity cost to the lower end of the $100 to $300 per LLC per year range.
Texas requires the Public Information Report per LLC. The deadline is May 15 each year (Public Information Report filed with the TX Comptroller of Public Accounts). Fee: $0 (Public Information Report, no fee).
Texas does not impose a general franchise tax on LLCs. The annual state compliance cost per LLC is the $0 (Public Information Report, no fee) Public Information Report, paid to the Secretary of State.
Yes. One Texas LLC may be listed as the member of another Texas LLC. This is the mechanism behind holding company structures: the holding LLC owns membership interests in one or more operating LLCs. Each LLC in the chain must independently meet Texas formation and compliance requirements.
A DBA (doing business as) lets a single LLC operate under a different trade name. It provides no additional liability protection because the same LLC entity and its assets back all DBA names. If liability isolation between business lines matters, a separate LLC is the appropriate structure. DBAs are appropriate when you simply want a different public-facing name for the same business activity.
Generally yes. A foreign LLC registered to do business in Texas must pay the same annual compliance fees and taxes as a domestically formed Texas LLC. The formation fee may differ (foreign registration vs. domestic formation), but the ongoing annual cost is equivalent.
Ready to Build Your Multi-LLC Structure in Texas?
LLC Attorney handles multi-entity Texas portfolios from initial structure consultation through formation, operating agreements, and ongoing annual compliance. Same-day filing is available at no markup on the $300 Texas formation fee. Whether you are forming your second LLC or your tenth, one account manages every entity, deadline, and registered agent requirement across your portfolio. See our full pricing for all service tiers.
