Family Limited Partnerships (FLPs) provide a practical framework for protecting assets and planning for future generations in San Bernardino and across California.
In probate and estate planning matters, FLPs can help families organize ownership, manage gifts, and maintain control while transferring wealth with care.
Using FLPs, families can safeguard assets from creditors, simplify transfers to heirs, and set up a clear structure that supports tax efficiency and long‑term goals.
Ling Law Group in San Bernardino serves clients with practical estate planning solutions, including FLP design, trust coordination, and succession planning tailored to California families.
An FLP is a structured business arrangement that combines a family partnership with limited liability features to manage and transfer wealth.
Key roles include general partners who manage the partnership and limited partners who hold interests, with careful governance and documentation.
In California estate planning, an FLP is used to consolidate family ownership, control distributions, and coordinate gifting while maintaining family governance.
Core elements include the partnership agreement, ownership interests, gift-transfer strategies, valuations, and formal records. The process involves careful planning, funding of the FLP, and ongoing compliance.
This glossary explains common terms used in FLP planning and how they apply in California contexts.
A family‑oriented entity that centralizes ownership and control, typically with general partners and limited partners to facilitate wealth transfer and management.
A reduction in the value of FLP interests for gift or estate tax purposes due to limited control and marketability.
The party or entity that manages the FLP, makes decisions, and controls distributions, typically a trusted family member or management entity.
A member who holds an ownership interest but has limited or no control over daily operations, often used to facilitate gifting and transfers.
When planning for wealth transfer, FLPs are one option alongside trusts, family LLCs, and outright gifts. Each approach has trade-offs in control, taxation, and complexity.
For families seeking straightforward ownership and limited ongoing administration, an FLP with a small number of participants can be effective.
If the transfers are regular and planned, an FLP can provide predictable gift value and administration without excessive complexity.
A full planning approach coordinates FLP design with trusts, beneficiary designations, and tax planning to avoid gaps.
A complete service ensures all agreements, funding, and reporting meet California requirements and reflect family goals.
A comprehensive plan aligns ownership, governance, gifting, and tax considerations to support long-term stability and smooth transitions.
A well-structured FLP clarifies who manages the business and how assets pass to heirs, reducing disputes and uncertainty.
By coordinating gifts and ownership, families may achieve more favorable transfer tax outcomes while maintaining control.
Define your objectives for control, gifting, and tax planning before setting up an FLP.
Prepare formal agreements, fund the FLP with assets, and maintain records to meet California requirements.
If you want orderly wealth transfer and asset protection within a family business context.
If you need governance to reduce disputes and simplify gifting to heirs.
High net worth families, closely held businesses, intergenerational gifting, and blended families often seek FLP planning.
When preserving wealth while guiding ownership changes is a priority, an FLP can help manage who has control and how assets pass.
For estates exposed to taxes, FLPs can support leverage and valuation strategies aligned with goals.
FLPs offer a framework to transfer interests to the next generation while maintaining business continuity.
We bring straightforward, results-focused planning suitable for families and business owners in the Inland Empire.
Our approach emphasizes transparent communication, tailored documents, and careful coordination with tax professionals.
We provide practical steps and clear timelines so you know what to expect.
We begin with a discovery of your goals, assess assets, draft agreements, and coordinate funding and compliance.
During the initial consultation, we review family goals, assets, and potential FLP structures.
Identify goals for control, gifting, and tax planning.
Draft a preliminary FLP agreement and plan funding.
Prepare all necessary documents and fund the FLP with assets.
Partnership agreement, operating rules, and gift documents.
Transfer assets into the FLP and record ownership.
Final review for accuracy and California compliance.
Check documents, funding, and tax implications.
Assistance with updates and annual governance.
Results-focused representation without big-firm overhead. We combine aggressive advocacy with AI and modern tools to expedite your legal issues with precision. We have closed over nine figures in litigation and transactional deals while keeping fees sensible.
Results-focused representation without big-firm overhead. We combine aggressive advocacy with AI and modern tools to expedite your legal issues with precision. We have closed over nine figures in litigation and transactional deals while keeping fees sensible.
An FLP is a partnership designed for family wealth transfer. It allows control by a general partner while gifting interests to heirs, helping coordinate ownership and distributions.
Consider an FLP if you have a closely held family business, substantial assets, or a plan for intergenerational gifting that benefits from centralized governance.
Taxes related to FLPs can affect gift and estate planning. It is important to consult with a tax professional to understand implications for your situation.
Costs vary by complexity, including planning, drafting, and filing. We provide transparent breakdowns and timelines.
Assets such as real estate, business interests, and securities can be placed into an FLP with proper valuation and documentation.
FLPs can be used in tandem with trusts to enhance control and transfer strategies; we tailor solutions to your goals.
Management and control are defined in the partnership agreement, with beneficiaries involved as allowed by the documents.
Process duration varies with scope, but clear goals and prepared records help move things efficiently.
Planned transfers can reduce disputes and provide a clear path for heirs to receive interests over time.
Prepare asset lists, current trusts, beneficiary designations, and a gifting plan to smooth the FLP setup.