Ling Law Group serves Hillsborough families with FLP-based estate planning to protect assets across generations and maintain family alignment.
We tailor FLP structures to fit your family dynamics, business interests, and long-term goals while staying in compliance with California law.
FLPs can help protect family wealth, simplify gifting, facilitate controlled ownership transfers, and support orderly succession while keeping assets within the family.
Ling Law Group serves the Hillsborough community with practical guidance on FLPs, asset protection, and succession planning, tailored to each family’s needs.
An FLP is a legal vehicle that allows family members to pool assets into a partnership, with a general partner managing affairs and limited partners benefiting from ownership.
Proper setup supports gifting strategies, governance, and tax planning while complying with California rules.
In an FLP, family members contribute assets to the partnership; a designated general partner runs operations while limited partners hold interests with restricted management rights.
Core elements include general and limited partners, a governing partnership agreement, asset contributions, gifting options, and ongoing governance through structured steps from design to execution.
This glossary explains essential terms used in FLP planning, including limited partner, general partner, capital accounts, and gifting strategies.
A family member who contributes assets to the FLP and holds an ownership stake with restricted management rights.
The entity or person responsible for managing the FLP, with authority over operations and decisions.
An accounting record tracking each partner’s share of the FLP’s assets and distributions.
Strategies for transferring interests to heirs, including tax considerations and valuation planning.
Explore how FLPs compare with other estate planning tools such as revocable trusts, wills, and other business structures in California.
For smaller families with straightforward assets, a simplified approach may meet goals with faster implementation.
A limited approach can reduce upfront costs and ongoing administrative burden while still achieving key aims.
When families have multiple generations, businesses, or cross-generational goals, thorough planning reduces risk and confusion.
A full service addresses tax implications, transfer rules, and regulatory requirements to keep your plan current.
A complete approach strengthens asset protection, governance clarity, and future-ready wealth transfer.
Clear rules on ownership, management, and distributions help prevent disputes and drift.
Well-defined roles and timelines support smooth wealth transfer across generations.
Gather family objectives, asset lists, and potential concerns to guide the FLP design.
Revisit the agreement after major life events to reflect changes.
FLPs provide a framework to manage family assets responsibly and prepare for smooth transitions.
A well-planned FLP can reduce family disputes and support orderly wealth transfer.
Asset ownership across generations, family businesses, gifting goals, and probate avoidance.
When a family owns a business, an FLP provides structured management and ownership transfer.
Gifting and valuation strategies help manage estate taxes and pass wealth efficiently.
An FLP separates control from ownership to help shield assets from certain claims.
We tailor FLP strategies to fit your family and goals while staying compliant with California law.
Our team focuses on clear communication, practical documents, and thoughtful support.
Committed to helping families protect wealth and plan for the future in Hillsborough.
From first contact to final documents, we guide you step by step through FLP planning and execution.
We discuss goals, assets, and family dynamics to tailor the FLP plan.
We review family objectives and compile a complete asset list.
We evaluate timing, tax considerations, and compliance requirements.
Draft FLP agreement, governance provisions, and gifting features.
We prepare the governing document outlining roles, distributions, and procedures.
We review tax implications, reporting requirements, and California compliance.
Finalize documents, sign, fund the FLP, and plan for ongoing support.
Execute agreements and contribute assets to form the FLP.
We provide periodic reviews to adjust to life changes.
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 formed to hold family assets. It typically has a general partner who manages the day-to-day operations and one or more limited partners who own interests with restricted rights. This structure can support gifting and orderly transfers over time.
Eligible partners include family members, trusts, or entities created for estate planning. The terms of ownership and governance are defined in the FLP agreement.
Tax considerations for FLPs include gift tax planning, allocation of income, and potential estate tax implications. Specific outcomes depend on asset types and timing.
Yes. FLPs enable gifting strategies, allowing owners to transfer interests to heirs while maintaining control through the general partner.
Planning time varies with complexity, but many FLP projects take weeks to a few months from initial consultation to execution.
Real estate, business interests, and family investments are commonly placed in an FLP, depending on goals and structure.
Asset protection in an FLP is careful and structured but not absolute. Proper planning and local law considerations apply.
We recommend periodic reviews, especially after major life events, to keep the FLP aligned with goals and laws.
Costs vary by scope, but typically include initial consultation, drafting, and filing/record keeping.
To determine suitability, we assess assets, goals, family dynamics, and tax considerations.