Family Limited Partnerships (FLPs) are a practical estate planning tool that helps families protect assets, plan for succession, and minimize taxes while keeping control within the family.
This overview for Santa Ynez clients explains how FLPs work, when they may help, and how Ling Law Group guides families through the planning process.
FLPs can reduce gift and estate tax exposure, preserve family control, and simplify ongoing management of real estate and family-owned assets.
Ling Law Group serves Santa Ynez and across California with clear, practical guidance on FLPs and related planning tools. Our team focuses on tailored strategies, open communication, and careful drafting to meet your goals.
An FLP is a private partnership where family members are partners, with limited partners and a general partner who manages the assets placed in the partnership.
These arrangements help coordinate asset ownership, control, and gifting while providing a framework for orderly succession among heirs.
In an FLP, parents contribute assets to a limited partnership; limited partners hold equity but have limited involvement in day-to-day management, while the general partner runs the partnership and makes strategic decisions. Family members may transfer interests gradually, balancing control with wealth transfer goals.
Core components include a formal partnership agreement, a designated general partner, multiple limited partners, scheduled gift transfers, partnership tax allocations, and a plan for asset re-titling and governance.
Definitions of common terms used in FLP planning.
A legal arrangement in which investors (limited partners) contribute assets or capital but have limited involvement in day-to-day management; a general partner runs the partnership.
A family-centered form of a limited partnership used to centralize ownership, manage gifting, and coordinate asset transfers while preserving family governance.
The person or entity responsible for managing the FLP and its assets in accordance with the partnership agreement.
Adjustments used for gifts and estate planning that reflect lack of marketability, minority interest, and control features in transferred partnership interests.
Other approaches include trusts, gifting programs, and deeds and wills; FLPs sit alongside these tools to address control, taxes, and succession while accommodating family dynamics.
In small or straightforward family holdings, an FLP can offer tax efficiency and simpler governance without adding unnecessary complexity.
An FLP can help separate ownership and provide a degree of privacy while coordinating transfers among generations.
Families have unique assets and goals; a tailored plan ensures all members and properties are addressed.
Regular reviews keep the plan aligned with changes in family dynamics and tax rules.
A complete plan aligns gifting, ownership, and governance to reduce risk and simplify administration.
Structured gifting and clear rules help families transfer wealth over time while preserving control.
Defined roles and processes reduce disputes and ensure consistent management across generations.
Begin conversations with family members and collect asset details to build a realistic FLP plan.
Schedule periodic reviews to reflect life changes, asset growth, and tax updates.
An FLP can offer control over asset distribution while enabling orderly wealth transfer across generations.
It can provide favorable gift and estate tax planning when aligned with your overall strategy and family goals.
You may consider an FLP when families own real estate, farms, or closely held businesses and want to coordinate ownership and succession while preserving family governance.
Bringing multiple assets under one family partnership can simplify ownership and transfer processes.
Structured gifts over time help manage gift tax exposure and transfer timing.
An FLP can provide a layer of protection and privacy for family assets.
We provide practical guidance, clear drafting, and responsive service focused on your family’s goals in California.
Our approach emphasizes transparent communication and careful alignment with your timeline and asset mix.
Contact us to discuss your FLP objectives and how we can help.
We begin with an initial consultation to understand your assets and goals, followed by a tailored FLP plan, drafting, and coordination with your tax advisor.
We assess asset holdings, family dynamics, and tax considerations to shape a customized FLP strategy.
You provide an inventory of assets and desired outcomes to guide the plan.
We present a clear outline of proposed steps, timelines, and responsible parties.
Draft documents are prepared and reviewed with you and your advisors to ensure alignment.
Partnership agreement, gifting schedules, and plan documents are prepared.
We coordinate with your tax advisor and estate planner to ensure consistency.
We finalize the FLP and set governance, ownership, and ongoing review processes.
Signing and funding of the FLP as part of the estate plan.
Establish governance routines and periodic reviews for updates.
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 private partnership that centralizes ownership and management of family assets. It can facilitate orderly wealth transfer and make gifting and succession more predictable.
Anyone with real estate, a family business, or significant assets intended for future generations may benefit. The details depend on asset mix and goals.
Tax savings may be possible through valuation discounts and gifting strategies. However, tax laws are complex, and results vary by situation.
Valuation of gifts is based on ownership interest, marketability, and control features. We’ll explain the methods used in your plan.
Typical assets include real estate, businesses, and investment portfolios. We coordinate with your advisers to structure transfers.
The general partner manages the FLP; limited partners hold interests but have limited authority. The agreement defines roles and decision rights.
Planning timelines vary; a simple FLP can take weeks, while more complex setups may take months.
FLP ownership can offer privacy, but some disclosures may be required for tax or regulatory reasons.
Trusts and FLPs can complement each other; we assess if a combination best fits your goals.
Maintenance includes regular reviews, updating documents, tracking asset values, and staying aligned with tax laws.