It’s one of the most common questions sophisticated Orange County owners ask: should I hold my rental in an LLC? The internet’s answer is usually a confident “yes!” — often from sites that happen to sell LLC formation. The real answer is “it depends,” and in California the math is more nuanced than most owners realize, because the state makes LLCs comparatively expensive and the transfer can carry tax and financing traps. Here’s an honest look at what an LLC actually does for a California rental in 2026 — the genuine benefits, the real costs, and the situations where it’s worth it versus when it isn’t.
This article is general information, not legal or tax advice. Entity and tax decisions are highly fact-specific. Before you form an LLC or transfer a property, talk to a California real estate attorney and a CPA — the wrong move here can trigger taxes or call a loan due.

What an LLC does — and doesn’t — protect

The main reason to hold a rental in an LLC is liability protection. If a tenant or visitor is injured and sues over something tied to the property, a properly maintained LLC can help shield your personal assets (your home, savings, other property) by keeping the liability inside the entity. Two big caveats:
  • It only works if you treat the LLC as a real, separate entity — its own bank account, no commingling of personal and rental funds, proper records, leases in the LLC’s name. If you don’t, a court can “pierce the corporate veil” and the protection evaporates.
  • It doesn’t replace insurance. A solid landlord policy plus an umbrella liability policy covers many of the same risks, often more cheaply and simply. For a lot of single-property owners, good insurance does most of the practical work an LLC would — which is why this is a real cost-benefit decision, not an automatic yes.

The California cost problem (this is the catch)

California is one of the more expensive states to run an LLC, and this is where the “just put it in an LLC” advice falls apart for smaller portfolios:
  • $800 minimum annual franchise tax — every LLC pays this to the Franchise Tax Board every year, regardless of income, for as long as the LLC exists.
  • An additional gross-receipts fee kicks in at higher revenue.
California-source gross receipts 2026 LLC fee (≈)
Under $250,000 $0 (just the $800 minimum)
$250,000 – $499,999 $900
$500,000 – $999,999 $2,500
$1,000,000 – $4,999,999 $6,000
$5,000,000+ $11,790
For a typical single rental, gross rent is under $250k, so you’d usually owe just the $800/year — but that’s $800 of pure overhead, every year, that a directly-held property doesn’t cost. For an owner with one modest rental, the protection may not justify the standing expense; for an owner with several higher-value coastal properties, the calculus changes.

Watch out: property-tax reassessment (Prop 13)

This is the trap that costs owners the most. Under California Revenue & Taxation Code §62(a)(2), transferring a property into an LLC does not trigger reassessment if the owners keep identical proportional interests before and after.
  • ✅ Spouses who own a home 50/50 transfer it to an LLC they own 50/50 → no reassessment.
  • ❌ One spouse who owns the property 100% transfers it to an LLC owned 50/50 by both → reassessment, even though the property “stayed in the family.”
Get the proportions wrong and you can lose your Prop 13 basis and face a much higher tax bill. (Later transfers of LLC interests can also trigger reassessment under separate change-of-ownership rules.) This is exactly why you involve a CPA/attorney before transferring title — not after.

Your mortgage: the due-on-sale clause

If the property has a loan, transferring title into an LLC can technically trigger the “due-on-sale” clause — giving the lender the right to call the entire balance due. In practice many lenders don’t act on it, but the risk is real, and the federal exemptions that protect transfers into a living trust don’t cleanly cover LLCs. On top of that, getting a new mortgage in an LLC’s name usually means commercial loan terms — higher rates, bigger down payments. Check your loan documents and talk to your lender before you move title.

The privacy angle (modest, not absolute)

An LLC can keep your name off the public title record, which some owners value. But it’s not true anonymity: California requires a Statement of Information that discloses managers/members, and federal beneficial-ownership reporting rules add further disclosure. Treat privacy as a minor perk, not the main reason.

So — when does an LLC make sense?

It leans worth it when you have multiple and/or high-value properties, meaningful personal assets to protect, partners or investors involved, and the rents to comfortably absorb the annual cost. It leans not worth it when you have a single modest rental, a mortgage with due-on-sale exposure, and good insurance already in place — where the $800/year and the transfer risks may outweigh a benefit that solid coverage largely provides anyway. There’s no universal answer. The right move depends on your portfolio size, property values, financing, and risk tolerance — which is precisely the conversation to have with your CPA and attorney.

Managing an LLC-held rental (we do this all the time)

Whatever you decide on the entity, day-to-day management doesn’t change much — and at Bear we manage plenty of properties held in LLCs and family trusts. Rent flows to the entity, statements and year-end tax documents are prepared for the owning entity, and the lease is written in the correct name. If you’re holding (or planning to hold) Orange County rentals in an LLC, we slot into that cleanly. You can see how our reporting and owner care works on our services and pricing page, and meet the person who’ll handle your portfolio on the about Adam page.
Start with the numbers on the property itself. Entity structure is one layer; the asset underneath it still has to perform. For a clear read on what your Orange County property should rent for — the foundation of any hold-it-in-an-LLC decision — request a free rental analysis, reviewed personally by Adam within 24 hours, and backed by our six written guarantees. — Adam Tomalas, CA DRE #02222825

Frequently asked questions

It depends on your situation. An LLC can protect personal assets from property-related lawsuits, but California charges an $800 minimum annual franchise tax (plus higher fees on large revenue), and transferring title can risk property-tax reassessment and trigger a mortgage’s due-on-sale clause. It tends to make more sense for owners with multiple or high-value properties than for a single modest rental with good insurance. Consult a CPA and attorney.

Every California LLC pays an $800 minimum annual franchise tax regardless of income. An additional graduated fee applies on California-source gross receipts: roughly $900 at $250k–$499k, $2,500 at $500k–$999k, $6,000 at $1M–$4.99M, and $11,790 at $5M+. Most single rentals fall under the $250k threshold and owe just the $800.

Not if the owners keep identical proportional interests before and after the transfer (R&T Code §62(a)(2)). If the ownership percentages change, it can trigger reassessment and the loss of your Prop 13 basis. Always confirm with a California attorney/CPA before transferring title.

Yes, potentially. Transferring a mortgaged property to an LLC can give the lender the right to call the loan due under the due-on-sale clause. Lenders don’t always act on it, but the risk is real and the protections that cover living-trust transfers don’t cleanly apply to LLCs. Review your loan and talk to your lender first.

Yes. Bear manages many Orange County rentals held in LLCs and family trusts — rent flows to the entity, statements and tax documents are prepared for the owning entity, and leases are written in the correct name.


Disclaimer: This article is general information for Orange County property owners and is not legal or tax advice. Entity selection, property transfers, and their tax consequences are highly fact-specific and the rules change. Consult a licensed California real estate attorney and a qualified CPA before forming an LLC or transferring title to a property. Questions? Call us at (949) 514-8822.