Pennsylvania LLC Operating Agreement

A Pennsylvania operating agreement is a legal document that outlines the rules and structure of your LLC. It serves as a binding contract between members, establishing how your LLC will handle important processes like voting, transfer of membership interest, allocation of profits and losses, mergers, and dissolution. You can use one of our attorney-drafted templates to fill out, save, and download your operating agreement for free.

An operating agreement is an internal document—meaning you don’t need to file it with the Pennsylvania Bureau of Corporations and Charitable Organizations. But your operating agreement shouldn’t be an afterthought. Since we know that creating an operating agreement for the first time can be intimidating, Northwest provides free operating agreement templates specific to Pennsylvania that have been drafted by an attorney and can be customized to fit your LLC’s requirements.

What is included in a Pennsylvania operating agreement?

Your operating agreement is the blueprint for how your Pennsylvania LLC will function internally. You’re allowed to cover pretty much anything in your operating agreement, as long as it complies with Pennsylvania law. But you should include these key topics:

What information do I need to use Northwest’s Free Pennsylvania LLC operating agreement?

Want to focus on your business and leave the legal hullabaloo to us? Our lawyers drafted a comprehensive operating agreement you can use for free. You can even fill it out on this page, save it in a free account for later, and download a completed draft to sign.

In order to fill out our free operating agreement template, you’ll need your:

Business name

This must be your business’ legal entity name, or the name you put on your LLC Articles of Organization.

Initial contributions

Did an LLC member contribute $500? $5k? A storefront? Put that here.

Amount of pages

You’ll just write in 16 here since our version has a set amount of pages.

Members' names

Remember, this is an internal document, so you won’t have to submit these names to the state just because they’re on here. However, you might need to add these people to your BOI Report.

Initial contribution percentages, descriptions, and dollar amounts

Include any initial contributions, even if it’s only a small percentage.

Bank Account information (Account #, Holder, Bank Name, Bank Address)

While we recommend having a business bank account, some banks like to actually see the operating agreement before you open the account. If that’s the case, you can leave this blank for now.

Business' Principal Address

This is the place your business operates from.

Date of Initial Meeting

You can add this in later if you aren’t sure when your meeting will be held.

Signatures of LLC members

There’s a few different spots where you’ll need to add at least one members’ signature. These are on pages 13, 14, 15, and 16 on our template.

Why should a Pennsylvania LLC have an operating agreement?

A Pennsylvania LLC should have an operating agreement because a company cannot act for itself. In order to operate, LLCs require real humans (and other entities) to carry out company operations.

Though it’s not required by Pennsylvania law, any good lawyer will recommend having a written operating agreement for your LLC.

1. Your operating agreement proves you own your LLC.

Pennsylvania doesn’t require you to list members’ names or addresses on the Certificate of Organization. This is great for privacy but makes it tricky to prove who owns your LLC with the Certificate of Organization alone. Most banks require you to show a written operating agreement when you open company bank account, since this document has all your members’ names and addresses listed.

2. An operating agreement can help reinforce your limited liability status.

To benefit from limited liability protection, you must be able to prove that your LLC is a legally separate entity from the people who own it. This requires you to take certain steps like keeping business and personal spending separate. Another way to demonstrate that your LLC is a separate entity is by following the rules and procedures set out in your operating agreement. If you ever face a lawsuit, an operating agreement will be a huge asset.

3. An operating agreement can help prevent misunderstandings.

When you start a company with other people, you’re not always going to see eye-to-eye. Since your operating agreement is a contract you’ve all agreed to and addresses how you’ll handle a range of important situations, it can help you resolve conflict early on.

4. An operating agreement can override Pennsylvania’s default laws.

If your LLC doesn’t have an operating agreement, it will be governed by Pennsylvania’s default LLC laws. These laws might not meet the needs of your business. Adopting a customized operating agreement lets you override these default laws and run your business on your own terms.

Pennsylvania Case Law

We asked our lawyers for an example of how an operating agreement can make or break your LLC. Here’s what they said.*

“Consider the case of Staiger v Holohan, where the failure to actually adopt and maintain a clear and understandable operating agreement led to disputes among the members resulting in extensive and expensive litigation. The Staiger case is also a prime example of why it is important to not have equal 50-50 split ownership, as it can result in a ‘deadlock’ of LLC operations or management. In those circumstances, valuable resources will inevitably be lost as a direct result of a disagreement between the members and their failure to foresee, prepare for, and memorialize the process to resolving the disagreement without hindering LLC operations or destroying the relationship of the members.

“Such a situation can be avoided if the members of the LLC had taken the time to memorialize and distill their understanding into a clear and understandable operating agreement.”

Pennsylvania Operating Agreement Template

Our LLC operating agreements are written by an attorney and work for a range of situations. Find the one that best suits your LLC below.