If you're forming a Wyoming LLC for asset protection, you've probably heard that Wyoming has the strongest charging order laws in America. But what does that actually mean? And how does a well-drafted operating agreement turn a charging order from a creditor's tool into a creditor's nightmare?
This article breaks down how Wyoming's charging order protection works, why attorneys across the country recommend it, and how the "phantom income" strategy in your operating agreement can force a creditor to pay taxes on money they never receive.
What Is a Charging Order?
A charging order is a court order that gives a creditor a lien on a debtor's interest in an LLC. Think of it as a claim on future distributions — if and when the LLC decides to pay its members, the creditor gets a portion of the debtor's share.
The critical distinction: a charging order does not give the creditor ownership of the LLC, management control, voting rights, or the ability to seize LLC assets. The creditor cannot force the LLC to sell property, close accounts, or make distributions. They can only wait.
Why Wyoming's Charging Order Is Different
In most states, a charging order is one of several remedies a creditor can pursue. Courts in some states can order foreclosure on a member's interest, force a sale, or grant the creditor other equitable remedies.
Wyoming took a different approach. Under Wyoming's LLC Act, the charging order is the exclusive remedy available to a judgment creditor. No foreclosure. No forced transfer. No court-ordered dissolution. The creditor's only option is to sit and wait for voluntary distributions that may never come.
Wyoming statute limits creditors to a charging order as the sole and exclusive remedy against a member's interest in an LLC. Other remedies — including foreclosure and court orders for directions, accounts, and inquiries — are expressly not available. — Wyoming Limited Liability Company Act, W.S. 17-29-503
Single-Member LLCs Are Protected Too
Here's where Wyoming truly stands alone. In states like California, Florida, and others, courts have ruled that charging order protection does not extend to single-member LLCs. The logic: since there's only one member, there's no "innocent" co-owner to protect, so the court can order a forced transfer of the entire LLC interest.
Wyoming explicitly extends charging order protection to single-member LLCs. If you're a solo business owner or a real estate investor holding properties in individual LLCs, this is significant. Your assets receive the same protection whether you have one member or ten.
The Phantom Income Strategy: Turning the Tables on Creditors
This is where the operating agreement becomes your most powerful asset protection tool.
An LLC is a pass-through entity for federal tax purposes. That means the LLC's income flows through to the members' personal tax returns, whether or not the income is actually distributed as cash. The IRS allocates taxable income based on membership interest, not distributions received.
Here's what that means for a creditor holding a charging order:
How It Works
- Creditor obtains a charging order against the debtor's LLC interest.
- The LLC generates income through its normal business operations.
- The manager elects not to distribute cash to members (as permitted by the operating agreement).
- The IRS allocates the creditor's share of taxable income to the creditor via a K-1, even though no cash was distributed.
- The creditor owes income tax on money they never received.
This is called "phantom income" — taxable income without corresponding cash. The creditor ends up in the bizarre position of paying taxes on the very assets they're trying to seize, while receiving nothing.
Under IRS Revenue Ruling 77-137, the assignee of an LLC interest — including a charging order holder — may be allocated the debtor's share of LLC income, even if no distributions of cash are made. This creates a tax obligation without any corresponding economic benefit to the creditor. — IRS Revenue Ruling 77-137; widely cited by asset protection attorneys
Why This Deters Creditors
The phantom income strategy is not just a theoretical concept — it's a practical deterrent that changes the economics of litigation. Consider a creditor who obtains a charging order against a member's 50% interest in an LLC that earns $200,000 per year:
- The creditor is allocated $100,000 in taxable income.
- At a 37% federal rate, the creditor owes approximately $37,000 in federal income tax.
- The creditor receives $0 in actual cash distributions.
- The creditor is now paying to hold the charging order, not profiting from it.
As attorney Clint Coons of Anderson Advisors has explained in his educational materials on asset protection, this dynamic can push creditors into higher tax brackets and sometimes force them to pay more in taxes annually than the original judgment was worth. At that point, most creditors negotiate a settlement at a significant discount — or walk away entirely.
What Your Operating Agreement Must Include
The phantom income strategy only works if your operating agreement is properly drafted. A generic template downloaded from the internet won't include these provisions. Here's what matters:
1. Manager-Managed Structure
The LLC must be manager-managed, not member-managed. This gives the manager sole authority over distributions. A member-managed LLC may not withstand a court challenge because the debtor-member could theoretically force distributions to themselves.
2. Discretionary Distributions
The operating agreement should explicitly state that distributions are made at the sole discretion of the manager and are never mandatory. Language like: "Distributions shall be made solely at the discretion of the Manager and shall not be mandatory under any circumstances."
3. No Obligation to Distribute for Taxes
Many standard operating agreements include a provision requiring the LLC to distribute enough cash for members to pay their tax obligations. Your asset-protection operating agreement should not include this provision. If the LLC is required to distribute for taxes, the creditor receives cash — defeating the entire strategy.
4. Charging Order as Exclusive Remedy
While Wyoming statute already provides this, your operating agreement should restate it explicitly. This reinforces the protection and makes it clear to any court reviewing the agreement.
5. Transfer Restrictions
The agreement should restrict the transfer of membership interests without unanimous consent of all managers. This is designed to make it more difficult for a creditor to argue they've acquired a transferable interest.
Why This Matters for Your Wyoming LLC
Your Articles of Organization get filed with the state — they're a one-page formality. Your operating agreement is the document that actually protects your business. A Wyoming-specific operating agreement with charging order provisions, discretionary distribution language, and manager-managed structure is worth more than any formation package that doesn't include one. This is exactly what our Professional plan includes — not a cookie-cutter template, but a Wyoming-specific operating agreement with these asset protection provisions built in.
What Charging Orders Don't Protect Against
It's important to understand the limits of charging order protection. No asset protection strategy is bulletproof, and anyone who tells you otherwise isn't being straight with you.
- Inside claims: Charging order protection shields against outside claims (personal lawsuits against the member). It does not protect against inside claims — lawsuits against the LLC itself for its own actions.
- Fraudulent transfers: If you transfer assets into an LLC after a lawsuit is filed or a judgment is entered, a court can void the transfer as fraudulent.
- Federal claims: The IRS can seize LLC interests to satisfy federal tax liens, regardless of state charging order laws.
- Other state courts: If you're sued in California, that court applies California's creditor remedies — not Wyoming's. Wyoming's charging order protection is strongest when the LLC's assets and operations are connected to Wyoming.
The bottom line: Wyoming's charging order protection is a powerful tool, but it works best as part of a comprehensive plan. It's not a substitute for insurance, proper business practices, or legal counsel.
Need a Wyoming Operating Agreement With These Provisions?
Our Professional plan includes a Wyoming-specific operating agreement with charging order protection, discretionary distribution language, and manager-managed structure — not a generic template.
Get the Professional Plan — $279Sources & Further Reading
- Wyoming Limited Liability Company Act — Wyoming Secretary of State
- How Investors Protect Assets from Charging Orders — Anderson Advisors
- 6 Powerful Benefits of a Wyoming LLC — Anderson Advisors
- LLC Asset Protection Benefits — Anderson Advisors
- Wyoming LLC Asset Protection — Wyoming LLC Attorney
- New Wyoming LLC Law: Charging Order Protection — Wyoming Company