Can I Lose My House If My LLC Gets Sued?

Your house is protected from an LLC lawsuit only if the LLC’s veil holds. Here’s what determines whether a court can reach your personal assets — and what you can do now to prevent it.

Minutes.llc · May 12, 2026 · 10 min read
Can I Lose My House If My LLC Gets Sued?

If your LLC maintains its liability shield, no — creditors of the LLC can only reach LLC assets, not your personal property. But if a court pierces the LLC’s veil, your personal assets — including your home — become fair game. Whether the veil holds depends almost entirely on whether you maintained the LLC as a genuinely separate entity with its own governance records, separate finances, and documented decision-making process.

This is the question that keeps LLC owners up at night. You formed the LLC specifically to protect your personal assets. You were told that a lawsuit against your business could not reach your home, your savings, your personal bank account. That is the whole point of limited liability.

And it is true — as long as the LLC’s liability shield holds. The problem is that the shield is not automatic. It is conditional. And the conditions are things most LLC owners never do.

How the LLC Shield Is Supposed to Work

An LLC is a separate legal entity. It has its own legal identity, its own assets, its own debts. When the LLC is sued, the lawsuit targets the LLC — not you. A judgment against the LLC can reach LLC bank accounts, LLC property, and LLC assets. It cannot, by default, reach your personal bank accounts, your personal investments, your car, or your home.

This is the limited liability in “Limited Liability Company.” The liability of the members is limited to their investment in the LLC. Your personal assets are on the other side of a legal wall.

The wall holds — until someone proves it should not.

When the Shield Fails: Veil Piercing

Veil piercing is the legal mechanism by which a court decides that the LLC’s separate identity is a fiction and holds the members personally liable for the LLC’s debts. When the veil is pierced, the wall between business and personal disappears. The LLC’s creditors become your creditors. And your home is on the table.

Courts do not pierce the veil lightly. But they do it more often than most owners realize. The factors they examine are remarkably consistent across states:

Risk

A creditor’s attorney does not need to prove all of these factors. They need enough of them to convince a judge that the LLC was not a real, separate entity. For single-member LLCs, the bar is even lower — there is only one person on both sides of the wall, and the court is already skeptical.

The Homestead Exemption: Your Last Line of Defense

Even if the veil is pierced, your home may have partial protection through your state’s homestead exemption. This is a state law that shields a portion (or all) of your primary residence from creditor claims.

But homestead exemptions vary wildly. Texas and Florida offer unlimited homestead exemptions — your primary residence is protected regardless of value. Some states cap the exemption at specific dollar amounts, and a few states offer very limited protection — as low as $5,000 to $30,000 in equity. The homestead exemption is a safety net, not a strategy. Relying on it means you have already lost the veil.

The homestead exemption protects your house. It does not protect your savings, investment accounts, vehicles, rental properties, or any other personal assets. If the veil is pierced, everything except your homestead-protected equity is exposed.

Other Ways Your House Ends Up at Risk

Veil piercing is not the only path to personal liability. Your home can also be at risk if you personally guaranteed an LLC debt (a commercial lease, a bank loan, an equipment financing agreement). Personal guarantees bypass the LLC entirely — you agreed to be personally liable, so the LLC’s existence is irrelevant. If you committed fraud, tort, or illegal acts through the LLC, personal liability attaches regardless of the LLC’s status. Or if you are in a community property state and LLC debts were incurred during the marriage, the analysis gets more complex — especially for spousal LLCs.

Keep Your LLC’s Shield Intact

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What You Can Do Right Now

If you are reading this because you are worried about losing your house in a lawsuit, here is the practical checklist. These are the actions that keep the LLC’s liability shield in place — so the question of whether creditors can reach your home never arises.

If you are unsure where your LLC stands — especially if your operating agreement has gone untouched for yearsCheckMy.llc can help you evaluate your operating agreement and identify gaps.

How Minutes.llc Keeps the Wall Standing

Minutes.llc generates the governance records that prove your LLC is a real, separate entity — not a fiction. Annual written consents, banking resolutions, distribution authorizations, contract approvals. Every document includes authority statements, separate-existence clauses, and ratification language. SHA-256 hash verification. Immutable audit trail.

Your LLC was formed to protect your house, your savings, and your family’s financial security. Minutes.llc helps you maintain the governance trail that makes that protection hold up when it matters — for the full walkthrough, see what it actually takes to keep an LLC’s protection.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I lose my house if my LLC gets sued?

Generally no — if the LLC’s liability shield is intact. But if a court pierces the veil, creditors can pursue personal assets including your home, subject to state homestead exemptions.

What is veil piercing and how does it affect my home?

Veil piercing allows courts to disregard the LLC’s separate status and hold members personally liable. When pierced, LLC debts become your debts and creditors can pursue personal assets. Courts pierce the veil when the owner failed to maintain governance records, commingled funds, or used the LLC as an alter ego.

Does a homestead exemption protect my house from LLC lawsuits?

Homestead exemptions provide a secondary layer of protection but vary dramatically by state. Texas and Florida offer unlimited protection. Other states cap it as low as $5,000 in equity. The primary protection is maintaining the LLC’s veil so creditors never reach personal assets at all.

How do I protect my house from LLC lawsuits?

Maintain the LLC as a genuinely separate entity: separate bank accounts, documented distributions, annual written consents, formal resolutions for major decisions. Carry adequate insurance and avoid personal guarantees when possible.

Does Minutes.llc provide legal advice?

No. Minutes.llc is a document automation platform. It generates governance documents using pre-approved, versioned legal language blocks. Consult a licensed attorney for legal questions specific to your situation.

Minutes.llc is a document automation platform. It is not a law firm, does not provide legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by using this service. Consult a licensed attorney for legal questions specific to your situation.

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