Apex Development Group

LLC vs. LP: Choosing the Optimal Real Estate Joint Venture Structure for Passive Capital

Real Estate Joint Venture Structure

LLC vs. LP: Choosing the Optimal Real Estate Joint Venture Structure for Passive Capital

Blog · January 8, 2026

When participating in a real estate joint venture, the legal structure used to organise a project plays an important role in how responsibilities, liability, and reporting are defined. Two of the most commonly used structures in residential development joint ventures are the Limited Liability Company (LLC) and the Limited Partnership (LP).

While both structures are widely used for individual real estate projects, they differ in how management responsibility is allocated and how participant roles are defined. This article provides a high-level overview of LLC and LP structures in the context of passive participation in real estate joint ventures.

Understanding LLC Structures in Real Estate Joint Ventures

A Limited Liability Company (LLC) is a flexible legal entity commonly used to hold a single real estate project. In a joint venture context, an LLC allows multiple parties to participate in a defined development while limiting personal liability.

Key characteristics of LLC-based joint ventures include:

Liability Protection
Participants are generally protected from personal liability beyond their contribution to the project entity.

Pass-Through Tax Treatment
LLCs are typically structured so that income and expenses flow through to members for tax reporting purposes, avoiding entity-level taxation.

Defined Management Structure
Most real estate joint venture LLCs are manager-managed, meaning operational decisions are handled by the appointed operator, while participants remain passive and informed through structured reporting.

This structure is often used when a project requires operational flexibility while maintaining clear separation between execution and participation.

Understanding LP Structures in Real Estate Joint Ventures

A Limited Partnership (LP) is another common structure for real estate projects, particularly where roles are clearly divided between an operating partner and passive participants.

An LP consists of:

General Partner (GP)
The GP is responsible for managing the project, overseeing development, construction, and execution.

Limited Partners (LPs)
Limited partners participate economically in the project but do not take part in day-to-day management. Their liability is typically limited to their contribution.

LP structures are frequently used when participants prefer a clearly defined, hands-off role with management authority concentrated at the operator level.

Comparing LLC and LP Structures: Roles and Participation

Both LLCs and LPs support passive participation, but they differ in how management authority is formalised.

LLC Structures

In a manager-managed LLC:

  • Operational control rests with the designated manager
  • Participants remain passive
  • Reporting and updates are provided according to agreed schedules

This structure allows flexibility in how governance is documented while maintaining a clear operational hierarchy.

LP Structures

In an LP:

  • The general partner retains full management authority
  • Limited partners do not participate in decisions
  • Participant involvement is limited to information rights and reporting

This structure provides clarity and simplicity where operational responsibility is fully centralised.

Liability Considerations

Both structures are designed to limit participant exposure.

  • LLCs generally provide liability protection to all members.
  • LPs provide liability protection to limited partners, while the general partner assumes operational responsibility.

The appropriate structure depends on how roles, responsibilities, and risk allocation are defined at the project level.

Tax Treatment Overview

Both LLCs and LPs are commonly structured as pass-through entities for tax purposes.

  • LLCs may offer flexibility in how tax treatment is elected, depending on jurisdiction and project design.
  • LPs are typically taxed as partnerships, with income and expenses allocated according to the partnership agreement.

Tax treatment varies by jurisdiction and individual circumstances and should be reviewed with professional advisors.

Choosing the Right Structure for a Joint Venture

There is no universally “better” structure between an LLC and an LP. Each serves a specific purpose depending on:

  • Project requirements
  • Management responsibilities
  • Participant preferences for structure and clarity

What matters most is that the structure supports clear execution, defined timelines, transparent reporting, and alignment between the operator and participants.

About Apex Joint Ventures

Apex Joint Ventures structures individual residential development projects using legal frameworks that support passive participation, operational clarity, and transparency. All projects are managed end-to-end by Apex’s in-house development and construction teams, with participants receiving structured updates throughout the project lifecycle.

To learn more about how joint venture structures are used within Apex projects, additional informational resources are available through the Apex team.

Disclaimer

For informational purposes only and not an offer or solicitation of securities.

Reset password

Enter your email address and we will send you a link to change your password.

Get started with your account

to save your favourite homes and more

Sign up with email

Get started with your account

to save your favourite homes and more

By clicking the «SIGN UP» button you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
Powered by Estatik