How to Add a Member to an LLC in Connecticut
Complete 2026 guide to bringing in new members to your Connecticut LLC — operating agreement amendments, capital contribution structure, tax implications, and avoiding dilution disputes.
Step-by-Step: Adding a Member in Connecticut
- 1
Negotiate terms with the new member
Ownership %, capital contribution (cash/property/services), role/title, vesting schedule, voting rights, buy-sell triggers. Draft an admission agreement BEFORE they commit funds.
- 2
Get existing members' approval
Per your operating agreement. Default in Connecticut and most states: unanimous consent. Document with written resolution signed by all approving members.
- 3
Receive the capital contribution
New member transfers cash/property to the LLC. For property: document fair market value and adjust basis. For services: IRC §83 rules apply — may trigger income to new member unless structured as profit interest.
- 4
Amend the operating agreement
Reflect new member, ownership split, capital accounts, voting thresholds. All members sign. Keep signed original in permanent records.
- 5
Update capital accounts
New member's capital account = contribution. Existing members' accounts may need revaluation if contribution is at different valuation. Work with a CPA.
- 6
Update tax elections
If previously SMLLC, file Form 1065 + K-1s for the tax year of the change. If multi-member → multi-member, just update allocations. S-Corp: verify new member eligibility (US person, etc.) and amend ownership records.
- 7
Update BOI report (FinCEN)
New member with 25%+ ownership or substantial control must be reported within 30 days. Update at fincen.gov/boi.
- 8
Update state + local filings
If Connecticut annual report lists members, update it. Some states require amendment filings when members change.
- 9
Update business accounts
Bank signers (optional), payment processors, insurance, vendor contacts. New member may need to be authorized on accounts.
FAQ
Need a Connecticut operating agreement amendment?
Our free template generates the base agreement. For complex member admissions with custom vesting or special allocations, work with a Connecticut business attorney.