> It still doesn't stop someone from suing you personally.
It vastly reduces the expected value to them, and thus the incentive, and the expected cost (legal and liability) to you, but no, it's not an absolute shield.
> . You can try to claim "it was the business's fault" but if you're a single member LLC (with no employees) this is very difficult
Well, yes, but the problem with that isn't “single-member LLC” (for which the standard is pretty much the same as any other limited liability entity) but the “you’re” part: a key requirement of maintaining limited liability is that the entity is operated as a distinct thing from the principals. If you view yourself as not distinct from the LLC—that the LLC is something you are and not something you have or operate—that's a pretty good sign that you are thinking about it wrong from the start.
It vastly reduces the expected value to them, and thus the incentive, and the expected cost (legal and liability) to you, but no, it's not an absolute shield.
> . You can try to claim "it was the business's fault" but if you're a single member LLC (with no employees) this is very difficult
Well, yes, but the problem with that isn't “single-member LLC” (for which the standard is pretty much the same as any other limited liability entity) but the “you’re” part: a key requirement of maintaining limited liability is that the entity is operated as a distinct thing from the principals. If you view yourself as not distinct from the LLC—that the LLC is something you are and not something you have or operate—that's a pretty good sign that you are thinking about it wrong from the start.