Your trading account may be generating significant profits, but there is one question every trader should ask:
What happens if someone sues you tomorrow?
Most traders spend countless hours developing strategies, analyzing charts, and managing risk inside their portfolios. Yet many overlook one of the biggest threats to their wealth: personal liability.
A car accident. A personal lawsuit. A creditor dispute. A business-related claim.
Any one of these events could put a brokerage account held in your personal name at risk.
The reality is simple. If a creditor obtains a judgment against you, they may be able to garnish your brokerage account and force the liquidation of your investments. An unrelated legal issue could wipe out years of successful trading.
That’s why protecting your trading account from creditors should be part of every serious investor’s strategy. The goal isn’t just to grow your portfolio. It’s to create asset protection for traders that helps protect your wealth from lawsuits, creditors, and unexpected claims.
Fortunately, there are proven strategies for asset protection for brokerage accounts that can help with liability coverage. With the right structure, you can focus on growing your account while protecting trading profits from lawsuits and reducing your exposure to personal creditors. Watch the video for the strategy and examples here.
Key Takeaways
- A brokerage account held in your personal name may be vulnerable to creditor claims and lawsuits.
- Many traders use a Wyoming LLC to create a layer of trading account asset protection.
- Properly structured charging order protection may prevent creditors from taking control of the brokerage account.
- A disregarded LLC can protect brokerage accounts from creditors and lawsuits without creating significant tax complexity.
- Traders who need real-time market data may be able to combine a trust and LLC structure to avoid certain brokerage fees while maintaining protection.
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Why Are Brokerage Accounts Vulnerable to Lawsuits?
Many investors assume that because their brokerage account is held at a major financial institution, it is automatically protected.
It isn’t.
When you hold a trading account in your personal name, creditors can often identify the account during the collection process. If they obtain a judgment against you, they may seek to garnish the account.
In many cases, the brokerage firm must comply with a valid court order.
As a result, the broker may liquidate positions and transfer proceeds to satisfy the judgment.
How Do You Protect a Trading Account From Creditors?
One of the most effective brokerage account asset protection strategies involves moving ownership of the account into a properly structured Limited Liability Company (LLC).
By placing the brokerage account inside an LLC, you shift ownership from yourself to the entity.
This creates an additional layer of protection for your personal assets.
However, not all business structures (sole proprietorships, LLCs, corporations) provide the same level of protection, so the type of legal entity you use matters.
Why Do Many Traders Use a Wyoming LLC?
When discussing protecting your trading account from civil lawsuits and creditors, I frequently recommend looking at Wyoming.
Wyoming state law offers some of the strongest charging order protections for business owners.
Under this structure, the LLC owns the brokerage account, and you own the LLC.
A basic asset protection structure may look like this:
You
↓
Wyoming LLC
↓
Brokerage Account
That distinction becomes extremely important if someone obtains a judgment against you personally.
Instead of gaining access to the brokerage account itself, the creditor faces significant limitations.
What Is Charging Order Protection?
A charging order is a legal remedy that may allow a creditor to receive distributions from an LLC.
However, the creditor does not automatically gain:
- Ownership of the LLC
- Management rights
- Control of the brokerage account
- Authority to liquidate investments
In other words, the creditor cannot simply take over your investment portfolio.
The LLC continues to own the account and conduct business as usual.
The result is a structure designed to help protect trading accounts from creditors while allowing you to continue investing and trading normally.

Does an LLC Change How Your Trading Income Is Taxed?
One of the biggest misconceptions about asset protection for stock traders is that adding an LLC automatically creates a complicated tax situation.
In many cases, it does not.
If your goal is to protect assets from creditors and threats rather than operating a trading business, a disregarded LLC is often the preferred choice.
Option 1: Disregarded LLC
A disregarded LLC has one owner (or, in certain community property states, spouses).
For United States federal tax purposes:
- The LLC does not file its own tax return.
- Trading activity flows directly to your personal return.
- You report gains and losses much like you would if the account remained in your name.
Under federal laws, the LLC exists for legal protection, not tax complexity.
Option 2: Partnership Taxation
If spouses own the LLC together in a non-community property state, the LLC may be taxed as a partnership.
In that case:
- The LLC files Form 1065 annually.
- Income passes through to the owners.
- Profits remain taxable at the individual level.
This structure can still provide the same asset protection benefits while accommodating multiple owners.
What About Traders Who Need Real-Time Market Data?
Some brokers classify LLC-owned brokerage accounts as professional, owned by a business entity.
This classification can create unexpected fees for real-time market data and trading feeds.
For smaller accounts, those costs can become significant.
A Potential Workaround
One solution is to combine a personal property trust with the LLC.
The structure looks like this:
You
↓
Wyoming LLC
↓
Personal Property Trust
↓
Brokerage Account
Under this arrangement:
- The trust opens the brokerage account.
- The LLC owns the trust.
- The LLC continues to provide asset protection.
- The trust may allow access to real-time feeds without triggering certain professional account fees.
This approach has become increasingly common as brokers have expanded professional account pricing policies.
When Should Traders Implement Asset Protection?
Before there is a problem.
If you wait until a lawsuit appears on the horizon, many asset protection strategies become significantly more difficult—or even impossible—to implement effectively. Courts closely examine attempts to transfer assets after legal claims arise, and they may challenge transactions that appear designed to avoid creditors.
Effective asset protection planning starts long before a dispute occurs. The strongest strategies help protect assets by establishing the right structure when no threat exists and by creating meaningful liability protection before creditors have a reason to come looking.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a Trust Alone Protect My Brokerage Account?
Generally, no. A trust by itself does not automatically provide protection from personal creditors or lawsuits. In many cases, if you retain control over the trust assets, a creditor may still be able to take them.
Will a trust change how I pay taxes on my trading profits?
In many cases, no. The IRS may treat certain trusts as disregarded entities, so trading gains and losses flow directly to your individual tax return. However, your trust structure and the type of trust you use determine its tax treatment, so you need to plan carefully.
Does insurance protect a trading account from creditors?
Not directly. Insurance coverage can provide valuable liability protection by helping cover claims before they become judgments, but it generally does not protect the assets held inside a brokerage account.
If I am an active trader and also own real estate, what asset protection strategy should I consider?
Active traders who also own rental properties, businesses, or other investments should look at their entire balance sheet rather than protecting each asset individually. A comprehensive plan may include LLCs, trusts, liability insurance, and state-specific protections such as homestead exemptions. The assets you own, their location, and your overall risk exposure determine the right structure.
What’s the Bottom Line?
If you want financial security and are building it through trading, protecting those profits should be just as important as generating them.
Holding a brokerage account in your personal name may leave years of hard-earned gains vulnerable to creditor claims and civil lawsuits.
If you’re serious about protecting your trading account from creditors and lawsuits, schedule a free 45-minute Strategy Session with Anderson Advisors. We’ll evaluate your current structure, identify potential vulnerabilities, and help you develop a plan designed to protect both you and your trading profits.
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